A Complete Guide to Quantitative Research Methods

Atlan
Humans of Data
Published in
6 min readJun 11, 2018

Numbers are everywhere and drive our day-to-day lives. We take decisions based on numbers, both at work and in our personal lives. For example, an organization may rely on sales numbers to see if it’s succeeding or failing, and a group of friends planning a vacation may look at ticket prices to pick a place.

In the social domain, numbers are just as important. They help identify what interventions are needed, whether ongoing projects are effective, and more. But how do organizations in the social domain get the numbers they need?

This is where quantitative research comes in. Quantitative research is the process of collecting numerical data through standardized techniques, then applying statistical methods to derive insights from it.

When is quantitative research useful?

The goal of quantitative research methods is to collect numerical data from a group of people, then generalize those results to a larger group of people to explain a phenomenon. Researchers generally use quantitative research when they want get objective, conclusive answers.

For example, a chocolate brand may run a survey among a sample of their target group (teenagers in the United States) to check whether they like the taste of the chocolate. The result of this survey would reveal how all teenagers in the U.S. feel about the chocolate.

Similarly, an organization running a project to improve a village’s literacy rate may look at how many people came to their program, how many people dropped out, and each person’s literacy score before and after the program. They can use these metrics to evaluate the overall success of their program.

Unlike qualitative research, quantitative research is generally not used in the early stages of research for exploring a question or scoping out a problem. It is generally used to answer clear, pre-defined questions in the advanced stages of a research study.

How can you plan a quantitative research exercise?

  • Identify the research problem. An example would be, how well do New Delhi’s government schools ensure that students complete their education?
  • Prepare the research questions that need to be answered to address the research problem. For example, what percentage of students drop out of government schools in New Delhi?
  • Review existing literature on the research problem and questions to ensure that there is no duplication. If someone has already answered this, you can rely on their results.
  • Develop a research plan. This includes identifying the target group, sample, and method of data collection; conducting data analysis; collating recommendations; and arriving at a conclusion.

What are the advantages of quantitative research methods?

Samples have to be carefully designed and chosen, else their results can’t be generalized. Learn how to choose the right sampling technique for your survey.

  • Does not account for people’s thoughts or perceptions about what you’re evaluating.
  • Does not explore the “why” and “how” behind a phenomenon.

What are the limitations of quantitative research methods?

What quantitative research methods can you use?

Here are four quantitative research methods that you can use to collect data for a quantitative research study:

Questionnaires

This is the most common way to collect quantitative data. A questionnaire (also called a survey) is a series of questions, usually written on paper or a digital form. Researchers give the questionnaire to their sample, and each participant answers the questions. The questions are designed to gather data that will help researchers answer their research questions.

Understanding closed and open-ended questions is crucial to designing a great survey and collecting high quality data. Learn more with our complete guide about when and how to use closed and open-ended questions.

Typically, a questionnaire has closed-ended questions — that is, the participant chooses an answer from the given options. However, a questionnaire may also have quantitative open-ended questions. In the open-ended example above, the participants could write a simple number like “4”, a range like “I usually go one or two times per week” or a more complex response like “Most weeks I go twice, but this week I went 4 times because I kept forgetting my grocery list. During the winter, I only go once a week.”

Advantages: Limitations: Response bias — a set of factors that lead participants answer a question incorrectly — can be deadly for data quality.

Learn how it happens and how to avoid it.

A good questionnaire should have clear language, correct grammar and spelling, and a clear objective.

Interviews

An interview for quantitative research involves verbal communication between the participant and researcher, whose goal is to gather numerical data. The interview can be conducted face-to-face or over the phone, and it can be structured or unstructured.

Advantages: Limitations: One way to speed up interviews is to conduct them with multiple people at one time in a focus group discussion. Learn more about how to conduct a great FGD.

In a structured interview, the researcher asks a fixed set of questions to every participant. The questions and their order are pre-decided by the researcher. The interview follows a formal pattern. Structured interviews are more cost efficient and can be less time consuming.

In an unstructured interview, the researcher thinks of his/her questions as the interview proceeds. This type of interview is conversational in nature and can last a few hours. This type of interview allows the researcher to be flexible and ask questions depending on the participant’s responses. This quantitative research method can provide more in-depth information, since it allows researchers to delve deeper into a participant’s response.

Observation

Advantages: Limitations: Simple vs. behavioral is just one type of observation. Learn more about the 5 different types of observation and when you should use each to collect different types of data.

Observation is a systematic way to collect data by observing people in natural situations or settings. Though it is mostly used for collecting qualitative data, observation can also be used to collect quantitative data.

Observation can be simple or behavioral. Simple observations are usually numerical, like how many cars pass through a given intersection each hour or how many students are asleep during a class. Behavioral observation, on the other hand, observes and interprets people’s behavior, like how many cars are driving dangerously or how engaging a lecturer is.

Advantages:

  • Records often include comprehensive data captured over a long period of time.
  • Data collection time is minimal, since the data has already been collected and recorded by someone else.

Limitations:

Simple observation can be a good way to collect numerical data. This can be done by pre-defining clear numerical variables that can be collected during observation — for example, what time employees leave the office. This data can be collected by observing employees over a period of time and recording when each person leaves.

Since quantitative research depends on numerical data, records (also known as external data) can provide critical information to answer research questions. Records are numbers and statistics that institutions use to track activities, like attendance in a school or the number of patients admitted in a hospital.

Image credits: Curtis MacNewton, Brijesh Nirmal, Charles Deluvio, and Atlan.

For example, the Government of India conducts the Census every 10 years, which is a record of the country’s population. This data can be used by a researcher who is addressing a population-related research problem.

Summing it up

Quantitative research methods are one of the best tools to identify a problem or phenomenon, how widespread it is, and how it is changing over time. After identifying a problem, quantitative research can also be used to come up with a trustworthy solution, identified using numerical data collected through standardized techniques.

Originally published at https://humansofdata.atlan.com on June 11, 2018.

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Atlan
Humans of Data

DataOps for winning data teams around the world ✨ Humans of data, welcome home ❤️ www.atlan.com