Introduction
Qualitative data can feel overwhelming at first glance. Interview transcripts run into dozens of pages. Open-ended survey responses look messy. Focus group discussions overlap with emotion, context, and nuance. If you’re thinking, “I don’t know how to analyse qualitative data,” you’re not alone.
The good news? With a clear structure and the right approach, thematic analysis makes qualitative analysis systematic, rigorous, and publishable.
In this guide, you’ll learn:
- What coding qualitative data really means
- How thematic analysis works step-by-step
- How to develop coding themes from raw data
- A practical example you can replicate
- Tools (including NVivo) that make the process easier
If you’re working on a DBA, PhD, or applied research project, this guide will walk you through the exact process researchers use to transform messy text into defensible findings.
Before we begin, review our comprehensive Methodology Pillar to understand where thematic analysis fits within your research design:
https://dbacoach.com/methodology-pillar
Struggling with qualitative analysis?
Download our free PDF: Thematic Analysis Guide — a step-by-step checklist you can follow while coding.
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H2: Dataset / Context
To explain coding clearly, let’s use a practical example.
Research Scenario
Research Question:
How do remote employees experience work-life balance in multinational organizations?
Data Collected:
- 12 semi-structured interviews
- Average length: 45 minutes
- Transcribed verbatim
- Total dataset: 98 pages
Sample Raw Transcript Excerpt
“I feel more productive at home, but sometimes I can’t switch off. There’s no clear boundary between work and personal life. I also miss spontaneous conversations with colleagues.”
“Flexibility is great, but I end up working longer hours. My manager expects quick responses, even late at night.”
At this stage, qualitative data looks unstructured and narrative-heavy.
Your job is to transform this into meaningful coding themes using thematic analysis.
H2: Step-by-Step Execution
This section explains how to conduct thematic analysis step-by-step using best practices aligned with current qualitative research standards.
We follow Braun & Clarke’s six-phase framework — widely accepted in qualitative analysis globally.
Step 1: Familiarization with the Data
Before coding, read all transcripts multiple times.
✔ Highlight recurring ideas
✔ Take notes in margins
✔ Write initial impressions
✔ Observe emotional tone
Tip: Do not rush this phase. Deep familiarity strengthens credibility and rigor.
📸 Screenshot Suggestion:
- NVivo transcript view with highlighted text
- Margin notes example
Step 2: Generating Initial Codes
Now we begin coding.
Coding means labeling meaningful chunks of data.
Let’s code the first excerpt.
Raw Text:
“I feel more productive at home, but sometimes I can’t switch off.”
Possible Codes:
- Increased productivity
- Difficulty disconnecting
- Blurred boundaries
Second excerpt:
“Flexibility is great, but I end up working longer hours.”
Possible Codes:
- Flexibility benefits
- Extended working hours
- Hidden workload
At this stage, codes are:
- Short
- Descriptive
- Numerous
This is still qualitative analysis, but we are not interpreting deeply yet — only organizing.
📸 Screenshot Suggestion:
- NVivo coding stripes view
- Example of code nodes created
If you are using NVivo, you can learn structured coding techniques directly from NVivo’s official training resources here:
https://lumivero.com/resources/nvivo-thematic-analysis-guide/
Step 3: Searching for Coding Themes
Now we move from codes to coding themes.
Group related codes together.
Example:
Codes:
- Difficulty disconnecting
- Blurred boundaries
- Extended working hours
- Late-night expectations
➡ Potential Theme:
Work-Life Boundary Erosion
Another grouping:
Codes:
- Increased productivity
- Flexibility benefits
- Autonomy
➡ Potential Theme:
Perceived Flexibility Advantages
Themes are broader patterns across the dataset.
They answer your research question.
Step 4: Reviewing Themes
Ask critical questions:
- Do these themes reflect the dataset?
- Are themes distinct from each other?
- Is there enough supporting data?
- Are themes too broad?
You may merge or split themes.
For example:
“Flexibility Benefits” and “Autonomy” might merge into:
Empowered Work Structures
This is where qualitative analysis becomes analytical, not descriptive.
📸 Screenshot Suggestion:
- Thematic map diagram
- Mind map style structure
Step 5: Defining and Naming Themes
Now refine.
Weak theme name:
“Work Problems”
Strong theme name:
“Boundary Erosion in Remote Work Contexts”
Each theme should:
✔ Have a clear scope
✔ Relate directly to the research question
✔ Include a concise definition
Example Definition:
Boundary Erosion in Remote Work Contexts
This theme captures how employees experience blurred distinctions between professional and personal life due to remote working expectations and digital accessibility.
Step 6: Producing the Report
Now you integrate:
- Theme explanation
- Participant quotes
- Analytical interpretation
- Link to literature
Example Write-Up:
Participants consistently described an erosion of work-life boundaries. Although flexibility improved autonomy, digital connectivity extended working hours. As Participant 7 noted, “There’s no clear boundary between work and personal life.”
This is the final stage of thematic analysis — turning coding themes into publishable findings.
H2: Final Output
After systematic qualitative analysis, your final output may look like this:
Theme 1: Boundary Erosion in Remote Work Contexts
- Blurred boundaries
- Late-night responsiveness
- Emotional fatigue
Theme 2: Empowered Work Structures
- Flexibility
- Increased productivity
- Autonomy
Theme 3: Social Disconnection
- Lack of spontaneous interaction
- Isolation
- Reduced collaboration
Each theme is supported by:
- Multiple participants
- Verbatim quotes
- Analytical explanation
This structure ensures:
✔ Academic rigor
✔ Transparency
✔ Reproducibility
✔ Publication readiness
Common Mistakes in Thematic Analysis
- Coding without a clear research question
- Creating too many themes
- Confusing codes with themes
- Skipping reflexivity
- Not documenting analytic decisions
To deepen your understanding of methodological rigor, revisit our full research framework:
https://dbacoach.com/methodology-pillar
Why Thematic Analysis Is Powerful
- Flexible across disciplines
- Suitable for small and large datasets
- Works with interviews, surveys, documents
- Ideal for DBA and applied research
- Recognized globally
When executed properly, thematic analysis transforms qualitative data into strategic insight.
When You Should Seek Help
You should consider expert support if:
- You have 50+ transcripts
- Your supervisor says your themes lack depth
- You are unsure about coding consistency
- You need NVivo validation
- You are preparing for viva or defense
Qualitative analysis is both systematic and interpretive. Getting it right matters.
Get Qualitative Data Help
Need expert support with coding themes or thematic analysis?
Our DBA specialists can guide you step-by-step or handle the full qualitative analysis process for you.
👉 Book a Consultation Today
Conclusion
If you’ve ever thought, “I don’t know how to analyse qualitative data,” remember this:
Qualitative research is not messy — it is structured storytelling grounded in evidence.
Through thematic analysis, you:
- Familiarize yourself with the data
- Generate initial codes
- Develop coding themes
- Review and refine themes
- Define and interpret themes
- Produce analytical findings
With practice, the process becomes systematic, transparent, and academically rigorous.
Download our Thematic Analysis Guide PDF to follow this structure step-by-step in your own project.
Qualitative data holds rich insight — you just need the right framework to unlock it.
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