Research is a blanket term describing various activities used to find new answers to questions.
These activities include conducting experiments, interviewing people, or consulting a variety of publications. Methods are often combined to provide all the evidence required for informed opinions and decisions.
Applied research aims to find an answer to a specific problem, usually identified by an industry or community partner.
A broad range of work fits under the applied research umbrella:
- creating and improving products and processes, for example prototyping and product testing in design research and traditional R&D
- evaluation and market research to improve outcomes in businesses and community organizations.
In Basic Research, by comparison, the goal is generating new knowledge, regardless of whether it has any known application.
This curiosity-driven work is associated with universities, while most research conducted at colleges is applied.
While Basic Researchers ask why things happen the way they do, Applied Researchers ask how to make things happen in a better way.
The focus on solving clearly identified, practical problems means that Applied Research projects are more direct and contained than the open-ended discovery of Basic Research. As a result, Applied Research generally has much shorter time frames, with expected research products or "deliverables" identified from the outset.