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How systematic should you be?
The stages of a systematic review
1. Produce a review protocol / plan
2. Assemble a review group / advisory group
3. Formulate review question(s)
4. Conduct a thorough search
5. Select relevant studies
6. Appraise the quality of studies
7. Extract information from individual studies
8. Synthesise studies
9. Report what is known and not known
10. Inform research, policy and practice
Keep up-to-date 


It is important to keep your references up-to-date and there are several ways to achieve this.  In this stage in the earlier step "protocol driven search" you learnt how to save searches. Each database may be different but the concept is the same:

  • Look for a link to ‘My profile’ or ‘Saved searches’

  • Set up a profile with your email address

  • Run your search

  • Save your search as an alert

  • Zetoc Alert is a service that sends you email alerts when new data is loaded into the database (it is updated daily so this can be as soon as 72 hrs after publication).  Instructions can be found on the website.

    For books, individual publishers, as well as websites like Amazon, offer email alerting services.

    You can search for the latest working papers at the Social Science Research Network (SSRN).

    The text on this page was created by Professor David Denyer, Professor of Organizational Change, Cranfield School of Management.