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FAQ: How do I cite a Harvard Business Review case study in APA Style?
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Last Updated: Jun 22, 2023 Views: 70196
When citing case studies in APA style you'll want to include the typical citation elements and apply general formatting guidelines. The following are examples of how case studies could be cited in APA style, but be sure to check with your professor about how they'd like you to cite case studies in your work.
In-Text Citations
Kotter (1990) explains the steps British Airways took to reverse a horrible customer service atmosphere and financial crisis.
… as the case study concluded (Bisell & Tram, 2007) .
Groysberg and Connolly (2015) concluded in their case study that….
Reference List
Example (don't forget to indent the second and subsequent lines):
Author(s). (Year). Title of case study . HBS No. number of case study. Publisher.
Example, one author:
Kotter, J. (1990). Changing the culture at British Airways . HBS No. 491-009. Harvard Business School Publishing.
Example, two authors:
Groysberg, B., & Connolly, K. (2015). BlackRock: Diversity as a driver for success . HBS No. 415-047. Harvard Business School Publishing.
More Information
- APA Guide (Shapiro Library)
- APA Style Blog This link opens in a new window (APA)
Further Help
This information is intended to be a guideline, not expert advice. Please be sure to speak to your professor about the appropriate way to cite sources in your class assignments and projects.
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Home / Guides / Citation Guides / How to Cite Sources / How to Cite a Case Study in APA, MLA, or Chicago
How to Cite a Case Study in APA, MLA, or Chicago
When citing a case study, the format in MLA and APA is similar to that of a report, and in Chicago style, it is similar to that of a book. For all three citation styles, you will need the name of the author(s), the title of the case study, the year it was published, the publishing organization/publisher, and URL (if applicable). The templates and examples below will demonstrate how to cite a case study in MLA, APA, and Chicago styles.
Author Last Name, Author First Name. Title of Case Study . Edition (if applicable), volume number (if applicable), Publisher, year of publication, URL without http:// or https:// (if applicable).
Hill, Linda A., et al. HCL Technologies (A). Rev. edition, Harvard Business School, 2008, www.hbs.edu/faculty/Pages/item.aspx?num=34784.
In-text Citation:
(Author Last Name(s) page #)
(Hill et al. 8)
Author Last Name, Author Initial. (Publication Year). Title of Case Study (Case # if applicable). Publishing Organization. URL
Hill, L., Khanna, T., & Stecker, E. (2008). HCL Technologies (A) (Case 408-004). Harvard Business School. https://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Pages/item.aspx?num=34784
(Author Last Name, Publication Year)
(Hill et al., 2008)
Notes-bibliography style
Author Last Name, First Name. Title of the Case Study . Publishing City: Publishing Organization, Publication Year. URL.
Hill, Linda A., Tarun Khanna, and Emily Stecker. HCL Technologies (A). Boston: Harvard Business School, 2008. https://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Pages/item.aspx?num=34784.
1. Author First Name Last Name, Title of the Case Study (Publishing City: Publishing Organization, Publication Year), URL.
1. Linda A. Hill, Tarun Khanna, and Emily Stecker, HCL Technologies (A) ( Boston: Harvard Business School, 2008), https://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Pages/item.aspx?num=34784.
Author-date style
Author Last Name, First Name. Publication Year. Title of the Case Study . Publishing City: Publishing Organization. URL.
Hill, Linda A., Tarun Khanna, and Emily Stecker. 2008. HCL Technologies (A). Boston: Harvard Business School. https://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Pages/item.aspx?num=34784.
In-text citation:
(Author Last Name Publication Date)
(Holl, Khanna, and Stecker 2008)
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Q. How do I cite a case study in Harvard Business Review?
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Answered By: Katie Hutchison Last Updated: Oct 26, 2016 Views: 347507
Harvard Business Review - Case Studies
This format would apply to any business case including Harvard Business Review, Ivey and MIT Sloane cases:
Author(s). Name of the case. Business Case. City. Publisher. Date. Format (Print or Web) If your format is Web include the date it was accessed. EXAMPLE: Yoffe, David B. and Renee Kim. Apple Inc in 2010. Case Study. Boston. Harvard Business Publishing, 2010. Web. 28 October 2010.
APA Format
Harvard Business School Case Study
Citation elements required and general format:
Author(s). (Year). Title of case study . HBS No. number of case study. City, State abbreviation or Country of publication: Publisher. EXAMPLES:
One Author:
Smith, S. (2003). Leadership. HBS No. 7-806-122. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing.
Two Authors:
Eisenmann, T., & Herman, K. (2006). Google, Inc. HBS No. 9-806-105. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing.
In-text citation examples – Harvard Business School Case Study
APA in-text citations include the author’s last name, the year of publication, and the page number (for quotes), either as part of the text of your paper or in parentheses.
…as the case study concluded (Smith, 2003, p. 6).
Smith reported (2003, p. 6) that the data was flawed.
Eisenmann and Herman did agree on the research findings (2006, p. 11).
… as both researchers agreed (Eisenmann & Herman, 2006, p. 11).
Chicago Manual of Style ( PDF selections copied from Grove City College Henry Buhl Library)
CASES (PRINTED)
Footnote
Mikołaj Jan Piskorski and David Chen, “Twitter,” HBS No. 710-455 (Boston: Harvard Business School Publishing, 2010), p. 8.
Bibliography
Piskorski , Mikołaj Jan, and David Chen. “Twitter.” HBS No. 710-455. Boston: Harvard Business School Publishing, 2010.
CASES (ONLINE)
On the Web
Amy C. Edmondson and Laura R. Feldman, “Group Process in the Challenger Launch Decision (A),” HBS No. 603-068 (Boston: Harvard Business School Publishing, 2002), http://hbsp.harvard.edu, accessed October 2012.
Edmondson, Amy C., and Laura R. Feldman. “Group Process in the Challenger Launch Decision (A).” HBS No. 603-068. Boston: Harvard Business School Publishing, 2002. http://hbsp. harvard.edu, accessed September 2007.
Michael J. Enright et al., “Daewoo and the Korean Chaebol,” University of Hong Kong case no. HKU143 (University of Hong Kong, August 2001), via Harvard Business Publishing, http://hbsp.harvard.edu/, accessed March 2007.
Bibliography
Enright, Michael J., et al. “Daewoo and the Korean Chaebol.” University of Hong Kong case no. HKU143 (University of Hong Kong, August 2001). Harvard Business Publishing. http://hbsp.harvard.edu/, accessed March 2007.
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How do i cite a case study in harvard business review.
Cite case study as you cite a book.
EasyBib: https://www.easybib.com/guides/citation-guides/how-do-i-cite-a/case-study/
University od Alberta: https://guides.library.ualberta.ca/apa-citation-style/case-studies
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Harvard Style Guide: Case studies
- Introduction
- Harvard Tutorial
- In-text citations
- Book with one author
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Case studies
- Group or individual assignments
- Legal Cases (Law Reports)
- No date of publication
- Personal communications
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- Citing same author, multiple works, same year
Back to Academic Integrity guide
Reference : Author/editor Last name, Initials. (Year) 'Title of case study' [Case Study], Journal Title, Volume (Issue), pp. page numbers. Available at: URL [Accessed Day Month Year].
Ofek, E., Avery, J., Rudolph, S., Martins Gomes, V., Saadat, N., Tsui, A., & Shroff, Y. (2014) 'Case study second thoughts about a strategy shift' [Case Study], Harvard Business Review , 92(12), pp. 125-129. Available at: http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=bth&AN=99621003&site=ehost-live [Accessed 10 December 2014].
In-Text-Citation :
- (Author last name, Year)
- Author last name (Year)...
- In their case study Ofek et al. (2014) describe how marketing to the young generation...
Still unsure what in-text citation and referencing mean? Check here .
Still unsure why you need to reference all this information? Check here .
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Harvard Referencing
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Harvard Referencing: Case Studies

