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..If
you want GQG to review your organization's information needs, and respond
with a proposal, you have several options for sending your Request for
Proposal (RFP). Either send GQG your request RFP clicking on the
Response Box to the left, attach an existing RFP to an e-mail, fax, send
via U.S. mail, or telephone us directly:
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GQG
One World Trade Center
121 S.W. Salmon Street, Suite 1100
Portland, Oregon USA 97204
503.471.1397,
office
800.878.1422,
US fax
253.681.8102,
international fax
rfp@gqg-mr.com
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..Please provide as much of the following
information as possible (click on the response
box, to the left or a separate document):
Organizational information:
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1. What is your organizations mission?
2. What are your organizational goals?
3. What is your industry?
4. What are your goods, products, and services?
5. Who are you target audiences for them?
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Research proposal information:
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11. What is the scope?
12. What are the research
objectives?
13. What are the research
questions you need answered?
14. What needs to be known?
15. Why does it need to
be known?
16. What is known about
it now?
17. If it is an issue
or problem, what are the possible causes?
18. How do you think research
will help?
19. How will the research
findings be used?
10. Which departments in your organization will use
the research findings?
11. Who are your target audiences?
12. Which countries do you want to conduct the research?
13. What are the languages of your target audiences?
14. What is your available budget?
15. What is your desired depth of analysis required?
16. What deliverables do you need? (e.g., top-line,
standard, comprehensive, or
presentation style report)
17. Do you need a presentation (if yes, in-person,
audio, video, and/or
Web conference)?
18. When to you need the results?
19. What are the most important criteria in your organizations
decision-making for
a research partner for this study?
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Next steps:
GQG will provide you with a detailed research proposal, including:
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1. Our understanding of the research objectives, information
needs, questions, and problems that explain the need for research;
2. An independent view of how we are thinking about
addressing your questions, issues, and ideas; and
3. A proposed, detailed study design to satisfy objectives
and information needs, including methodologies, detailed timelines and
budgets.
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