Title: Questionnaire Design
1Questionnaire Design
- Ed Blair
- University of Houston
2Broad issues in writing questions
- Have you asked the right question?
- Do respondents understand the question?
- Do they know the answer?
- Are they willing to answer accurately?
3Have you asked the right question?
- In marketing research, we ask questions because
the answers will help improve marketing
decisions. A question can be technically
perfect, yet still be a bad question because it
doesn't properly serve our marketing purpose. - Is this a good question?
- 1. Have you heard of any physician referral
services that you can call if you need help in
finding a doctor? - Yes . . . . . . 1 (ASK Q1A)
- No . . . . . . 2 (GO TO Q2)
- (IF YES)
- 1A. Can you name any of these services or tell
me their telephone numbers? (PROBE Any
others?)
4Making sure its the right question
- Ask yourself
- Is this question consistent with my theory about
how the market works? - Do I know, specifically, how I plan to use the
answers to this question to draw conclusions
about the market?
5Do respondents understand the question?
- Do respondents understand the question?
- Q Does your home have power conditioning
equipment to protect your critical equipment
against power fluctuations? - Q (en Español?)
- Do all respondents interpret the question the
same way? - Q What is your income?
- Do respondents interpret the question the same
way you do? - Q What are all the reasons you bought your
groceries at ValueLand rather than some other
store? (PROBE Any others?)
6Minimizing problems from misunderstanding
- Ask questions one at a time.
- BAD Do you consider a backup generator or a
surge suppressor to be necessary equipment for
your home? - Use simple, specific language, and avoid words
with more than one meaning. - BAD? Do you exercise regularly?
- Specify who, what, when, where, how, and the
desired form of response. - Which of the following categories best describes
your familys total income last year before
taxes? - Before doing the project, have someone read you
the questions. Also consider pre-testing your
questionnaire to see whether respondents have
trouble understanding some of the questions, and
how they interpret key questions.
7Do respondents know the answer?
- Were they there?
- Q How satisfied were you with the service you
received from the hospital's business office? - Q Why did your company?
- Can they remember?
- Q In the past thirty days, about how many
telephone calls did you make? - Do they have an opinion?
- Q I have a list of hospitals in our area. As I
read each one, please tell me how you would rate
that hospital as a place to receive care
excellent, good, fair, or poor. How about . . . - Are intentions meaningful?
- Q If there was a local magazine like Consumer
Reports that evaluated restaurants, auto repair
shops, stores, plumbers, and other local
businesses, would you subscribe? - Q How many small batteries do you intend to buy
during the next six months?
8Minimizing knowledge problems (a)
- Consider qualifying respondents for knowledge or
allowing for no opinion or not sure or dont
know. - Use the right time frame for your question.
- Event Reasonable time frame
- Hospital stay, car purchase One year
- Appliance purchase Three months
- Grocery purchase One week
- Food consumption One day
- Measure behavior over intentions/attitudes (e.g.,
previous battery purchases over intent to
purchase, actual referrals over intent to
refer/satisfaction). - Conjoint, anyone?
9Minimizing knowledge problems (b)
- Anchor subjective measures with comparisons
across time, objects, or people. - 78 of patients say they were "very satisfied"
overall with the food at your hospital. Is this
good or bad? - - What if the number was 84 last year?
- - What if the number is 84 at another
hospital? - - What if the number is 90 for maternity
patients, 71 for oncology patients? - Use previous questions wherever possible!
- Interpret and present self-report data as if they
are approximate, not exact, and focus on patterns
in the data rather than specific tabulations.
10Are respondents willing to answer accurately?
- Is the behavior or attitude socially desirable or
undesirable? - Q During the past month, have you read any books
other than for work or school? - Q During the past month, since (DATE) , did you
drink beer even once? - (IF YES)
- A. About how often did you drink beer during the
past month? - Once . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1
- 2-3 times . . . . . . . . . . . ....2
- About once a week . . . . . . .3
- 2-3 times a week . . . . . . . 4
- 4-6 times a week . . . . . . . . ..5
- Once a day or more . . . . . . . 6
- Do respondents think you care which answer they
give? - Q If there was a local magazine like Consumer
Reports that evaluated restaurants, auto repair
shops, stores, plumbers, and other local
businesses, would your family subscribe to this
magazine?