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On this page
- Basic format to reference published data
Referencing case studies: Examples
Basic format to reference an online case study.
The basics of a Reference List entry for an case study:
- Author or authors. The surname is followed by first initials.
- Year of publication.
- Case study title, in italics .
- Date viewed.
- URL <in angled brackets>.
Example: Business Queensland 2016, Coastal Cruises Mooloolaba , case study, viewed 14 February 2017, < http://www.business.qld.gov.au/starting-business/advice-support/support/case-studies/coastal-cruises >.
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APA Citation and University Writing: Examples
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Reference examples.
These examples are references. The examples demonstrate the style and format required for a reference list.
Need help with in-text citation style? Click the tab Citations & Reference List . Need more help? Ask us!
APA 7 Style Guide Examples
APA Style Notes
- Date of retrieval
- Missing Info
The examples on this page should only be used as a guide. The following links are official APA Style resources:
APA Style FAQ [APA Style]
Quick Answers - Reference
APA Tutorial: The Basics of APA Style
https://URL
URL where information was r etrieved not required for library database citations.
Database where information was retrieved not required in most instances except for special cases.
A citation for an article from a library database does not require the URL or name of the database.
ONLINE! URL
Do not include the words "Retrieved from" any longer before the URL
URL is important for items found freely available online. APA rules recommend using the homepage URL when an item can be easily located - such as URLs for news websites or online databases such as Hathi Trust and Internet Archive. Here is an example - only the homepage URL is used, not the full webpage URL.
Gallagher, D. (2018, Feb. 3 ) Is Google Losing to Amazon? Wall Street Journal. https://www.wsj.com
Retrieved date is only included in a reference if the information cited is likely to change.
In general, do not include retrieved date within a citation, unless it is required by your instructor, or you are citing a blog, wiki, and a post from a personal website.
Example of information likely to change:
Neurology. (n.d.). In Wikipedia . Retrieved August 8, 2007 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neurology
This is only in cases where this is no published date and the information is likely to change.
[Square Brackets]
[Square Brackets] have several functions in APA Style. Regardless of the function, words within square brackets are your words .
1) [Square brackets] identify source types. APA Style recommends (not requires) providing identifying information when the title and other information in the citation does not identify the source. Add [square brackets] when needed to clarify what the item is. For example, [Case study], [Blog post], [Wiki], [Twitter post], [Facebook post] [Personal website], [PDF document], [Excel document], [Video], [Interview], [Data], [Data set].
Sasal, D. (2017, June 13) Project Management simplified: Learn the fundamentals of PMI's framework [Video]. Youtube. https://youtu.be/ZKOL-rZ79gs
2) Use square brackets If you’re referencing an unusual item.
APA Style Blog: Using Square Brackets
3) Use square brackets when there is missing information - for example, missing date and title.
APA Style Blog: Missing Pieces: How to Write an APA Style Reference Even Without All the Information
Do you have questions about authors?
- Click here. APA FAQ tab. Need help formatting AUTHOR names? No author, multiple authors, etc... In the AUTHOR box, click the tabs IN-TEXT or REFERENCE to learn how to handle 1-5 authors, and 6+ authors.
Authors for websites are often corporations, organizations or governments. If there is no person as the author consider using a corporate/group name.
Use a corporate/group name when an o rganization, rather than an individual, takes responsibility for the creation of a work. Ask yourself, whose website is it - what company, organization or government agency?
No author? Are you sure? Is it a Group/corporate Author?
APA Style Blog on group authors
If there is no author and no group/corporate author, begin the reference with the TITLE in the author-place. Use a shortened version of the title in when using in-text citations.
How to write an APA Style reference when information is missing
No date? Missing title? Missing source?
APA Style Blog on missing information
- Guidelines for missing information This PDF was created and made available by the APA Style Blog.
- Articles - Print
- Articles - Online
- Articles - Library database
- Articles - Library database with DOI
Working Papers
Article - print.
I ansiti , M., Lakhani, K. R., McBrien, K., & Moon, M. (2017). Managing our hub economy: Strategy, ethics, and network competition in the age of digital superpower. Harvard Business Review , 95 (5), 84-92.
Online Journal Article
Klein, G., & Aubry, M. (2017). Introducing the issue on megaprojects. Project Management Journal , 48 (6), 3-4. https://www.pmi.org/PMJ
Wang, J., Meric, G., Liu, Z., & Meric, I. (2010). A comparison of the determinants of stock returns in the 1987 and 2008 stock market meltdowns. Banking and Finance Review, 2 (1), 15-26. http://www.bankingandfinancereview.com/
Online Newspaper Article
Gallagher , D. (2018, February 3 ). Is Google losing to Amazon? The Wall Street Journal. https://www.wsj.com
Krauss, C. (2008, August 30). Surge in natural gas has Utah driving cheaply. The New York Times . https://www.nytimes.com
APA Style Blog on citing newspapers
Is this website a newspaper, magazine or journal?
"There’s no governing authority who decides what’s a newspaper versus a website versus an online magazine versus something else entirely. Best to look at how the site refers to itself and follow the convention associated with that. So if they call themselves a newspaper, italicize the name; otherwise, don’t." APA Style Blog
If the site does not refer to itself as a newspaper, magazine or journal cite the source as a webpage - scroll down to Online - Webpage.
Articles from library databases without doi .
Journal Article:
Arruda-Filho, E., Cabusas, J., & Dholakia, N. (2010). Social behavior and brand devotion among iPhone innovators. International Journal of Information Management, 30 (6), 475-480.
Magazine Article:
Barkin, E. (2010, April). Jetting to greener pastures. Customer Relationship Management, 14 (4), 30-33,36.
Newspaper Article:
Krauss, C. (2008, August 30). Surge in natural gas has Utah driving cheaply. The New York Times , 157 (54418), A1. https://www.nytimes.com/
Articles from library databases with doi.
Gonzalez, J., Ragins, B., Ehrhardt, K., & Singh, R. (2018). Friends and family: The role of relationships in community and workplace attachment. Journal of Business & Psychology , 33 (1), 89-104. https://doi.org/ 10.1007/s10869-016-9476-3
Holland, C. P. (1995). Cooperative supply chain management: The impact of interorganizational information systems. The Journal of Strategic Information Systems, 4 (2), 117-133. https://doi.org/10.1016/0963-8687(95)80020-Q
Deming, D., & Dynarski, S. (2008). The lengthening of childhood (National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper No. 14124). http://www.nber.org/papers/w14124
White papers.
Department for Business Innovation & Skills. (2016). Success as a knowledge economy: Teaching excellent, social mobility and student choice [White paper]. Crown. https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/523396/bis-16-265-success-as-a-knowledge-economy.pdf
APA Style on White Papers
Author, A. A. (year). Title of work (Report No. 123). Publisher.
Author, A. A. (year). Title of work (Report No. 123). http:// www.URL.com
Source: American Psychological Association, 2010, p.206.
- Books in print
Book in print
Brader, t. (2006). campaigning for hearts and minds: how emotional appeals in political ads work . university of chicago press., laudon, k.c. & traver, c.g. (2016). e-commerce: business, technology, society (12 th ed.). pearson., lewis, r., & dart, m. (2010). the new rules of retail: competing in the world's toughest marketplace . palgrave macmillan., miller, t. e., bender, b. e., & schuh, j. h. (2005). promoting reasonable expectations: aligning student and institutional views of the college experience . jossey-bass..
Book with no author, but has an editor or editors: add (Ed.) or (Eds.)
Duncan , G. J., & Brooks-Gunn, J. (Eds.). (1997). Consequences of growing up poor . Russell Sage Foundation.
Ebooks (APA 7)
Ebook from a library database (ie. Ebook Central ProQuest)
Kerzner, H. (2017). Project management metrics, KPIS, and dashboards: A guide to measuring and monitoring project performance . https://ebookcentral.proquest.com
Ebook found online:
Barton, Clara. (1904). A story of the Red Cross: Glimpses of field work . D. Appleton and Company. http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/30230
Ebook accessed using a specific reader
Gladwell, M. (2011). Outliers: The story of success . Back Bay Books. https://www.amazon.com
- General Guidelines
- Library Database
- Website (including photo)
- Reference examples
Figures: graphs, flow charts, maps, drawings, photos, etc.
Looking for tables > use formatting information in the box Tables.
Click through the tabs and find in-text citation and reference examples.
Using Statista? Scroll down to the Statista box.
Video tutorial: APA Style for Figures and Tables
Looking for tables > using formatting information in the box Tables.
A figure may be a chart, a graph, a photograph, a drawing, or any other illustration or nontextual depiction. Any type of illustration other than a table is referred to as a figure.
When you use a figure that has been adapted or copied directly from another source, you need to reference that original source. This reference appears as a caption underneath the figure (image):
- don't include a title on top - the caption is your title
- concise explanation of the figure; i.e. a brief but descriptive phrase
- include copyright information
- format your caption - use italics and a capital F for Figure and sequential numbering (if you have more than one Figure)
Legend (if needed) :
A legend explains the symbols used in the figure. It should have the same kind and proportion of lettering that appear in the rest of the figure.
- capitalize major words in the legend
- place the legend within the figure (it may already be there if you have copied the graph from elsewhere)
General rules:
- Number all figures with Arabic numerals in the order in which they are first mentioned in text, regardless of whether a more detailed discussion of the figure occurs later in the paper. For example, Figure 1...Figure 2...etc.
- Refer to the figure in your writing - no italics, but with capital F, for example "In Figure 1..."
- Copyright permission for using figures and images in theses/dissertations/exegeses - obtain written copyright permission from the copyright holder if you reproduced or adapted a figure from a copyrighted source. If you are adapting material from multiple sources, and integrating them into a single figure, you might need to include multiple permission statements, one for each source.
- Figures must have a reference in your Reference List.
Multiple Sources:
See Simon Fraser University's instructions for citing multi-sources.
Created by Auckland University of Technology Library, and adapted with permission.
APA Style on citing Tables & Figures
Figure reproduced in your paper
Use this format for figures you COPY - reproduced exactly as they appear in another source. Use this format when you do not make any modifications or add data to the table.
Caption Format - caption under a figure

Figure 1. FinSec's communication networks. Reprinted from Employment Relations in New Zealand (2nd ed., p.355), by E. Rasmussen, 2009. Pearson. Copyright 2009 by Erling Rasmussen.
In-text citation:
Reference list entry:
Figure referred to and not reproduced in your paper
If you simply refer to a figure, format the in text-citation and the reference list entry in the usual way.

