Internet Learning Volume 5, Number 1, Fall 2016/Winter 2017 | Page 28

An Academy Customer Experience Benchmark Observation sona B are doctoral chairs who chose the scholarly profession to help their careers either in the private or academic sectors, indicated that they work parttime utilizing their doctoral degree discipline, and also have had a peer reviewed scholarly article published. They may require more assistance since their time is shared with other positions or adjunct teaching assignments. Persona C are doctoral chairs who indicated that they worked part-time as an academician and who perhaps chose the scholarly profession to help their careers whether private or academic and would need more assistance in learning how to disseminate meaningful knowledge and have not had a peer reviewed scholarly article published, but may have presented. These customers graduate and go back to a largely private sector nonacademic job or one that does not require the dissemination of knowledge to a broader range other than their day-to-day duties. They remain doctoral chairs in good standing to allow them to gain scholarly publishing experience. They may have pursued their doctorate for vanity and likely not intended to contribute to the scholarly community other than the culmination of their dissertation. By virtue of having no peer-reviewed publishing experience, Persona Cs would need more publishing and research assistance of any of the personas. To determine the persona, responses to both Questions 2 and 3 were combined via hand-tabulated using an Excel spreadsheet to divide the 23 respondents into their labeled persona. Since SurveyMonkey retained individual data, it was relatively easy to first parse out all the responses then assign them within the spreadsheet. Inter-coder reliability was tested by having a colleague at a local college conduct the same technique having been provided SurveyMonkey access. Question 2 had four choices of which participants could select all that applied: (i) full-time professor/academic administrator, (2) full-time in doctorate field, (3) part-time faculty/chair or administrator, and (4) employed in a different field other than academia. Any of the full-time choices would be the first step in denoting Persona A. Part-time faculty where grouped into Persona B as well as working in a different field. If response was “Primarily employed in a different field than doctorate,” that participant was grouped into Persona C. Question 3 had five choices or as many as applied. If those who were categorized in Question 2 as Persona A, that category would only continue if they had indicated they had a peer-reviewed paper published. The same constant was used for Persona B. However, those deemed Persona A or B in Question 2 but that responded to Question 3 with only having presented at a scholarly conference or did not have a scholarly article were bumped down to B or C, respectively. If they were already labeled Persona C in Question 2, but now indicated that they had a peer-reviewed scholarly article published, they were now categorized into Persona B. The personas are solidified based on 27