Posts Tagged ‘Case Study’

Personal Injury Case Study

February 24th, 2010



A year and a half ago I suffered severe car accident which caused personal injury to me. This accident turned my life upside down because I lost my ability to work due to meniscus tear in my knee. First I did not know what to do, but when I lied in the hospital and had the time to think I told my wife to look up a good personal injury lawyer.

Here is the reason why I am writing those articles nowadays – there were no good answers to our searches, we could not find any personal injury lawyer that would not require money for case evaluation and other stupid taxes to basically scam the money away from us. Finally my dear wife Susan got a contact of one lawyer who really helped us. Strangely my wife admitted that finding him was the hardest part, but I thought that no, it can not be like this, but somehow she was right.

After we had filled out the free case evaluation form they contacted us within the next day, which was the first positive sign about them. Well after they contacted us we made sure to ask that they did not have hidden taxes and all seamed clear and correct on their side. My wife gathered contact information from the witnesses and I had to ask for the medical report card from my doctor. After that we handed those papers to lawyer and he gave us a brief overview about our possibilities to win.

Only one week later we had a case against the driver who ran me down with his Dodge. After that our life took a big turn, we had to visit court each week for about three months, which actually was not so bad, because it had huge benefits for us. The personal injury lawyer we chose was perfect, because he got me full coverage of my medical bills plus he got me monthly payments due to my working disability and that is not all, I also received money for a term called “loss of life enjoyment”. We have since received a total of $247,000 and the number is growing. The best part is that I don´t have to worry about my daughters universities and house payment anymore. This is all thanks to my superb lawyer who made this possible You can find his contact from my website.

By: Phil Thomson

Green Consumer Loyalty Considered – Case Study Discussion

February 7th, 2010



What happened to the American Auto Makers, it seems that over the years, fewer and fewer folks and their families have carried on with their loyalty for Ford, Chrysler or General Motors? Why is this? It seems that often the consumers have more loyalty for Toyota and Honda then for the big three American Brands. Well one recent story may in fact give at least some insight to this challenge:



Study: Hybrid Car Owners are the Most Loyal

DETROIT — Hybrid car owners are some of the most loyal in the U.S. market, with nearly half purchasing a vehicle of the same make when they buy another car, according to a study released Monday by an automotive data company. Forty-seven percent of hybrid buyers buy a vehicle of the same make, compared with 35% of buyers overall, according to Experian Automotive… Eighteen percent of hybrid car buyers even buy the same model, compared with 12% overall. [Source: Associated Press].



Apparently, Detroit is starting to learn what Honda and Toyota have already discovered with regards to their hybrid customers. In fact, now that I think about it, everyone I know who owns a Prius also owns is planning on buying another one or replacing that one if and when it ever dies, interest statistics indeed.

Strong customer loyalty can save the big US automakers 100s of millions of dollars per year in advertising. And both GM and Ford have several Hybrids on the market and are introducing many more in 2009, 2010 and 2011. And right about now that is a very important fact to consider for the struggling automakers.

By: Lance Winslow

Writing the Case Study in Three Simple Steps

January 21st, 2010



Case studies are the written equivalent of the in-person demonstration, an opportunity to illustrate your product or service in action. The more complex or abstract your offer (attention all “solutions providers” out there) the more valuable your case studies become: their specificity has the power to cut through the fog of business rhetoric. Better yet, they allow your prospects to see themselves in your customers’ shoes, encouraging them to imagine what it would be like to enjoy the benefits of working with you.

You can think of the case study as a cross between the testimonial and the business article. Like the testimonial, the case study features a satisfied customer who “speaks” on your behalf. Like the article, it’s structured dramatically, with a clear beginning, middle and end that holds your audience’s attention through the tension of conflict and the anticipation of resolution.

In format, the case study is simplicity itself. Many are limited to just one page — a brevity that makes them especially useful as trade show handouts, direct mail inserts, supplemental pages to Web sites, and as sales collateral that can be faxed to hot prospects. Most are conveniently divided into three or four labeled sections that telegraph the case study structure to readers, guiding them quickly to the happy ending. These labels go under any number of names, but for our purposes, I’ll stick to three: Challenge, Solution, Result.

The Challenge: Setting up the problem and the stakes

Think of The Challenge as the first act in a three act opera: This is the place to set the scene, introduce the lead characters, and present the problem or challenge that puts your story in motion. Articulating the character and context is easy — just state the facts: “Widgets, Inc. is a $50M industrial design firm serving extrusion plastics concerns in the southern United States.”

For the challenge itself, present both the problem to be solved (or the opportunity that may be reached) plus the stakes — the reason why the problem or opportunity matters. It’s not enough to say that Widgets, Inc. had an inefficient project management system. So what? You need to articulate the meaning of the challenge to the customer, whether it’s a negative consequence to overcome, or a positive outcome that might be gained:

Negative: “Widgets CFO Lex Palmer estimates that the company lost approximately 25,000 man-hours a year — or $1,875,000 in wasted resources — through the mismanagement of project-team time, talent and focus.”

Positive: “According to Widgets engineer Rufus Manchester, a fifteen percent improvement in management efficiency would cut the average project time from six weeks to four, and lead to $0.75M to $1.25M in additional profits for the company.”

The Solution: Putting your services on stage

In the middle or second act of your study, the Solution, you introduce the hero: The product or service your company provides that solves the customer’s problem or helps them achieve their goals.

Here, your objective is to paint a picture, to illustrate the solution so graphically readers can “see” the evolving events in their imagination. Specificity is critical: Every detail you contribute makes the solution more tangible, more real. That’s why a broad, vague assertion is insufficient:

“Widgets, Inc. deployed the ProjectMaster solution across its departments.”

Instead, build the description piece by piece:

“First, the ProjectMaster team of workflow analysts, IT network developers, and systems engineers spent a week on-site analyzing Widgets’ work processes. The team’s subsequent report, reviewed by senior managers at Widgets, formed the basis for a new workflow design. ProjectMaster recommended a wireless networking infrastructure, new collaborative management software applications, and a set of specific policies — tailored to Widgets’ unique circumstances — to reduce meeting times and streamline product development. After a one-month trial period with one Widgets department, ProjectMaster deployed the complete solution across the entire enterprise, and established regularly reporting protocols to monitor progress and make adjustments, as required.”

The Result: Making the payoff

At this point, your case study should positively tremble with tension. The Challenge established a conflict between “what-is” and the desired “what-could-be.” Then the Solution detailed a response to the Challenge. Now every reader will want the payoff: Did the Solution work? And what change did it bring about?

The Result is, as its name suggests, an articulation of the results; your job is to present the consequences of the Solution. As you had in your description of the Solution, make the Result as specific and detailed as you con. If possible, quantify the results with numbers, perhaps with an amount of money saved (or earned), a percentage increase in productivity, or a dramatic reduction in time or waste.

But whenever possible, put the most important result in your client’s words. If you can get permission to use a direct quote, use it — it’s the most credible source of information. A great Result quote might look like this:

“In just six months, we cut our average design-to-implementation time from six weeks to seventeen work days,” says Bill Sharpton, Widgets COO. “With ProjectMaster in place, we’re on track to realize an additional $1M in profits this year and an additional $2M next year.”

Do your homework and the writing will follow

As you can see, the case study is a simple format that packs a lot of punch in a small space. For maximum impact, invest most of your writing time in research — gathering the facts and quotes you need to give your case immediacy and credibility. Once you have your basic information in front of you, the 3-step structure makes the writing itself fast and painless.

By: Jonathan Kranz