Figure 1. Factors influencing the formation of tourists' needs. Reprinted from "Factors that Obstruct Tourism Development in Bangladesh", by N. Jahan and S. Rahman, 2016, CLEAR International Journal of Research in Commerce & Management, 7 (9) , p.53. Copyright 2016 by Chinniah Lakshmiammal Educational Academy & Research (CLEAR) Foundation.
If you simply refer to a figure and do not include it in your text, format the in text citation and the reference list entry in the usual way.
Caption Format - caption under a figure
Example from ACNielsen Market Information Digest database
Figure 1 . The market location and dollar sales of meat pies in New Zealand. SMAP is the segment of market for the Auckland Province, SMLNI for the Lower North Island, SMSI for the South Island; MAP is the moving annual total. Nielsen Market Information Digest New Zealand database. Copyright 2011 by The Nielsen Company.
Example: from Passport (Euromonitor) database
Figure 2 . Trade volume of ready to drink high strength premixes sold in New Zealand, measured in 000 litres. Passport database. Copyright 2010 by Euromonitor International.
If you refer to a figure, format the in-text citation and the reference list entry in the usual way:
Caption Format - caption under a figure
Figure 1 . Vermeer, J. (c. 1665). Girl with a pearl earring . From Mauritshuis Royal Picture Gallery, The Hague. http://www.mauritshuis.nl/index.aspx?Chapterid=2295. Reprinted with permission.
Figure 2 . America's Army screen dump showing soldiers and watch tower. From America's Army (Version 3). http://www.americasarmy.com. Copyright 2010 by America’s Army.
If you refer to a figure, format the in-text citation and the reference list entry in the usual way.
- Not every reference to an artwork needs a reference list entry, for example, if you refer to a famous painting, as above, it would not need a reference.
- clicking on or hovering your mouse over the image
- looking at the bottom of the image
- looking at the URL
- if there is no title, create a short descriptive one yourself and put it in square brackets e.g. [...]
Reference List
Examples of references for figures.
Retrieved from a library database
Euromonitor International. (2013). Youth unemployment rate vs. total unemployment rate: 2006-2011 [Graph]. Euromonitor Passport database .
Format: Figure
Author. (year created). Title of work [Type of work], Database name or URL.
No author? Use a corporate/agency/company (as known as group author name), or a screen name. If this is not an option, use the title in place of the author.
Interviews, emails, and personal communications
- Interview, Email & Personal Communications
Personal interviews that you conduct do not have references. Personal interviews are considered personal communication. Include any relevant and important information about the interview in the body of your paper. APA Style states, "An interview is not considered recoverable data, so no reference to this is provided in the reference list. You may, however, cite the interview within the text as a personal communication." APA Style
Interviews - research participants . APA Style
An interview you read has a citation and reference. Where did you find the interview? Is it from a magazine article, website, blog, etc.? Use the appropriate APA Style format to create the reference.
Email & Personal Communications
Email & personal communications do not have references at the end of your paper, but you will create a citation within the body of your paper.
Why do personal communications not have references? References are created to direct your reader to the sources of information you used in your paper. With personal communications you cannot direct the reader to the source - to the phone conversation you had, to your email inbox, to the day of the interview - the reader of your paper cannot access these sources.
Include any relevant and important information about the email and personal communication in the body of your paper.
Here is an example for the APA Style :
Britannica Academic & Encyclopaedia Britannica
Library database.
Fisher, W. W. (2018). Patent. Encyclopaedia Britannica .
Britannica, T. Editors of Encyclopaedia (2019, November 20). Prohibition. Encyclopedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/event/Prohibition-United-States-history-1920-1933
Note: Encyclopedia Britannica online has a citation tool.
Faulkner Reports
Reports from these databases: Faulkner Advisory for IT Studies (FAITS), and Faulkner Security Management Practices.
Barr, J. G. (2019). Artificial intelligence . Faulkner Advisory for IT Studies.
Keston, G. (2019). Network access control . Faulkner Security Management Practices.
Gale eBooks
Agile software. In Encyclopedia of Emerging Industries (7th ed., pp. 5-10). Gale. https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3664200008/GVRL?u=ggusf_main&sid=GVRL&xid=4c07cc09
Krauss , C. (2008, August 30). Surge in natural gas has Utah driving cheaply. The New York Times , 157 (54418), p. A1. https://www.nytimes.com/
Nexis Uni company dossiers pull together information from different sources (e.g. Corporate Affiliations and Disclosure). Cite the publisher of the information you use.
LexisNexis Corporate Affiliations. ( March 22, 2021 ). McDonald's Corporation. https://advance.lexis.com/api/document?collection=company-financial&id=urn:contentItem:5C1R-8W91-JC4V-R048-00000-00&context=1516831
ReferenceUSA
Infogroup , Inc . (2017). List of brewers in Ramsey County, MN. Retrieved from ReferenceUSA database.
I nfogroup , Inc. (n.d.). Starbucks Corp [Company profile]. Retrieved from ReferenceUSA database.
S&P Global NetAdvantage
Industry survey.
Snyder, K. (2017, October). Health care equipment and supplies. CFRA Industry Surveys [PDF].
- Blogs & Wikipedia
- YouTube & Video
Social Media
- Help! More info for web sources...
Website (entire website, not a webpage)
No citation is needed for an entire website. Include the website within the body of a paper.
"In my paper, I mention a website. I refer to the website as a whole, and I am not discussing a specific webpage or an article within a website. Do I need to create an in-text citation and a reference list citation?"
NO . All you need to do is include the URL within the body of your paper, and you do not need to include the website and URL in your reference list at the end of the paper. In APA Style there is no specific formatting recommendations.
Two examples - full websites mentioned within a paper.
1) The Department of Health has just released a new website to help people identify and compare health care programs available in their area. The website is called HealthCare.gov at http://www.healthcare.gov/ This resource is easy to use and the interface is intuitive, but the website will not support members of the population not using the internet.
2) Kidspsych ( http://www.kidspsych.org ) is a wonderful interactive website for children. This resource is appropriate for children ages 3 to 10.
APA Style Blog: Websites & Webpages
Webpage (not an online journal, magazine or newspaper > use article format) (APA 7)
Webpage with author:
Doyle, A. (2017, July 1). Best questions to ask at a job interview: What to ask the employer during a job interview. The balance careers. The Balance. https://www.thebalance.com/questions-to-ask-in-a-job-interview-2061205
Webpage without a person as the author - there are options! (APA 7)
Authors for websites are often corporations, organizations or governments. If there is no person listed as the author consider using a corporate/group name . Use a corporate/group name when an o rganization, rather than an individual, takes responsibility for the creation of a work. Ask yourself, whose website is it - what company, organization or government agency?
Webpage with no person as author. Use a corporate/group author. (APA 7)
United States government agency
U.S. Food and Drug Administration. (2018, February 14). Traumatic brain injury: FDA actions and research. http://usgov.info/2018/02/14/traumatic-brain-injury-fda-actions-and-research/
U.S. Small Business Association. (n.d.). Build your business plan. https://www.sba.gov/tools/business-plan/1?interiorpage2015
Ben & Jerry's. (n.d.). Our history. https://www.benjerry.com/about-us
Samsung. (2018). Vision 2020. https://www.samsung.com/us/aboutsamsung/vision/vision2020/
Kaiser Permanente. (2013, November). Measuring quality and patient safety. https://healthy.kaiserpermanente.org
Webpage with no author
Effective business plans: Strategies for managers. (2018, March 4). Business Pros. http:// www.businesspros.com
Format: Title of webpage. (Year, Month Day web page was last updated). Webpage. URL
In-text citation for no author: ("First Few Words of Title," YEAR). ("Effective Business Plans," 2018).
If the site refers to itself as a newspaper, magazine or journal cite the source using an article format. Scroll up to Articles - Online.
"There’s no governing authority who decides what’s a newspaper versus a website versus an online magazine versus something else entirely. Best to look at how the site refers to itself and follow the convention associated with that. So if they call themselves a newspaper, italicize the name; otherwise, don’t."
Blogs, wikis, and posts on personal websites
Stephanie (2018, february 5). what to do if your obamacare 1095-a column b is zero. poorer than you . http://poorerthanyou.com/category/taxes/.
APA Style on citing Blogs
When citing Wikipedia, cite an archived version of a Wikipedia page so that readers can retrieve the version you used.
*Access the archived version on Wikipedia by selecting “View history” and then the time and date of the version you used.
*If a wiki does not provide permanent links to archived versions of the page, include the URL for the entry and a retrieval date.
Business performance management. ( 2018, January 25 ). In Wikipedia . https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_performance_ management
Neurology. (n.d.). In Wikipedia . Retrieved December 15, 2017 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neurology
APA Style Blog on citing Wikipedia
Entire blog, wiki, or personal website
"In my paper, I mention a blog. I refer to the blog as a whole, and I am not discussing a specific blog post. Do I need to create an in-text citation and a reference list citation?"
No. All you need to do is include the URL within the body of your paper, and you do not need to include the website and URL in your reference list at the end of the paper. In APA Style there is no specific formatting recommendations.
Two examples for mentioning the entire blog, wiki or personal website. In the body of the paper:
1) At age 22, blogger Stephanee (Stephanie), started her the blog Poorer Than You (http://poorerthanyou.com). The posts are aimed at millennials and provide financial advice on a variety of topics.
2) I have learned a lot by reading the Psych Learning Curve blog (http://psychlearningcurve.org). This blog is an excellent resource for teachers.
Glass, I. (Producer). (2013, September 6). How I got into college [Audio podcast]. In This American Life . http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/504/how-i-got-into-college
Purdue OWL APA Style: How to Cite a Podcast
LastName, A. A. (Producer). (Year, Month Day {of podcast}). Title of podcast [Audio podcast]. In Title of Podcast Series . Publisher. URL
Podcast without a series - stand alone
LastName, A. A. (Host). (Year, Month Day {of podcast}). Title of podcast [Audio podcast episode]. Publisher. URL
Gallagher , D. (2018, February 3 ). Is Google losing to Amazon? The Wall Street Journal. https://www.wsj.com
Krauss, C. (2008, August 30). Surge in natural gas has Utah driving cheaply. The New York Times . https://www.nytimes.com
CNN. (2015, February 15). Boston sets new snow record [Video]. https://www.cnn.com/videos/weather/2015/02/15/newday-alesci-ripley-boston-sets-new-snow-record.cnn/video/playlists/top-news-videos/
Online Newspaper format:
Author, A. A. (Year, Month Day). Title of article: Capital letter to start subtitle. Title of Newspaper . https://www.someaddress.com
Online Magazine format:
Author, A. A. (Year, Month Day). Title of article: Capital letter to start subtitle. Title of Magazine, volume number (issue number if available). https://www.someaddress.com
Online News broadcast video:
Producer Name. (Year, Month Day). Video title [Video]. Website host. https://www.someaddress.com
Youtube video
Forbes. (2018, January 19). Facebook announces algorithm changes; Apple brings money back to U.S. [Video]. Youtube. https://youtube/39gFZawmKfM
Sasal, D. (2017, June 13) Project Management simplified: Learn the fundamentals of PMI's framework [Video]. Youtube. https://youtu.be/ZKOL-rZ79gs
APA Style: How to Create a Reference for a YouTube Video
TikTok video
Cook, P. [@chemteacherphil]. (2019, November 19). Alkali salts get lit. #chemistry #chemteacherphil #scienceexperiments #foryou #jobforme #trend #featurethis #science #vibecheck [Video]. TikTok. https://vm.tiktok.com/xP1r1m
Washington Post [@washingtonpost]. (2019, December 3). News is all around us #frozen #newsroom #newspaper [Video]. TikTok. https://vm.tiktok.com/x2sKUu
TikTok Profile
Witherspoon, R. [@officialreesetiktok]. (n.d.). vsco mom [TikTok profile]. TikTok. Retrieved January 12, 2020, from https://vm.tiktok.com/xS3B86
APA 7 TikTok Citation Guide

