The MBA dissertation sits at a unique intersection of academic rigour and real-world business application. Our UK business research specialists help you achieve both — producing original, examiner-ready dissertations that satisfy the scholarly demands of your business school whilst delivering the practitioner relevance your programme requires.
The MBA dissertation is not a pure academic exercise, nor is it simply a business report. It demands genuine integration of management theory and practitioner insight — a balance that most MBA students have never been explicitly taught how to achieve.
MBA assessments throughout the programme ask you to apply theoretical frameworks to business cases. The dissertation goes further — it requires you to conduct original research, critically evaluate management theory against real-world evidence, and produce findings with both academic credibility and practical managerial relevance. Achieving this simultaneously is genuinely difficult.
Business research at MBA level can be qualitative (interviews with managers, focus groups, document analysis), quantitative (employee surveys, financial data analysis), or mixed methods. Many students default to whichever method feels most familiar rather than the one that best serves their research question — and examiners notice immediately.
Many MBA dissertations require primary data from real organisations — employee surveys, manager interviews, strategic documents, or financial reports. Securing that access, managing commercial confidentiality, and presenting organisational data in an academically credible way presents challenges specific to business research that no other discipline faces.
MBA examiners expect engagement with recent academic management research, not just established textbook frameworks. Relying solely on Porter's Five Forces and SWOT analysis signals surface-level scholarship. Distinction-grade dissertations engage with current empirical research and emerging theoretical debates from leading management journals.
Unlike pure academic research, MBA dissertations must produce managerially actionable recommendations — specific to your chosen organisation or industry context, grounded in your research findings, and applicable to real business decisions. Generic management advice drawn from textbooks without evidential support fails this requirement.
MBA students who have a strong business background often produce excellent practical analysis but insufficient academic depth. Those from academic backgrounds produce theoretically sound work but lack commercial contextualisation. Finding the precise balance your business school's marking criteria require is the central challenge of the MBA dissertation.
This is the defining characteristic of MBA-level research that no other postgraduate programme demands. Your examiner will assess both dimensions — and weakness in either will cost marks regardless of how strong the other side is.
Critical engagement with peer-reviewed management journals — Academy of Management, Strategic Management Journal, British Journal of Management, Journal of Organizational Behavior
Theoretical frameworks evaluated and challenged — not merely applied. Porter, RBV, dynamic capabilities, stakeholder theory, agency theory used as lenses, not as answers
Rigorous research methodology — research philosophy, justified design, sampling rationale, ethics, analytical framework — all addressed with academic precision
Findings connected back to the scholarly literature in the discussion — not just described but interpreted through a theoretical lens
Research grounded in a real business problem, industry challenge, or organisational question — not a purely abstract academic inquiry disconnected from management practice
Primary data from real-world contexts — manager interviews, employee surveys, company reports, industry data — rather than purely secondary literature synthesis
Findings that mean something to practitioners — answering not just "what does this show?" but "what should managers do differently as a result of this research?"
Strategic recommendations that are specific, evidence-based, and applicable — not generic business advice that could have been written without conducting any research at all
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Every MBA dissertation we produce is built around your specific research question, your business school's marking criteria, and the practitioner context of your chosen topic. No generic templates. No recycled frameworks.
We identify a dissertation topic that is academically viable, grounded in a genuine management problem, researchable within your programme timeline, and positioned within current scholarly debates in your chosen management specialism. The proposal frames your research question, justifies your methodology, and establishes your theoretical framework.
A literature review that goes well beyond business school textbooks. We engage with peer-reviewed management journals — including the Academy of Management Review, Strategic Management Journal, and British Journal of Management — critically evaluating foundational frameworks (Porter's competitive advantage, resource-based view, stakeholder theory, agency theory) alongside cutting-edge research in your chosen specialism.
Business research methodology tailored to management inquiry — typically pragmatism or interpretivism as the philosophical foundation. Research design covering case study, survey, archival analysis, or mixed methods. Data collection via semi-structured manager interviews, employee questionnaires, or company document analysis. Full ethics treatment for commercial research contexts.
