To guide the decision of whether or not to recruit participants with previous experience in attending group discussions, we summarize data from experimental research carried out since 1987 in Spain. The effect of participants' previous experience and their honesty about their motivations, expectations, feelings and anxiety before and after participating in a group, as well as on the process and content of the group, were studied. The authors recommend recruiting inexperienced participants as they are more suitable for improved quality standards. The participants' experience should never be concealed, and at least 50% of any group working on any research project should lack previous experience.
This paper concentrates on the quintessential question of how to locate and motivate qualified management in "New Europe". New Europe is being defined as all countries of the former Eastern Bloc Nations. Hungary is used as a concrete example, describing the economic frame conditions, explaining the search and selection criteria for adequate local candidates for management positions as well as describing the legal frame work in which Western companies active in Hungary presently have to operate. Because of its importance to Western companies one special chapter is devoted to an analysis of the advantages and disadvantages of using expatriates or repatriates, as Western companies built up their operations in New Europe.