11Minimizing problems with unwillingness (a)
- Professionalism is a must, to convince
respondents that you care whether they answer but
not how they answer. This means - - Professional appearance for questionnaires
that respondents will see. - - A proper and professional introduction.
- - Formal language in the questionnaire (no
slang, please) - - Business clothing for interviewers if
respondents will see them - - Proper training so that interviewers seem to
know what they are doing - Use choice measures or previous behavior rather
than intention measures. - Check for loading. Don't ask subjective questions
(attitudes, opinions, etc.) in in a "Yes-No"
format, and avoid angel" or "devil" words (e.g.,
reasonable, forbid), absolute terms (always,
never), and appeals to the norm (most people
think")
12Minimizing problems with unwillingness (b)
- Don't reveal sponsor identity unless necessary to
convince respondents that their answers will have
a legitimate use. - Consider less personal methods (mail, online) for
sensitive topics. - Use open questions for sensitive quantitative
questions (except income) - Use longer questions to reduce the social stigma
attached to certain answers. - Q Many people say that they just don't have time
for reading anymore. In the past month, have you
read any books other than for work or school?
13Whats wrong with this questionnaire? (a)
- (Fan survey to be administered at an Astros game)
- 1. In what city do you live? ____________________
- (IF HOUSTON)
- A. In what part of Houston do you live?
- ? Inside the Loop ? South
- ? North ? Southwest
- ? Northeast ? West
- ? East ? Northwest
- ? Southeast
- 2. How many people are in your group at tonight's
game? - ? 1 ? 2-3 ? 4-5 ? 6 or more
14Whats wrong with this questionnaire? (b)
- 3. How many of them are kids?
- ? 1 ? 2-3 ? 4-5 ? 6 or more
- 4. How many people in your group, including
yourself, are Astros season ticket holders? - ? 1 ? 2-3 ? 4-5 ? 6 or more
- 5. How many games have you, yourself attended
this season? - ? 1 ? 2-3 ? 4-5 ? 6 or more
- 6. What four radio stations do you listen to most
often? - __________________ _________________
- __________________ _________________
15Whats wrong with this questionnaire? (c)
- 7. Why did you come to tonight's Astros game?
- __________________________________________
- __________________________________________
- __________________________________________
- We need your name and address for our prize
drawing. - NAME ________________________________________
- ADDRESS ________________________________________
- CITY, STATE, ZIP _______________________________
____
16Revised questionnaire (a)
- 1. Are you attending tonight's game on a season
ticket or a single game ticket? - ? Season ticket ? Single game ticket
- 2. Counting tonight's game, how many Astros games
have you attended this season? - ? 1 ? 2-3 ? 4-5 ? 6 or more
- 3. Counting yourself, how many people are in your
group at tonight's game? - ? 1 ? 2-3 ? 4-5 ? 6 or more
- 4. How many of the people in your group are less
than 13 years of age? - ? 0 ? 1 ? 2-3
? 4-5 ? 6 or more -
17Revised questionnaire (b)
- 5. When did you decide to attend tonight's game?
Was it today, before today but during the past
week, or earlier than the past week? - ? Today ? Past week ? Earlier
- 6. What promotions, if any, might influence you
to attend an Astros game? - (CHECK ALL THAT APPLY)
- ? 2 off tickets ? Prize drawings
- ? Family discounts ? Country music concerts
- ? Free parking ? Rock music concert
- ? Free Astros mug ? Tailgate parties
- ? Free kid's cap ? Home run derby
18Revised questionnaire (c)
- 7. What is your favorite radio station?
- (FILL IN) _____________________
- We need your name and address for our prize
drawing. - NAME ________________________________________
- ADDRESS ________________________________________
- CITY, STATE, ZIP _______________________________
_____