TED Talk video
If you viewed the video on the TED website:
Palmer, A. (2013, February). Amanda Palmer: The art of asking [Video]. TED. https://www.ted.com/talks/amanda_palmer_the_art_of_asking
If you viewed the video on YouTube, the same TED Talk would be referenced as follows:
TED. (2013, March 1). Amanda Palmer: The art of asking [Video]. Youtube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMj_P_6H69g
APA Style Blog: How to Cite a TED Talk in APA Style
Film, Video, or DVD
Selick, H. (Director). (1993). The nightmare before Christmas [Film]. Touchstone.
Smithee, A. F. (Director). (2001). Really big disaster movie [ Film ]. Paramount Pictures.
APA Style Film and TV
NY Review of Books. (2013, September 6). The total weight of jellyfish in the Black Sea is 10x greater than that of all fish caught around the world in a year. [Tweet; thumbnail link to article]. Twitter. https://twitter.com/nybooks/status/376055502880665600
Obama, M. (2013, February 28). “ We can give all our children the bright, healthy futures they so richly deserve .” —the First Lady on why healthier food options are good for American businesses [Image attached] [Status update] . Facebook. https://www.facebook.com/photo.php? fbid =10152608245040578& set=a.10150238318835578.467644.22092775577&type=1
Gaiman, N. (2012, February 29). Please celebrate Leap Year Day in the traditional manner by taking a writer out for dinner. [Status update]. Facebook. https://www.facebook.com/neilgaiman/posts/10150574185041016
Reuters Top News [Reuters]. (2016, November 1). Inside David Bowie's art collection [Twitter moment]. Twitter. https://twitter.com/i/moments/793575609028915200
APA Style: How to Cite a Twitter Moment
APA Style: How to Cite Facebook
APA Style: How to Cite Instagram
In APA Style there are no specific formatting rules for citing PDFs.
Why? PDF is just a file format. To cite this type of document, ask yourself: What is this?
You must determine what the nature of the PDF, and then use the corresponding format.
There are two common types of documents that appear as PDFs:
- Articles (magazines, newspapers, journals, newsletters, etc.)
- Reports (government report, company profile, company annual report, etc.)
Need help? Ask us by emailing [email protected]
For Webinar citations in APA 7, Please check out Purdue University APA 7 citation guide on Other Non-Print Sources available here:
https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/research_and_citation/apa_style/apa_formatting_and_style_guide/reference_list_other_non_print_sources.html
Rules for citing information found on the web:
No author? Start with the title and then the date. A screen-name can be used as the author. An organization/company can be the author.
Date? If a date is not specifically included with the item you are citing, look for the last updated date. No date type (n.d.)
Titles? Keep it simple - do not italicize website titles. This can get confusing: If a webpage is part of a larger website, do not italicize the title of the page. If the webpage is an independent document on the website, do italicize the title of the page. This is also a judgment call that you will have to make. If you are not sure, do not italicize.
URL? Yes, include it. www.theURL.com
Retrieved on date? In general, do not include the retrieved date for most web sources. If a webpage is likely to change over time, such as a wiki or personal website, include the date that you looked at the page.
Author and website name? If the name of the website is the same as the name of the author, you do not need to include it a second time.
[Square Brackets]? APA Style recommends providing identifying information - when needed for clarification. If the information in the citation and URL do not clearly identify what it is you are citing, add [square brackets]. For example, [Blog post], [Wiki], [Twitter post], [Facebook post] [Personal website], [PDF document], [Video], [Interview], [Data].
- Statistics & Data Sets
- Dictionary / Definitions
Barr, J. G. (2018). Artificial intelligence . Faulkner Advisory for IT Studies database. MarketLine . (2013, April 29). NIKE, Inc.: Company profile .
Annual Report
American Psychological Association. (2013). 2012 annual report of the American Psychological Association . http://www.apa.org/pubs/info/reports/2012-report.pdf
Unilever. (2015). Annual report and accounts 2015 strategic report. https://www.unilever.com/Images/annual_report_and_accounts_ar15_tcm244-478426_en.pdf
APA Style on citing annual reports
Microsoft. (2005, September 25). Form 10-Q. Arrow International, Inc. (2009). 10-K Annual Report 2009 .
Government Report
San Francisco Department of Public Health. (2016). San Francisco community health needs assessment 2016 . https://www.sfdph.org/dph/hc/HCAgen/HCAgen2016/May%2017/2016CHNA-2.pdf
U.S. Department of Education. (2014). Profile of undergraduate students: 2011-12. Web tables (NCES 2015-167). https://nces.ed.gov/ pubs2015/2015167.pdf
National Cancer Institute. (2016). Taking part in cancer treatment research studies (Publication No. 16-6249). https://www.cancer.gov/publications/patient-education/CRS.pdf
Office of the Inspector General U.S. Department of Justice. (2017, May). Review of the handling of sexual harassment and misconduct allegations by the department’s Civil Division . https://oig.justice.gov/reports/2017/e1703.pdf
APA Style: How to Cite Government Report
U.S. Constitution
APA Style Blog states, "All citations of the U.S. Constitution begin with U.S. Const. , followed by the article, amendment, section, and/or clause numbers as relevant." APA Style Blog: How to Cite the U.S. Constitution in APA Style
In-text (U.S. Const. amend. II)
Reference U.S. Const. amend. II
Congressional Bill
Equitable Health Care for Severe Mental Illnesses Act of 1993, S. 671, 103d Cong., 1st Sess. (1993).
Federal Statutes
Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993, 29 U.S.C. §§ 2601–2654 (2006).
FORMAT: Name of the Statute, Tile number Source § Section number(s) (Year).
APA Style: Writing References for Federal Statutes
Statistics & Data Sets
Bureau of Labor Statistics. (2016). Consumer price index - all urban consumers, 1956-2016 [Time series]. http://data.bls.gov
Pew Research Center. (2016). June 10-July 12, 2015 – Gaming, jobs and broadband [Data file and codebook]. http://www.pewresearch.org
World Bank, World Development Indicators. (2016). Firms using banks to finance working capital (% of firms) [Data file]. http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/IC.FRM.BKWC.ZS?view= chart
United States Department of Housing and Urban Development. (2008). Indiana income limits [Data set]. http://www.huduser.org/Datasets/IL/IL08/in_fy2008.pdf
APA Style on citing data sets
U.S. Census
U.S. Census Bureau (2011). Selected housing characteristics, 2007-2011 American community survey 5-year estimates [Data file]. http://factfinder2.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ACS_11_5YR_DP04
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. (2009). Cahaba River Natural Refuge. https://www.fws.gov/cahabariver/maps.html
International Monetary Fund. (2017, May 8). IMF lending at a glance. http://www.imf.org/external/np/exr/map/lending/
WOU APA Style on citing maps
Google Maps
Google. (n.d.). [Google Maps directions for driving from Ingolstadt, Germany, to Geneva, Switzerland]. Retrieved August 4, 2015 from https://goo.gl/maps/ILt8O
APA Style on citing online map s
IAC. (n.d.). Impact investing. In Investopedia . Retrieved May 15, 2016 from https://www.investopedia.com/terms/i/impact-investing.asp
Merriam Webster (n.d.). R eliability. In Merriam-Webster.com dictionary (11th ed.). Retrieved January 11, 2020 from http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/reliability
Dictionary references in APA 7
- Library Databases
- Multiple sources
Tables: numerical values or text displayed in clearly designated columns and rows
Looking for: graphs, flow charts, maps, drawings, photos, etc. > see box Figures.
Created by Auckland University of Technology Library , and adapted with permission.
Tables usually show numerical value or textual information and are almost always characterized by a row-column structure. Any type of illustration other than a table is a figure .
General notes on tables:
- Tables are located at the end of your paper, after the reference list and before any appendixes. Each table is on a separate page.
- Tables may use single-spacing or one-and-a-half spacing (p. 229).
- Information necessary for understanding the table and definitions of abbreviations used within the table appear in a table note. ( APA Style Blog )
- All tables must be cited in-text and discussed within the body of your paper, and be included in your reference list.
Basic instructions for formatting tables
Number t ables sequentially (i.e.if you have more than one table in your writing) e.g. Table 1, Table 2 .....
- Each table must be referred to in the text, using a capital T, for example: ...as shown in Table 1
Title is placed directly a bove the table itself and below the table number.
- Brief but clear and explanatory, in italics and with major words capitalized with no full stop.
Note is placed directly below the table, the word "Note" in italics with a full stop, for example: Note.
- Explain abbreviations, symbols etc
- Acknowledge the source of the table
- Include a copyright statement at the end of the note.
For specific and probability note (section 5.16, p 138).
Ruling (Lines)
- Limit the use of lines to those that are necessary
- Appropriately positioned white space can be an effective substitute.
- Tables may be submitted either single or double spaced. Consider readability (section 5.17, p 141).
Sales of Take Home Ice Cream in New Zealand
Note . MAT= moving annual total, From ACNielsen Market Information Digest New Zealand .Copyright 2010 by The Nielsen Company.
Table reproduced in your paper
Use this format for tables you COPY - reproduced exactly as they appear in another source. Use this format when you do not make any modifications or add data to the table.
Note format - note under a table

Note. Reprinted from Employment relations in New Zealand (p 98), by E. Rasmussen, 2009. Pearson. Copyright (2009) by Erling Rasmussen.
Use the reference style for books - see go to box Books
Table referred to and not reproduced in your paper
If you simply refer to a table, format the in-text citation and the reference list entry in the usual way.
Note format - note under a table
In-text citation:
Use the reference style for articles - see box Articles .
Table referred to but not reproduced in your paper
Note Format : note below a table
Percentage of Men and Women Who Have Bought Fruit and Vegetable Products in the Last Four Weeks