For qualitative MBA research: NVivo thematic analysis of manager interview data with emergent themes connected to your theoretical framework. For quantitative research: SPSS analysis of survey data including descriptive statistics, regression analysis, and correlation. For mixed methods: integrated triangulation of qualitative and quantitative findings within a single coherent findings chapter.
The MBA discussion chapter must do what no other programme's discussion is asked to do — connect findings to management theory AND draw out specific managerial implications for practice. We write discussions that engage actively with your theoretical frameworks and produce strategic recommendations that are evidence-based, context-specific, and written at the level of a senior management consultancy report.
If your supervisor has returned chapters with specific feedback — "insufficient theoretical depth", "recommendations are too generic", "argument needs development" — we address each comment with targeted academic revision. Business school supervisory feedback often focuses on the theory–practice balance, and we know precisely how to resolve that in the text.
Every MBA dissertation is matched to a writer with postgraduate business qualifications and specific subject expertise in your chosen management area. Your specialism determines your writer — not convenience.
A structured process that mirrors the real business research journey — with the theory–practice balance built in at every stage from proposal to final recommendations.
Share your MBA programme, dissertation brief, business school guidelines, supervisor feedback, and any existing drafts. We assess your management specialism, assign a subject-specialist writer, and agree a chapter plan and timeline.
Your writer conducts targeted searches across leading management journals and business databases, identifies the most relevant theoretical frameworks for your research question, and maps the scholarly debate your dissertation will enter.
Each chapter is developed progressively with built-in review points. You provide feedback before the next chapter begins — keeping the dissertation aligned with your business school's expectations and your supervisor's requirements throughout.
The discussion and recommendations chapter is written with the dual audience in mind — academic examiner and business practitioner. Findings are connected to theory, implications are drawn out, and recommendations are specific, evidence-based, and actionable.
Your completed dissertation is reviewed for argument coherence, theory–practice balance, and referencing accuracy. Turnitin plagiarism report and AI-detection certificate delivered alongside the submission-ready document.
Built specifically for business school research — not repurposed academic writing dressed up as MBA support.
Every MBA dissertation is assigned to a writer with an MBA, MSc in Management, or DBA — and specific subject expertise in your management specialism. Your strategy dissertation is not written by an HR specialist.
We write MBA dissertations at the level of distinction-grade business school scholarship — rigorous academic engagement with management theory AND practically relevant findings and recommendations. Not one or the other.
We can base your dissertation on publicly available company reports, industry databases, FTSE-listed company filings, and sector-specific data — even if you do not have direct organisational access. We design research approaches that work within your access constraints.
Every dissertation is written from scratch by a human academic writer. No templates, no AI-generated content, no recycled business frameworks. Turnitin originality report and AI-detection certificate included as standard.
We translate business school supervisory language into specific academic action. "Your recommendations lack rigour", "theoretical engagement is superficial", "insufficient critical analysis" — we know exactly what these mean and how to fix them.
Your programme, business school, supervisor's name, company data, and research topic are held in strict confidence under full GDPR compliance. We do not share your information with any third party under any circumstances.
"My MBA dissertation on digital transformation in retail banking required both primary qualitative research — eight senior banker interviews — and secondary financial performance data. The integration of those two data sets in the findings and discussion was the most sophisticated piece of business research writing I have encountered at MBA level."
"The strategic recommendations chapter read at the level of a management consultancy report — evidence-based, specific to my case study organisation, and directly actionable for senior management. My dissertation supervisor said it was the strongest concluding chapter she had reviewed that academic year."
"I had the primary data from my eight manager interviews but could not connect it to the dynamic capabilities framework I had set up in the literature review. The discussion chapter did exactly that — and did so in language that my examiner recognised as distinction-grade business scholarship."
Share your business school, management specialism, and research topic today. Receive a free, no-obligation quote within minutes from an MBA research specialist.