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PROJECT FEASIBILITY STUDY

Suggested Format
CHAPTER 1 – THE PROBLEM AND ITS BACKGROUND
I. Background of the Study (your proposed business)
 One of the preliminary steps to completing a thesis is the background
study for it. The background study for a thesis includes a review of
the area being researched, current information surrounding the issue,
previous studies on the issue, and relevant history on the issue.
II. Statement of the Problem (General)
 A problem statement is a short description of the issues that need to be
addressed by a problem solving team and should be presented to them (or
created by them) before they try to solve a problem.
III. Specific Problems (Per Aspect)
 Problem specifically focus for each aspect (Marketing, Management, Technical,
Financial, etc.)

IV. Objectives of the Study (General)


 are the results sought by the researcher at the end of the research process,
i.e. what the researcher will be able to achieve at the end of the research
study.
CHAPTER 1 – THE PROBLEM AND ITS BACKGROUND
V. Significance of the Study
 An explanation of the significance of a study may include the
meaning of the research work to you personally and should include
how your research benefits or impacts others in part or whole. Discuss
what people or groups of people might benefit from reading your
research.

VI. Scope and Limitation


 The limitations of the study are those characteristics of design or
methodology that impacted or influenced the interpretation of the
findings from your research. They are the constraints on
generalizability, applications to practice, and/or utility of findings that
are the result of the ways in which you initially chose to design the
study and/or the method used to establish internal and external
validity.
CHAPTER 1 – THE PROBLEM AND ITS BACKGROUND

VII. Review of Related Literature


 A review of related literature is the process of collecting, selecting,
and reading books, journals, reports, abstracts, and other reference
materials.
CHAPTER 2 - METHODOLOGY
VII. Research Design
 The design of a study defines the study type (descriptive,
correlational, semi-experimental, experimental, review, meta-
analytic) and sub-type (e.g., descriptive-longitudinal case study),
research problem, hypotheses, independent and dependent variables,
experimental design, and, if applicable, data collection methods.

VIII.Population, Sample and Sampling Technique


 A population is all the organisms of the same group or species, which
live in a particular geographical area, and have the capability of
interbreeding.
 The sample size of a survey most typically refers to the number of units
that were chosen from which data were gathered.
 A sampling technique is the name or other identification of the
specific process by which the entities of the sample have been selected.
CHAPTER 2 - METHODOLOGY
IX. Survey Questionnaire
 A survey is defined as the measure of opinions or
experiences of a group of people through the asking of
questions. This is opposed to a questionnaire, which is
defined as a set of printed or written questions with a choice
of answers, devised for the purposes of a survey or statistical
study..

X. Survey Result
 Summary of result of the questionnaires conducted in your target
market. .

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