Note. wc = weighted count, shown in thousands; v% =vertical percentage, showing which % of the column group also belongs to the row group; h% = horizontal percentage showing which percentage of the row group also belongs to the column group. Roy Morgan Single Source New Zealand database. Copyright 2015 by Roy Morgan New Zealand Ltd.
Reference List entry:
Note format - note below a table
Percentage of New Zealand Population Who Have Never Worked by Age Group. By age group June 2016 quarter
Note . Adapted from http://www.stats.govt.nz/browse_for_stats/income-and-work/employment_and_unemployment/people-never-worked.aspx . Copyright (2016) by Statistics New Zealand.
Use the reference style for websites - see box Online , tab Websites.
If you refer to a table but don’t provide a copy of it in your assessment, simply give an in-text citation in the usual way
Reference list entry:
Table - compiled from a variety of sources
Multi source data
If you create your own table by compiling data from multiple sources, you will still need to cite where you got your information from. You do not need to give the full bibliographic citation in the note, an author and date is sufficient.
Note format - note under table:
In-text citation:
Multiple kinds of data
If you have multiple kinds of data (population figures, employment information... etc.) in one table you would describe each set of data)
Note format - note under Table:
For more information see:
APA Style for figures & tables
Examples of references for tables.
Retrieved from a book
New Strategist. (2008). Women's time use by age, 2007 [Table]. In New Strategist Editors, American women: Who they are and how they live (4th ed.) . New Strategist Publications, Inc.
Retrieved from a online source
US Census Bureau. (2002). Industries in Which California Ranks First in Terms of Sales or Receipts Per Capita [Table]. 2002 Economic Census . http://www.census.gov/econ/census02/data/tops/TOPSTCA.HTM
National Center for Education Statistics. (2007). [Chart showing racial makeup of San Francisco Unified School District students under age 18]. Common Core of Data . http://nces.ed.gov/ccd/districtsearch/
If the table you find does not have a title, then describe the content in [square brackets].
Format: Table
Author. (Publication Date). Title of table [Table]. In author or editor of work Title of work . Publisher.
Author. (Publication Date). Title of table [Table]. Title of website. URL
Author. (Publication Date). [Title of table] [Table]. Title of website. URL
Case Studies
Case study published by harvard business school publishing.
Thomas, D.A. (1999). Leaving. HBS No. 400033-PDF-ENG. Harvard Business School Publishing.
Eisenmann, T., & Herman, K. (2010). Google, Inc. HBS No. 910036-PDF-ENG. Harvard Business School Publishing.
Case Study published by Ivey Publishing
Bernhut, S. (2013). The Ivey Business Journal Interview: State Capitalism, with Aldo Musacchio . Ivey ID: 9B13TB08. Ivey Publishing.
Ads and Ad Age DataCenter
Ad from a magazine or newspaper.
Clairol [Advertisement]. (2003, May). Newsweek , 11(3), 22.
Ad Age DataCenter
Crain Communications Inc. (2017). Marketing fact pack 2018 . http://adage.com/d/resources/resources /whitepaper/ marketing-fact-pack-2018
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th ed): DSM–5
American psychiatric association. (2013). diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.). https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.books.9780890425596, (american psychiatric association, 2013), cq researcher.
Karaim , R. (2013, December 13). Chemical and biological weapons. CQ Researcher, 23, 1053-1076. http://library.cqpress.com
IBISWorld - US, China, & Global
Moses, J. (2020, April). IT consulting in the US (Industry Report 54151) . IBISWorld . Retrieved April 15, 2020 from https://my.ibisworld.com/us/en/industry/54151/about
Hyland, R. (2019, February). Bars & nightclubs in California (Industry Report CA72241). IBISWorld . Retrieved April 15, 2020 from https://my.ibisworld.com/us/en/industry-state/ca72241/about
Mergent Online
Mergent Inc. (n.d.). Apple, Inc.: Business segments .
Mergent Inc. (2014, February 28). McDonald's Corp.: Ford Equity research report .
Apple Inc. (2013, October 30). Form 10-K .
Microsoft. (2005, September 25). Form 10-Q.
Passport (via Euromonitor International)
Euromonitor International. (2011, January 10). American Airlines fights the distribution model .
Euromonitor International. (2010, March 15). Starbucks Corp - hot drinks - USA .
Euromonitor International. (2013). Youth unemployment rate vs. total unemployment rate: 2006-2011 [Graph].
Euromonitor International. (2010). Trade volume of ready to drink high strength premixes in New Zealand, measured in 000 liters [Graph].
Business Source Complete
Is it an article? Use the format: Articles - library database
Is it a report? >> Use the format: Reports
The database Business Source Complete has a citation tool. Click CITE and select APA citation format. Review the citation and edit it.
BizJournals (via American City Business Journals)
Dittmer, M. (2018, March 16). Busiest Bay Area airlines. San Francisco Business Times .
Economist Intelligence Unit
Economist Intelligence Unit. (2011, April). Country report: India .
Harvard Business Review
Is it an article? >> Use the article format .
Is it a case study? >> Use the case study format .
Morningstar Investment Research Center
Google , Inc. (2011, December 31). Form 10-K .
Morningstar . (n.d.). Google: Key ratios . Retrieved March 13, 2014, from Morningstar Investment Research.
Morningstar . (2014, February 28) Fidelity Blue Chip Growth: Rating and risk . Morningstar Investment Research.
Reichart, K. R. (2014, March 6). Fidelity Blue Chip Growth: Fund analyst repor t. Morningstar Investment Research database.
Summer, R. (2014, February 25). Google, Inc.: Stock analyst report . Morningstar Investment Research database.
MarketLine Report (retrieved using Business Source Complete)
MarketLine Industry Profile: Footwear in the United States. (2015). Footwear Industry Profile: United States , 1–46.
MarketLine Company Profile: NIKE, Inc. (2015). In NIKE, Inc. MarketLine Company Profile (pp. 1–32).
Value Line Publishing. (2010, November 26). Ford Motor. Value Line Investment Survey .
Library database - Statista - citing data and charts
When you are viewing data, look for the citation button. SELECT CITATION. From the drop-down menu, click APA. We recommend you edit the citation. Note, Statista uses many difference SOURCES - the source is in the place of the author.
Atlas Van Lines. (May 27, 2020). Internal factors that influenced employee relocations in the United States in 2020 [Chart]. In Statista - The Statistics Portal . Retrieved April 08, 2021 from https://www.statista.com/statistics/763368/internal-factors-on-employee-relocation-us/
Airnow. (February 17, 2021). Leading iPhone apps in the Apple App Store worldwide in January 2021, by revenue (in million U.S. dollars) [Graph]. In Statista . Retrieved April 08, 2021, from https://www.statista.com/statistics/271103/top-iphone-apps-worldwide-by-revenue/
Library database - Statista - citing a full report
Collignon , H. & Sultan, N. (2014, November). Winning the business of sports 2014 . Retrieved from Statista database.
Janßen , B., Krützfeldt, W., Ramcke, K., & Staffa, V. (2014, August). Industry report - Computer and electronic product manufacturing NAICS Code 334 . Retrieved from Statista database.
Statista. (2018). Coffee market in the U.S. [Report]. Retrieved from Statista database.
Online - using Statista's website - citing data and charts
When there is no author name, use the SOURCE name in place of the author. Statista uses many difference SOURCES. Look under the table or figure for the word SOURCE.
ITU. (2011, October). Number of active mobile broadband subscriptions worldwide from 2005 to 2011 (in millions) [Chart]. In Statista . Retrieved from http://www.statista.com/statistics/186337/number-of-mobile-broadband-subscriptions-worldwide-since-2005/
Pew Research Center
Lopez, G., Ruis, N.G. & Patten, E. (2017, September 8) Key facts about Asian Americans, a diverse and growing population. http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2017/09/08/key-facts-about-asian-americans/
Shearer, E. & Gottfried, J. (2017, September 6). In 2017, two-thirds of U.S. adults get news from social media [Table]. In News Use Across Social Media Platforms 2017. http://www.journalism.org/2017/09/07/news-use-across-social-media-platforms-2017/pi_17-08-23_socialmediaupdate_0-01/
Pew Research Center. (2016). June 10-July 12, 2015 – Gaming, Jobs and Broadband [Data file and code book]. http://www.pewresearch.org
Pew Research Center. (2018, January 2018). They’re waiting longer, but U.S. women today more likely to have children than a decade ago: More than half of never-married women in their early 40s have given birth [Report]. http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2018/01/18/theyre-waiting-longer-but-u-s-women-today-more-likely-to-have-children-than-a-decade-ago/
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- Last Updated: Mar 13, 2023 2:23 PM
- URL: https://ggu.libguides.com/apa

- Case studies
General format
There is no specific way to reference a case study in APA style. Case studies are typically published as an article or report, or within a book. Format the reference list entry according to the type of publication. Following are some examples of case studies in business.
Business case study
Author(s). (Year). Title of case study . Number of case study. URL
Harvard business school case study
Dey, A. (2022). Corporate governance: A three pillar framework. HBS No. 491-009. https://hbsp.harvard.edu/cases/
Ivey business school case study
Dunbar, C., & Southam, C. (2005). London youth symphony. Ivey ID: 9B05009. http://iveycases.com
Style notes
- If the case study is not numbered, leave it out of the reference entry.
- If the source is a book, format the reference according to the rules for books.
- If the source is a journal, format the reference according to the rules for journal articles.
- << Previous: Book and chapter
- Next: Dictionary or encyclopaedia entry >>
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- Thesis or dissertation
- Webpage or website
- Writing style resources & sample papers

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Harvard Guide to Using Sources
- The Honor Code
- In-Text Citations
In APA style, you use parenthetical citations within the text of your paper to credit your sources, to show how recently your sources were published, and to refer your reader to a more detailed citation of the source in the reference list at the end of your paper. You should use parenthetical citations when you paraphrase, quote, or make any reference to another author's work. A parenthetical citation in APA style includes the author's last name as well as the year in which the work was published, with a comma between them. If you are referring directly to a specific page in the source, you should also include the page number in your parenthetical citation. APA requires you to cite page numbers when you are quoting directly from the source. If you are paraphrasing, which is more common in the social sciences, you generally do not need to include a page number. If you have questions about whether you should include page numbers when citing in APA, you should consult your instructor.
If you mention the author's name and/or the year of publication in the sentence preceding the citation, you do not need to include them in the parenthetical citation. When you name the author in the sentence, you should include the publication year in parentheses right after the author’s name—do not wait until the end of the sentence to provide that information.
When you include a parenthetical citation at the end of a sentence, the punctuation for your sentence appears after the citation.
Citing author and date in a parenthetical citation
When you don’t mention either the author or the date of publication in your sentence, you should include both the author and the year, separated by a comma, in the parenthetical citation.
Colleges and universities need to create policies that foster inclusion for low-income students (Jack, 2019).
Citing when author’s name is mentioned in body of paper
When you mention the author’s name in your sentence, the year of publication should immediately follow the author’s name.
Anthony Jack’s (2019) study of low-income students on an elite college campus revealed that these schools are often unprepared to support the students they admit.
Jack (2019) studied the ways low-income students experience elite college campuses.
Citing page numbers
When you cite a direct quote from the source or paraphrase a specific point from the source, you should include the page number in the parenthetical citation at the end of the sentence. When you refer to a specific page or pages of the text, first list the year of publication and then list "p." followed by the page number or "pp." followed by the range of pages. If you refer to a specific chapter, indicate that chapter after the year.
The author contends that “higher education in America is highly unequal and disturbingly stratified” (Jack, 2019, p. 4).
Jack (2019) contends that “higher education in America is highly unequal and disturbingly stratified” (p. 4).
Citing sources with more than one author
When you cite a source that has two authors, you should separate their names with an ampersand in the parenthetical citation.
The authors designed a study to determine if social belonging can be encouraged among college students (Walton & Cohen, 2011).
If a work has three or more authors , you should only include the first author's name followed by et al. ( Et al. is the shortened form of the Latin et alia , which means “and others.”)
The implementation of postpartum contraceptive programs is both costly and time consuming (Ling et al., 2020).
Attributing a point to more than one source
To attribute a point or idea to multiple sources, list them in one parenthetical citation, ordered alphabetically by author and separated by semicolons. Works by the same author should be ordered chronologically, from oldest to most recent, with the publication dates separated by commas.
Students who possess cultural capital, measured by proxies like involvement in literature, art, and classical music, tend to perform better in school (Bourdieu & Passeron, 1977; Dumais, 2002; Orr, 2003).
Citing multiple works by the same author
If your reference list includes multiple works by the same author in the same year, identify them in your parenthetical citations and in your reference list by a lowercase letter after the year, assigning each letter in alphabetical order by the title of the work. When establishing the alphabetical order of works in your reference list, do not count the words "A" or "The" when they appear as the first word in a title.
One union-endorsed candidate publicly disagreed with the teachers' union on a number of issues (Borsuk, 1999a).
Citing multiple authors with the same last name
If your reference list includes sources by multiple authors with the same last name, list each author's initials before their last name, even when the works were published in different years.
The question of whether a computer can be considered an author has been asked for longer than we might expect (B. Sobel, 2017).
Citing when no author is listed
To refer to a work that is listed in your reference list by title rather than by author, cite the title or the first few words of the title.
The New York Times painted a bleak picture of the climate crisis (“Climate Change Is Not Negotiable,” 2022).
Citing when no date is listed
If the work you are citing has no date listed, you should put “n.d.” for “no date” in the parenthetical citation.
Writing research papers is challenging (Lam, n.d.).
Citing a specific part of a source that is not a page number
To refer to a specific part of a source other than page number, add that after the author-date part of your citation. If it is not clear whether you are referring to a chapter, a paragraph, a time stamp, or a slide number, or other labeled part of a source, you should indicate the part you are referring to (chapter, para., etc.).
In the Stranger Things official trailer, the audience knows that something unusual is going to happen from the moment the boys get on their bicycles to ride off into the night (Duffer & Duffer, 0:16).
- Citation Management Tools
- Reference List Format
- Examples of Commonly Cited Sources
- Frequently Asked Questions About Cite Sources in APA Format
- Sample Reference List
PDFs for This Section
- Citing Sources
- Online Library and Citation Tools
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How to Cite a Case Study
Last Updated: February 12, 2023 References
This article was co-authored by wikiHow staff writer, Jennifer Mueller, JD . Jennifer Mueller is a wikiHow Content Creator. She specializes in reviewing, fact-checking, and evaluating wikiHow's content to ensure thoroughness and accuracy. Jennifer holds a JD from Indiana University Maurer School of Law in 2006. This article has been viewed 37,061 times. Learn more...
Particularly in research for business studies or papers in the social sciences, you may want to cite a case study completed by a university or other organization. While case studies have titles and publication information like other articles, they often have a unique case study number that is typically included in your citation. While Chicago citation style is most frequently used in business schools, you may also use the American Psychological Association (APA) or Modern Language Association (MLA) style.
Sample Citations

