In project management research, on site involvement is recognized as being effective practice for getting primary data, understanding the project tasks being examined and gaining context awareness. However, it is impossible for investigators to be present on site for every project they intend to investigate since project can be difficult to access, or may be undisclosed during the implementation stage, or may have been completed a long time ago. Reading the project reports and documents will provide a substantial amount of information, but there is always more to any project than written information alone; project practitioners are well aware of this fact. Advancements in technology since the beginning of the 20th century enable the film making of projects; possibly the main purpose of that film making is to produce documentaries. Based on the facts that the camera can capture a wealth of details and rich complexity that it is impossible or very difficult to capture by other means and the eye and ear can acquire a great deal of information that it is practically impossible to write simultaneously a question arises, can the use of video data be beneficial in project management research? This article reports the experience of the authors in employing video data in historic project management research. In researching British aviation projects during the period of the Second World War the authors uses the approach of content analysis to examine more than 250 hours of video data. A classification scheme of video data is presented in this paper. The advantages of and suggestions managing the usage of video are data also shown in this paper, in addition to caution concerning what may influence the effective usage of video data.
Published in | Science Journal of Business and Management (Volume 2, Issue 1) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.sjbm.20140201.12 |
Page(s) | 10-15 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2014. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Video Data, Project Management Research, World War 2, Data Acquisition
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APA Style
Eskander Howsawi, David Eager, Ravindra Bagia, Klaus Niebecker. (2014). The Use of Video Data in Project Management Research. Science Journal of Business and Management, 2(1), 10-15. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.sjbm.20140201.12
ACS Style
Eskander Howsawi; David Eager; Ravindra Bagia; Klaus Niebecker. The Use of Video Data in Project Management Research. Sci. J. Bus. Manag. 2014, 2(1), 10-15. doi: 10.11648/j.sjbm.20140201.12
AMA Style
Eskander Howsawi, David Eager, Ravindra Bagia, Klaus Niebecker. The Use of Video Data in Project Management Research. Sci J Bus Manag. 2014;2(1):10-15. doi: 10.11648/j.sjbm.20140201.12
@article{10.11648/j.sjbm.20140201.12, author = {Eskander Howsawi and David Eager and Ravindra Bagia and Klaus Niebecker}, title = {The Use of Video Data in Project Management Research}, journal = {Science Journal of Business and Management}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {10-15}, doi = {10.11648/j.sjbm.20140201.12}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.sjbm.20140201.12}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.sjbm.20140201.12}, abstract = {In project management research, on site involvement is recognized as being effective practice for getting primary data, understanding the project tasks being examined and gaining context awareness. However, it is impossible for investigators to be present on site for every project they intend to investigate since project can be difficult to access, or may be undisclosed during the implementation stage, or may have been completed a long time ago. Reading the project reports and documents will provide a substantial amount of information, but there is always more to any project than written information alone; project practitioners are well aware of this fact. Advancements in technology since the beginning of the 20th century enable the film making of projects; possibly the main purpose of that film making is to produce documentaries. Based on the facts that the camera can capture a wealth of details and rich complexity that it is impossible or very difficult to capture by other means and the eye and ear can acquire a great deal of information that it is practically impossible to write simultaneously a question arises, can the use of video data be beneficial in project management research? This article reports the experience of the authors in employing video data in historic project management research. In researching British aviation projects during the period of the Second World War the authors uses the approach of content analysis to examine more than 250 hours of video data. A classification scheme of video data is presented in this paper. The advantages of and suggestions managing the usage of video are data also shown in this paper, in addition to caution concerning what may influence the effective usage of video data.}, year = {2014} }
TY - JOUR T1 - The Use of Video Data in Project Management Research AU - Eskander Howsawi AU - David Eager AU - Ravindra Bagia AU - Klaus Niebecker Y1 - 2014/02/20 PY - 2014 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.sjbm.20140201.12 DO - 10.11648/j.sjbm.20140201.12 T2 - Science Journal of Business and Management JF - Science Journal of Business and Management JO - Science Journal of Business and Management SP - 10 EP - 15 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2331-0634 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.sjbm.20140201.12 AB - In project management research, on site involvement is recognized as being effective practice for getting primary data, understanding the project tasks being examined and gaining context awareness. However, it is impossible for investigators to be present on site for every project they intend to investigate since project can be difficult to access, or may be undisclosed during the implementation stage, or may have been completed a long time ago. Reading the project reports and documents will provide a substantial amount of information, but there is always more to any project than written information alone; project practitioners are well aware of this fact. Advancements in technology since the beginning of the 20th century enable the film making of projects; possibly the main purpose of that film making is to produce documentaries. Based on the facts that the camera can capture a wealth of details and rich complexity that it is impossible or very difficult to capture by other means and the eye and ear can acquire a great deal of information that it is practically impossible to write simultaneously a question arises, can the use of video data be beneficial in project management research? This article reports the experience of the authors in employing video data in historic project management research. In researching British aviation projects during the period of the Second World War the authors uses the approach of content analysis to examine more than 250 hours of video data. A classification scheme of video data is presented in this paper. The advantages of and suggestions managing the usage of video are data also shown in this paper, in addition to caution concerning what may influence the effective usage of video data. VL - 2 IS - 1 ER -