The beginning section should provide any demographic information about your participants that are relevant to your study. Take care to make sure to maintain participant confidentiality.
Discuss if there were any variations from the data collection plan that you described in the methods section, for example, if you planned to record 10 focus groups, but one of the focus groups could not be transcribed due to poor audio, indicate that information early in the results section.
If you conducted a thematic analysis, you might want to provide an overview of the themes that you identified in the data.
Present your findings in a way that will help the reader understand the points that you will want to make when you get to the discussion section. In some cases that means you may want to organize your findings according to your research questions. For example if you found one theme was associated with your first research question, and another theme addressed the second research question, then it may be best to organize your results according to your research question. However, if your themes address different aspects of one or more research questions, then it may be better to organize your findings by themes.