- Example: Lee, Stan.
- If there is more than one author, list the additional authors' names in first-middle initial-last format. Separate author's names with commas, with the word "and" before the last author's name.

- Example: Lee, Stan. "DC Comics in 2016." HBS No. 999-111.

- Example: Lee, Stan. "DC Comics in 2016." HBS No. 999-111. Boston: Harvard Business School Publishing, 2017.

- Example: Lee, Stan. "DC Comics in 2016." HBS No. 999-111. Boston: Harvard Business School Publishing, 2017. http://hbsp.harvard.edu, accessed July 2018.

- Print example: Stan Lee, "DC Comics in 2016," HBS No. 999-111 (Boston, Harvard Business School Publishing, 2017), p. 14.
- Online example: Stan Lee, "DC Comics in 2016," HBS No. 999-111 (Boston, Harvard Business School Publishing, 2017), http://hbsp.harvard.edu, accessed July 2018.

- Example: Lee, S.
- Separate the names of multiple authors with commas, placing an ampersand before the last author's name.

- Example: Lee, S. (2017).
- If there is no year of publication listed, use the abbreviation "n.d." in the parentheses.

- Example: Lee, S. (2017). DC Comics in 2016 .

- Example: Lee, S. (2017). DC Comics in 2016 . HBS No. 999-111.

- Example: Lee, S. (2017). DC Comics in 2016 . HBS No. 999-111. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing.

- Example: (Lee, 2017).

- If there are 2 authors, place the word "and" between their names. For 3 or more, use commas with the word "and" before the final author. After the first author, list subsequent authors with their first name followed by their last name. For example: Lee, Stan and Clark Kent.

- Example: Lee, Stan. DC Comics in 2016. Case Study.

- Example: Lee, Stan. DC Comics in 2016. Case Study. Boston. Harvard Business School Publishing, 2017.
- Note that unlike many other citation styles, the unique case study number is not necessarily included for MLA citations. Ask your instructor or supervisor if they want this information included in your citation.

- Print example: Lee, Stan. DC Comics in 2016. Case Study. Boston. Harvard Business School Publishing, 2017. Print.
- Web example: Lee, Stan. DC Comics in 2016. Case Study. Boston. Harvard Business School Publishing, 2017. Web. 17 July 2018.
- If you accessed the case study online, you may put the URL of the case study. However, this isn't required by MLA style. Ask your instructor or supervisor for their preference.

- Example: (Lee 27).
Community Q&A

You Might Also Like

- ↑ https://www.library.hbs.edu/content/download/49322/786369/version/1/file/HBS_Citation_Guide
- ↑ https://guides.library.ualberta.ca/apa-citation-style/case-studies
- ↑ http://libanswers.snhu.edu/faq/128490
- ↑ http://libanswers.walsh.edu/faq/147917
- ↑ http://maag.guides.ysu.edu/businesscitations/mla
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HBS Citation Guide
Guidelines for citing sources for written work at HBS.
This guide describes citation conventions for HBS students to use when writing research papers.
Citation Type

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Frequently Asked Questions
What support can I offer my students around analyzing cases and preparing for discussion?
Case discussions can be a big departure from the norm for students who are used to lecture-based classes. The Case Analysis Coach is an interactive tutorial on reading and analyzing a case study. The Case Study Handbook covers key skills students need to read, understand, discuss and write about cases. The Case Study Handbook is also available as individual chapters to help your students focus on specific skills.
How can I transfer my in-person case teaching plan to an online environment?
The case method can be used in an online environment without sacrificing its benefits. We have compiled a few resources to help you create transformative online learning experiences with the case method. Learn how HBS brought the case method online in this podcast , gather some quick guidance from the article " How to Teach Any Case Online ", review the Teaching Cases Online Guide for a deep dive, and check out our Teaching Online Resources Page for more insights and inspiration.
After 35 years as an academic, I have come to the conclusion that there is a magic in the way Harvard cases are written. Cases go from specific to general, to show students that business situations are amenable to hard headed analysis that then generalize to larger theoretical insights. The students love it! Akshay Rao Professor, General Mills Chair in Marketing at the University of Minnesota

