Telephone Surveys: Challenges for the Future - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Telephone Surveys: Challenges for the Future

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Possible drop in the coverage of residential landline numbers. More on Technological Change ... The continued feasibility of telephone surveys depends much less ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Telephone Surveys: Challenges for the Future


1
Telephone Surveys Challenges for the Future
  • Clyde Tucker
  • Bureau of Labor Statistics

2
What Has Led to the Challenges
  • Technological Change
  • Societal Change

3
Technological Change
  • Less clustering in 100-banks
  • Declines in listing rates
  • Expansion of the areacodes
  • Multiple carriers
  • Number portability
  • Cell-only and cell-mostly households
  • Possible drop in the coverage of residential
    landline numbers

4
More on Technological Change
  • VoIP and wireless broadband
  • Single device for multiple types of
    communications
  • The availability of a cheaper modethe Internet

5
Consequences of Technological Change
  • More complicated designs
  • Dual frame sampling
  • Use of multiple modes
  • New contact procedures, interviewer training, and
    outcome codes
  • More knowledgeable tech staff having a more
    central role
  • New weighting methodology
  • More reliance on cost-benefit analysis

6
Societal Change
  • The continued feasibility of telephone surveys
    depends much less on what communication devices
    we use to reach respondents than on the continued
    cooperation of these respondents

7
(No Transcript)
8
More on Societal change
  • Change in household composition
  • Decline in married couples heading households
  • Increase in households with unrelated individuals
  • Increase in single-person households
  • Growing linguistic and cultural diversity
  • Growing concerns about privacy and
    confidentiality
  • More two-earner households among married
    households
  • Possible loss in sense of community (Bowling
    Alone?)
  • Changing communication patterns in households
  • Technology
  • More eating away from home

9
Consequences of Societal Change
  • Increasing differences among subpopulations
    (interactions)
  • Procedural change
  • Management of phone surveys harder
  • Use of multiple modes and possible mode effects
  • Hiring of more diverse interviewers
  • Changes in pattern of call scheduling
  • Declining response rates (especially due to
    noncontact)
  • Growing concerns about nonresponse bias

10
Trends in Response Rates
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