Research Process
The Research Process: Complete Step-by-Step Guide
Vector Technology Institute Library • February 2026
What is the Research Process?
The research process is a systematic method for identifying a problem, gathering credible evidence, analyzing information or data, and drawing conclusions to answer a specific question. At VTI, it supports technical projects, capstones, workplace problem-solving, and faculty scholarship.
From Broad Topic to Focused Research Question
❌ Too broad
“Cybersecurity”
✅ Focused
“Impact of machine learning on cybersecurity training outcomes at technical institutes”
The 8 Essential Steps
Step 1: Identify & Define Your Topic
Goal: Narrow a broad interest into a workable research direction.
- Brainstorm 3–5 topic areas from coursework, workplace issues, or community needs.
- Write 2–3 “problem statements” (what needs improvement and why?).
- Check feasibility: time, tools, data access, and scope.
Step 2: Conduct Preliminary Research
Purpose: Learn the basics, locate key terms, and identify gaps.
- Start broad: Google Scholar, then narrow with keywords.
- Use open databases: BASE, DOAJ, OpenAlex, OpenAIRE.
- For technology research: IEEE Access and JOSS.
Success looks like: 8–12 credible sources + a shortlist of keywords + 2–3 research gaps you can investigate.
Step 3: Create a Research Question (and/or Hypothesis)
Goal: Turn your topic into a question that can be answered with evidence.
- Make it specific: Who/what/where/when?
- Make it researchable: You can find sources or collect data.
- Make it meaningful: It addresses a real problem or improvement.
Example: “How does implementing MFA (multi-factor authentication) affect phishing success rates among first-year students at a technical institute?”
Step 4: Build a Search Strategy
- Write keyword groups (synonyms + related terms).
- Use filters: year, peer-reviewed, full text/open access.
- Track search strings so you can repeat or improve them.
Tip: Search smarter with quotation marks for phrases and combine terms (e.g., “technical institute” AND cybersecurity AND training).
Step 5: Evaluate Sources (CRAAP + Relevance)
- Currency: Is it recent enough for your topic?
- Relevance: Does it directly answer your question?
- Authority: Who wrote it and where was it published?
- Accuracy: Evidence-based, references included, methods clear?
- Purpose: Research vs opinion/marketing?
Step 6: Organize Sources & Notes
Goal: Keep your research manageable and citation-ready.
- Create a folder structure by theme/topic.
- Keep “quote notes” separate from paraphrase notes.
- Use a reference manager like Zotero (free): https://www.zotero.org/
Step 7: Analyze, Synthesize, and Build Your Argument
- Group sources by themes (not by author).
- Compare findings: where do authors agree or disagree?
- Identify patterns, gaps, and implications for VTI/industry.
- Write a clear thesis/claim supported by evidence.
Step 8: Write, Cite, and Revise
- Write your first draft early, then revise in rounds.
- Use APA 7 formatting consistently (in-text + references).
- Check clarity, structure, and evidence alignment.
- Proofread and verify every citation and link.
12-Week Timeline (Suggested)
- Weeks 1–2: Topic + initial literature scan (8–12 sources)
- Weeks 3–4: Research question + method/design + search strategy
- Weeks 5–7: Deep research + evidence collection (15–25 sources)
- Weeks 8–10: Analysis/synthesis + outline + draft writing
- Weeks 11–12: Revision, formatting (APA 7), final proof, submission
VTI Library Research Workflow (Fast Start)
- 1) Start broad: Google Scholar
- 2) Expand: BASE and DOAJ
- 3) Tech depth: IEEE Access and JOSS
- 4) Discover more: OpenAlex and OpenAIRE
- 5) Organize & cite: Zotero
Pro Tip: Keep a simple research log (date, database, keywords, best sources). Faculty value process transparency and it makes your final writing much easier.
Vector Technology Institute Library • Research Process Guide • February 2026