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Using & Citing Sources: Adhering to Academic Integrity at HKS
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How to Cite: Basic Elements and Common Styles
Citation management.
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- How to Cite: Basic Elements and Common Styles [PDF] Downloadable PDF version of the slide deck above.
Many resources like HOLLIS and article databases will offer you citation information for individual articles and books, formatted according to various citation styles. When using this functionality, please remember to check these citations for accuracy before including them in your work.
Instead of relying on these static—and potentially faulty—citations, however, we recommend that you use citation management software that can help you automate the process of keeping your citations up to date, even if you need to make changes. At HKS, the recommended citation management tool is Zotero .
- Next: Avoiding Plagiarism >>
- Last Updated: Sep 25, 2023 4:09 PM
- URL: https://guides.library.harvard.edu/hks/citation
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What is the Harvard Referencing System?
The Harvard citation style is a system that students, writers and researchers can use to incorporate other people’s quotes, findings and ideas into their work in order to support and validate their conclusions without breaching any intellectual property laws. The popular format is typically used in assignments and publications for humanities as well as natural, social and behavioural sciences.
It is a parenthetical referencing system that is made up of two main components:
- In-text citations including the author’s surname and the year of publication should be shown in brackets wherever another source has contributed to your work
- A reference list outlining all of the sources directly cited in your work
While in-text citations are used to briefly indicate where you have directly quoted or paraphrased a source, your reference list is an alphabetized list of complete Harvard citations that enables your reader to locate each source with ease. Each entry should be keyed to a corresponding parenthetical citation in the main body of your work, so that a reader can take an in-text citation and quickly retrieve the source from your reference list.
Note that some universities, and certain disciplines, may also require you to provide a bibliography. This is a detailed list of all of the material you have consulted throughout your research and preparation, and it will demonstrate the lengths you have gone to in researching your chosen topic.
‘Harvard referencing’ is an umbrella term for any referencing style that uses the author name and year of publication within the text to indicate where you have inserted a source. This author-date system appeals to both authors and readers of academic work. Scholars find the format an economical way of writing, and it is generally more accessible to the reader as there are no footnotes crowding the page. Only the name of the author, the publication date of the source and, if necessary, the page numbers are included in the parenthetical citations, for example: (Joyce, 2008).
Use the Cite This For Me Harvard style referencing generator to create your fully-formatted in-text references and reference list in the blink of an eye. Stop giving yourself extra pain and work for no reason and sign up to Cite This For Me today – your only regret will be that you didn’t use our citation generator sooner!
Popular Harvard Referencing Examples
- Chapter of a book
- Conference proceedings
- Court case
- Dissertation
- Encyclopedia article
- Image online or video
- Presentation or lecture
- Video, film, or DVD
Cite This For Me Harvard Referencing Guide
The following guide provides you with everything you need to know to do justice to all your hard work and get a mark that reflects those sleepless nights. If you’re not sure how to format your Harvard style citations, what citations are, or are simply curious about the Cite This For Me citation generator, our guide will answer all of your questions while offering you a comprehensive introduction to the style. Keep reading to find out why you need to use a referencing system, how to add citations in the body of your assignment, and how to compile a reference list.
Sometimes, students do not encounter citing until they embark on to degree-level studies, yet it is a crucial academic skill that will propel you towards establishing yourself in the academic community. It’s a common mistake to leave citing and creating a complete and accurate bibliography until the very last minute, but with the Cite This For Me Harvard referencing generator you can cite-as-you-go.
So, if you need a helping hand with your referencing then why not try Cite This For Me’s automated citation generator ? The generator accesses knowledge from across the web, assembling all of the relevant information into a fully-formatted reference list that clearly presents all of the sources that have contributed to your work. Using this Harvard reference generator to cite your sources enables you to cross the finishing line in style.
It is important to bear in mind that there is a plethora of different citation styles out there – the use of any particular one depends on the preference of your college, subject, professor or the publication you are submitting the work to. If you’re unsure which style you should be using, consult your tutor and follow their guidelines. If your lecturer or department does not ask you to use a particular style, we recommend using the Harvard referencing system because it is simple to use and easy to learn.
The powerful citation generator above can auto-generate citations in 7,000+ styles. So, whether your professor prefers that you use the MLA format , or your discipline requires you to adopt the APA citation or Chicago citation style , we have the style you need. Cite This For Me also provides citation generators and handy style guides for styles such as ASA , AMA or IEEE . To accurately create citations in a specific format, simply sign up to Cite This For Me for free and select your chosen style.
Are you struggling with citing an unfamiliar source type? Or feeling confused about whether to cite a piece of common knowledge? This guide will tell you everything you need to know to get both your parenthetical Harvard citations and reference list completed quickly and accurately.
Why Do I Need to Cite?
Harvard referencing can be a confusing task, especially if you are new to the concept, but it’s absolutely essential. In fact, accurate and complete referencing can mean the difference between reaching your academic goals and damaging your reputation amongst scholars. Simply put – referencing is the citing of sources you have utilised to support your essay, research, conference or article, etc.
Even if you are using our Harvard style citation generator, understanding why you need to cite will go a long way in helping you to naturally integrate the process into your research and writing routine.
Firstly, whenever another source contributes to your work you must give the original author the appropriate credit in order to avoid plagiarism, even when you have completely reworded the information. The only exception to this rule is common knowledge – e.g., Brazil is a country in South America. While plagiarism is not always intentional, it is easy to accidentally plagiarize your work when you are under pressure from imminent deadlines, you have managed your time ineffectively, or if you lack confidence when putting ideas into your own words. The consequences can be severe; deduction of marks at best, expulsion from college or legal action from the original author at worst. Find out more here.
This may sound overwhelming, but using our Harvard citation generator can help you avoid plagiarism and carry out your research and written work thoughtfully and responsibly. We have compiled a handy checklist to follow while you are working on an assignment.
How to avoid plagiarism:
- Formulate a detailed plan – carefully outline both the relevant content you need to include, as well as how you plan on structuring your work
- Keep track of your sources – record all of the relevant publication information as you go (e.g., If you are citing a book you should note the author or editor’s name(s), year of publication, title, edition number, city of publication and name of publisher). Carefully save each quote, word-for-word, and place it in inverted commas to differentiate it from your own words. Tired of interrupting your workflow to cite? Use our Harvard referencing generator to automate the process.
- Manage your time effectively – make use of time plans and targets, and give yourself enough time to read, write and proofread
- When you are paraphrasing information, make sure that you use only your own words and a sentence structure that differs from the original text
- Every quote or paraphrase should have a corresponding reference in the text. In addition, a full reference is needed on the final page of the project.
- Save all of your research and citations in a safe place – organise and manage your Harvard style citations
If you carefully check your college or publisher’s advice and guidelines on citing and stick to this checklist, you should be confident that you will not be accused of plagiarism.
Secondly, proving that your writing is informed by appropriate academic reading will enhance your work’s authenticity. Academic writing values original thought that analyzes and builds upon the ideas of other scholars. It is therefore important to use Harvard style referencing to accurately signpost where you have used someone else’s ideas in order to show that your writing is based on knowledge and informed by appropriate academic reading. Citing your sources will demonstrate to your reader that you have delved deeply into your chosen topic and supported your thesis with expert opinions.
Here at Cite This For Me we understand how precious your time is, which is why we created our Harvard citation generator and guide to help relieve the unnecessary stress of citing. Escape assignment-hell and give yourself more time to focus on the content of your work by using the Cite This For Me citation management tool.
Harvard Referencing Guidelines by School
- Anglia University Harvard Referencing
- Anglia Ruskin University
- Bath University
- Bournemouth University Harvard Referencing
- Cape Peninsula University of Technology
- Cardiff University Harvard Referencing
- City University London
- Coventry University Harvard Referencing
- Cranfield Harvard
- DMU Harvard Referencing
- Durham University Business School
- Edge Hill University Harvard Referencing
- European Archaeology
- Imperial College University Harvard Referencing
- Institute of Physics
- Leeds University Harvard Referencing
- King’s College London
- LSBU Harvard Referencing
- Manchester Business School
- MMU Harvard Referencing
- Newcastle University
- Northwest University
- Oxford Brookes University
- Oxford Centre for Mission Studies
- SHU Harvard Referencing
- Staffordshire University Harvard Referencing
- Swinburne University of Technology
- The Open University
- UCA Harvard Referencing
- University of Abertay Dundee
- University of Birmingham
- University of Cape Town
- University of Gloucestershire
- University of Greenwich Harvard
- University of Hull
- University of Kent – Harvard
- University of Limerick
- University of Melbourne
- University of Northampton
- University of Sunderland
- University of Technology, Sydney
- University of West London
- UWE Harvard Referencing
- UWS Harvard Referencing
- Wolverhampton University Harvard Referencing
- York University
How Do I Create and Format In-text Harvard Style Citations?
In-text citations are the perfect way to seamlessly integrate sources into your work, allowing you to strengthen the connection between your own ideas, and the source material that you have found, with ease. It is worth noting that in-text citations must be included in your assignment’s final word count.
When adopting Harvard style referencing in your work, if you are inserting a quote, statement, statistic or any other kind of source information into the main body of your essay you should:
- Provide the author’s surname and date of publication in parentheses right after the taken information or at the end of the sentence
There are many assumptions when it comes to the information processing approach to cognition… (Lutz and Huitt, 2004).
- If you have already mentioned the author in the sentence, Harvard referencing guidelines require you to only enter the year of publication in parentheses, directly after where the author’s surname is mentioned.
In the overview of these developmental theories, Lutz and Huitt (2004) suggest that…
- If you are quoting a particular section of the source (rather than the entire work), you should also include a page number, or page range, after the date, within the parenthetical Harvard citation
“…the development of meaning is more important than the acquisition of a large set of knowledge or skills …” (Lutz and Huitt, 2004, p.8), which means that …
- Note that if the source has four or more authors, you do not need to write out all of their surnames; simply use the first author’s surname followed by the abbreviation ‘et al.’ (meaning ‘and others’).
The results showed that respondents needed to reach out to multiple health agencies in order to cover the costs of their services (Wolbeck Minke et al., 2007).
- If you are reading a source by one author and they cite work by another author, you may cite that original work as a secondary reference. You are encouraged to track down the original source – usually this is possible to do by consulting the author’s reference list – but if you are unable to access it, the Harvard referencing guidelines state that you must only cite the source you did consult as you did not actually read the original document. Include the words ‘cited in’ in the in-text citation to indicate this.
Fong’s 1987 study (cited in Bertram 1997) found that older students’ memory can be as good as that of young people…
(Fong, cited in Bertram 1997)
Why use a Harvard referencing tool? As well as saving you valuable time, the Cite This For Me generator can help you easily avoid common errors when formatting your in-text citations. So, if you’re looking for an easy way to credit your source material, simply login to your Cite This For Me account to copy, save and export each in-text Harvard citation.
How Do I Format My Reference List?
Utilizing and building on a wide range of relevant sources is one way of impressing your reader, and a comprehensive list of the source material you have used is the perfect platform to exhibit your research efforts. A reference list is always required when you cite other people’s work within your assignment, and the brief in-text Harvard style citations in your work should directly link to your reference list.
As a general rule a reference list includes every source that you have cited in your work, while a bibliography also contains any relevant background reading which you have consulted to familiarise yourself with the topic (even those sources that are never mentioned in the narrative). Your Harvard referencing bibliography should start on its own page, with the same formatting as the rest of the paper and aligned to the left with the sources listed alphabetically. Certain fields ask you to provide an annotated bibliography that includes your full citations with the addition of notes. These notes are added to further analyze the source, and can be of any length.
Many people use the terms ‘reference list’ and ‘bibliography’ interchangeably, and if you are using the Harvard reference style you may be required to provide a bibliography as well as a reference list, so be sure to check this with your tutor.
Follow these guidelines when compiling your reference list:
- Start your reference list on a new page at the end of your document
- General formatting should be in keeping with the rest of your work
- Use ‘Reference List’ as the heading
- Copy each of your full-length Harvard citations into a list
- Arrange the list in alphabetical order by the author’s last name (titles with no author are alphabetized by the work’s title, and if you are citing two or more sources by the same author they should be listed in chronological order of the year of publication)
- When there are several works from one author or source, they should be listed together but in date order – with the earliest work listed first
- Italicize titles of books, reports, conference proceedings etc. For journal articles, the title of the journal should be printed in italics, rather than the title of the journal article
- Capitalize the first letter of the publication title, the first letters of all main words in the title of a journal, and all first letters of a place name and publisher
Creating and managing your reference list with the Cite This For Me Harvard referencing generator will help improve the way you reference and conduct research.
Reference list / bibliography examples:
- Book, one author:
Bell, J. (2010) Doing your research project . 5th edn. Maidenhead: Open University Press.
- One author, book, multiple editions:
Hawking, S.W. (1998) A brief history of time: From the big bang to black holes . 10th edn. New York: Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group.
- Chapter in an edited book:
Jewsiewicki, B. (2010). ‘Historical Memory and Representation of New Nations in Africa’, in Diawara, M., Lategan, B., and Rusen, J. (eds.) Historical memory in Africa: Dealing with the past, reaching for the future in an intercultural context . New York: Berghahn Books, pp. 53-66.
If all information resembles a book, use the template for a book reference
If a page number is unavailable, use chapter number. URL links are not necessary, but can be useful. When including a URL, include the date the book was downloaded at the end of the Harvard citation:
Available at: URL (Downloaded: DD Month YYYY)
- More than three authors, journal article*:
Shakoor, J., et al. (2011) ‘A prospective longitudinal study of children’s theory of mind and adolescent involvement in bullying’, Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry , 53(3), pp. 254–261. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7610.2011.02488.x.
- Conference papers:
Drogen, E. (2014) ‘Changing how we think about war: The role of psychology’, The British Psychological Society 2014 Annual Conference . The ICC, Birmingham British Psychological Society, 07-09 May 2014.
- Web page, by an individual:
Moon, M. (2019) Ubisoft put an official video game design course inside a video game . Available at https://www.engadget.com/2019/09/25/ubisoft-video-game-design-course/ (Accessed 19 November 2019).
- Web page, by a company or organization:
RotoBaller (2019) NFL player news . Available at https://www.rotoballer.com/player-news?sport=nfl (Accessed 17 September 2019).
For both types of web page references, the date the page was published or updated is placed in parentheses immediately following the author information. If a date is missing from the source, place (no date) next to the author’s name and make sure to include an accessed date at the end of the reference.
Are you struggling to find all of the publication information to complete a reference? Did you know that our Harvard citation generator can help you?
Time is of the essence when you’re finishing a paper, but there’s no need to panic because you can compile your reference list in a matter of seconds using the Cite This For Me Harvard style citation generator. Sign in to your Cite This For Me account to save and export your reference list.
Harvard Referencing Formatting Guidelines
Accurate referencing doesn’t only protect your work from plagiarism – presenting your source material in a consistent and clear way also enhances the readability of your work. Closely follow the style’s formatting rules on font type, font size, text-alignment and line spacing to ensure that your work is easily legible. Before submitting your work check that you have formatted your whole paper – including your reference list – according to the style’s formatting guidelines.
How to format in Harvard referencing:
- Margins: 2.5cm on all sides
- Shortened title followed by the page number in the header, aligned to the right
- Double-space the entirety of the paper
- ½ inch indentation for every new paragraph (press tab bar)
- Suggested fonts: Times New Roman, Arial and Courier New for Windows; Times New Roman, Helvetica and Courier for Mac, 12pt size. Ensure that all Harvard citations are in the same font as the rest of the work
- Reference list on a separate page at the end of the body of your work
Even when using a Harvard citation generator, always check with your professor for specified guidelines – there is no unified style for the formatting of a paper. Make sure that you apply the recommended formatting rules consistently throughout your work.
A Brief History of the Harvard Reference Style
The author-date system is attributed to eminent zoologist Edward Laurens Mark (1847-1946), Hersey professor of anatomy and director of Harvard’s zoological laboratory. It is widely agreed that the first evidence of Harvard referencing can be traced back to Mark’s landmark cytological paper (Chernin, 1988). The paper breaks away from previous uses of inconsistent and makeshift footnotes through its use of a parenthetical author-date citation accompanied by an explanatory footnote.
- Parenthetic author-year citation, page 194 of Mark’s 1881 paper:
[…] The appearance may be due solely to reflection from the body itself. (Comp. Flemming, ‘78b, p. 310.*)
- Mark’s rationale for his Harvard citational scheme:
*The numbers immediately following an author’s name serve the double purpose of referring the reader to the list (p. 591) where the titles of papers are given, and of informing him at once of the approximate date of the paper in question.
A tribute dedicated to Mark in 1903 by 140 students credits Mark’s paper with having ‘introduced into zoology a proper fullness and accuracy of citation and a convenient and uniform method of referring from text to bibliography’ (Parker, 1903). Today Harvard referencing is widely considered one of the most accessible styles and, although it originated in biology, these days it is used across most subjects – particularly in the humanities, history and social science.
The Evolution of the Harvard Referencing Style
Due to its simplicity and ease of use, the format has become one of the most widely used citation styles in the world. Unlike many citing styles there is no official manual, but institutions such as colleges offer their own unique Harvard reference style guide, and each has its own nuances when it comes to punctuation, order of information and formatting rules. Simply go to the Cite This For Me website to login to your Cite This For Me account and search for the version you need. Make sure you apply consistency throughout your work.
It is increasingly easy for writers to access information and knowledge via the internet, and in turn both the style’s guidelines and our citation generator are continually updated to include developments in electronic publishing. The Cite This For Me Harvard style citation generator currently uses the Cite Them Right 10th Edition, which has evolved in recent years to match the rapidly advancing digital age. In order to avoid plagiarism, you must be cautious about pulling information from the internet, and ensure that you accurately cite all source material used in your written work – including all online sources that have contributed to your research.
Key differences from previous Harvard referencing Cite Them Right editions:
- Previous editions required printed books and eBooks to be referenced differently – in the 10th edition, both are now referenced using the same template (if all the necessary information is available). An Ebook is considered to be the digital format of a published book (or a book that is only published in digital format) that is meant for reading on an electronic device.
- URLs are no longer a requirement for digital media if the information provided in the Harvard citation is sufficient to find the source without it. They should be included if the source is difficult to find, or pieces of source information – such as an author name – are missing.
- When a source has more than 3 authors, use the abbreviation “et al.” instead of listing each out.
These days students draw on a diverse range of digital sources to support their written work. Whether you are citing a hashtag on Instagram , a podcast or a mobile app, the Cite This For Me generator will take care of your Harvard citations, regardless of the type of source you want to cite. So don’t be held back by sources that are difficult to cite – locating unusual source material will help your work to stand out from the crowd.
How Do I Create Accurate Harvard Citations?
Creating complete and correctly formatted citations can be a challenge for many writers, especially when documenting multiple source types. Our primary goal at Cite This For Me is to offer support to students and researchers across the globe by transforming the way in which they perceive citing. We hope that after using our citation generator and reading this Harvard referencing guide, what was once considered an arduous process, will be viewed as a highly-valued skill that enhances the quality of your work.
Disheartened by the stressful process of citing? Got a fast-approaching deadline? Using the Cite This For Me fast, accessible and free generator makes creating accurate citations easier than ever, leaving more time for you to focus on achieving your academic goals.
Create a free account to add and edit each Harvard citation on the spot, import and export full projects or individual entries. Things get even easier with Cite This For Me for Chrome – an intuitive, handy browser extension that allows you to create and edit a citation while you browse the web. Use the extension on any webpage that you want to cite, and add it to your chosen project without interrupting your workflow.
The Cite This For Me citation management tool is here to help you, so what are you waiting for? Accurate Harvard citations are just a click away!
Reference List
Chernin, E. (1988) The ‘Harvard System’: A mystery dispelled. Available at: http://www.uefap.com/writing/referenc/harvard.pdf (Accessed: 4 July 2016).
Parker, G. (ed.) (1903) Mark anniversary volume. New York: Henry Holt.

