The Delphi method can be characterized as a query or interview-based research technique in which a guided interaction process is used to gather and develop the knowledge and understanding of a group of experts, about the phenomenon under study. The method emphasizes a structured process that is based on the interaction between the managing researcher (or research team) and the panel of experts. The characteristics of the phenomenon under investigation are peeled away layer by layer, or as said in Delphi, round by round. In survey research, the first round of questioning is also the last, and unlike in Delphi, there is no elevation of the ”subjects” to interaction among themselves in a manner that can be called communal learning. This is also the ultimate aim of the manager, regardless of whether the Delphi process targets consensus or dissensus.