Once you have a clean, comprehensive dissertation proposal, you are then on the road to completing your dissertation. Generally, the dissertation proposal consists of Chapters 1-3 the Introduction, the Literature Review, and the Methodology. More specifically, your dissertation proposal will need to show your committee that you have identified a purposeful and important dissertation study (part of the Introduction, Chapter 1), will fill a gap in the literature (part of the Literature Review, Chapter 2), and have a method to assess that gap (part of the Methodology, Chapter 3). Happily, P Value assist Ph.D. candidates in all three chapters! In the introduction we assist you in identifying and articulating your research problem, describing your studys theoretical construct, and clearly explaining the nature of your study. You also have access to an editor who makes sure the statement of the problem is clear, and that your studys rationale, significance, and research questions and hypotheses are stated concisely. Typically, our experts suggest concluding the Introduction with a clear outline of your studys assumptions, limitations, and delimitations. Now, in the Literature review we guide your approach using our best practices for effectively searching, selecting, organizing, and summarizing articles. Naturally, these best practices lead into how to present a well-curated Literature Review that tells a story and explicitly supports your research questions. Importantly, together we will ensure that the gap in the literature is clearly stated and aligns with your problem statement. As icing on the cake, our assistance includes a critique of the previous literature, wherein we replace and update articles as necessary. Finally, in the Methodology section, we help you select and discuss the most suitable research design for your study, ultimately finalizing with you the necessary steps you will follow to carry out your qualitative or quantitative study.