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How do I cite a Harvard Business Review case study in APA Style? - SNHU Library Frequently Asked Questions FAQ: How do I cite a Harvard Business Review case study in APA Style? Jun 22, 2023 70048 When citing case studies in APA style you'll want to include the typical citation elements and apply general formatting guidelines.
For all three citation styles, you will need the name of the author (s), the title of the case study, the year it was published, the publishing organization/publisher, and URL (if applicable). The templates and examples below will demonstrate how to cite a case study in MLA, APA, and Chicago styles. MLA 9 Structure:
WHAT TO CITE You should cite all direct quotations, paraphrased factual statements, and borrowed ideas. The only items you don't need to cite are facts that are common knowledge, such as the year of the first U.S. stock market crash. However, if you present facts in someone else's words, you should cite the source of those words.
Citation elements required and general format: Author (s). (Year). Title of case study. HBS No. number of case study. City, State abbreviation or Country of publication: Publisher. EXAMPLES: One Author: Smith, S. (2003). Leadership. HBS No. 7-806-122. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Two Authors: Eisenmann, T., & Herman, K. (2006).
APA Citation Style (7th Edition) General Format General format for citing case studies: Author (s). (Year). Title of case study. Number of case study. URL. Examples: Harvard Business School Case Study Smith, S. (2003). Leadership. HBS No. 7-806-122. https://hbsp.harvard.edu/cases/ Ivey Business School Case Study Heisz, M., & Leech, L. (2005).
Fundamentals of APA American Psychological Association (APA) style includes parenthetical in-text citations and a reference list. APA uses parenthetical citations as its form of in-text citation. Provide a parenthetical citation before the period directly following the information you are citing.
8 APA; 5 Art; 1 Bilingual Education; 2 Biography; 4 Biology; 4 Blackboard; 1 Book Return; 94 Business; 26 Business Cornerstone (company, industry,country research) 5 Career; 21 Catalog FAQ; 19 Checkout/Checkin; 11 Chemistry; 3 Children's/Young Adult Literature; 27 Citation Format; 8 Communication; 7 Computer Information Systems; 3 Computer ...
No one expects you to memorize the format for every type of source you will cite in APA style. Instead, you should know where to look for models of each type of source. This section explains the basics of APA-style citations and provides citation examples for some commonly used sources. For more information, you should consult the links below.
In-Text-Citation: (Author last name, Year) Author last name (Year)... Example: In their case study Ofek et al. (2014) describe how marketing to the young generation... Still unsure what in-text citation and referencing mean? Check here . Still unsure why you need to reference all this information? Check here . Last Updated:
Referencing case studies: Examples Last Updated: Jul 31, 2023 10:25 AM https://libraryguides.vu.edu.au/harvard
Soldiers Field. Boston, MA 02163. Phone: 1.617.495.6040. Email: [email protected]. Maps and Directions. Information on citation style guides, citation management tools, and citation best practices to assist you with your academic writing & research.
For Webinar citations in APA 7, Please check out Purdue University APA 7 citation guide on Other Non-Print Sources available here: ... Case Study published by Harvard Business School Publishing. Thomas, D.A. (1999). Leaving. HBS No. 400033-PDF-ENG. Harvard Business School Publishing.
Format the reference list entry according to the type of publication. Following are some examples of case studies in business. Business case study Author (s). (Year). Title of case study. Number of case study. URL Examples Harvard business school case study Dey, A. (2022). Corporate governance: A three pillar framework.
In-Text Citations. In APA style, you use parenthetical citations within the text of your paper to credit your sources, to show how recently your sources were published, and to refer your reader to a more detailed citation of the source in the reference list at the end of your paper. You should use parenthetical citations when you paraphrase ...
When typing the title of the case study for an APA citation, use sentence-case, capitalizing only the first word and any proper nouns. ... DC Comics in 2016. Case Study. Boston. Harvard Business School Publishing, 2017. Note that unlike many other citation styles, the unique case study number is not necessarily included for MLA citations. Ask ...
Harvard Referencing Generator; Text Resources. Grammar Guides; Plagiarism Guide; Writing a Paper; Video & Infographics; Topic Guides; Blog; Citation Resources. ... The templates and sample underneath will demonstrate method to quoting a case study in MLA, APA, and Chicago styles. MLA 9. Built: Author Last Name, Author First Name.
Citing a case study in APA style In-text citation template and example: (Author Surname, Year) (Rapp & Caramazza, 2002) Reference list entry template and example: Surname, F. M. (Publication Year). Title of the case study [Case study]. Name of Publication, Volume (Issue), Page number. Rapp, B., & Caramazza, A. (2002).
55 49611 Guidelines for citing sources for written work at HBS. HBS Citation Guide (PDF, 639.7 kB) This guide describes citation conventions for HBS students to use when writing research papers. Citation Type Guide Languages English Guidelines for citing sources for written work at HBS.
The Case Analysis Coach is an interactive tutorial on reading and analyzing a case study. The Case Study Handbook covers key skills students need to read, understand, discuss and write about cases. The Case Study Handbook is also available as individual chapters to help your students focus on specific skills.
Instead of relying on these static—and potentially faulty—citations, however, we recommend that you use citation management software that can help you automate the process of keeping your citations up to date, even if you need to make changes. At HKS, the recommended citation management tool is Zotero.
The templates and examples below becomes demonstrate how in cite a case study in MLA, APA, and Chicago styles. Find novel ideas and classic advice on strategy, innovation and leadership, for global commanders of the world's best business also management geniuses.
When citing case studies in APA style you'll want to include the typical citation elements and apply general formatting guidelines. The following are examples of how case studies could be...
The Harvard citation style is a system that students, writers and researchers can use to incorporate other people's quotes, findings and ideas into their work in order to support and validate their conclusions without breaching any intellectual property laws.