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Category Archives: Survey Design

Responsive Surveys Go Way Beyond Mobile

Responsive Surveys Go Way Beyond Mobile

Data Collection, Future Trends, Survey DesignBy Joe HopperSeptember 27, 2017

If you design surveys that adapt well to mobile devices, you can feel proud. Current estimates are that only about half of all market research surveys are mobile-friendly. According to Research Now, an online panel that fields thousands of surveys from research vendors like Versta, just 15% are fully optimized for mobile use. But now…

Avoid This Adherence Scale for Health Surveys

Avoid This Adherence Scale for Health Surveys

Data Collection, Methods & Tools, Survey DesignBy Joe HopperSeptember 20, 2017

Here’s an unfortunate reality in the world of survey research: Survey questions can sometimes be copyrighted. When certain questions (no matter how obvious and common) are asked together as a set, and then scaled into a single measure (no matter how obvious and simple), and then validated in a study as being a solid tool…

Why Bigger Is Better for Numeric Rating Scales

Why Bigger Is Better for Numeric Rating Scales

Data Collection, Survey Design, Survey TipsBy Joe HopperAugust 30, 2017

If you grew up in the United States, you probably think big numbers are better when it comes to rating things. Higher scores on school exams are better. Higher scores in games and sports are usually better. Higher credit scores are better. Five-star restaurants are definitely better than one-star restaurants. In Germany it is often…

Don’t Believe This Best Practice from Google Surveys

Don’t Believe This Best Practice from Google Surveys

Data Collection, Methods & Tools, Survey DesignBy Joe HopperAugust 16, 2017

We use Google Surveys for quick, cheap incidence tests, or to test question wording or answer scales. Every time I use it, however, I am startled by how foolish Google Surveys can be. Here is an example we noticed from our most recent use of the tool. Start constructing your Google Survey. Add a “single…

Lousy NYT Survey Makes Researcher Cringe

Lousy NYT Survey Makes Researcher Cringe

Public Polling, Sampling, Survey DesignBy Joe HopperJuly 5, 2017

Bad surveys bug me. Bad surveys touted in The New York Times bug me even more, as I expect only the best from them. Bad surveys on the front page of The New York Times with ridiculous and sensationalist findings bug me so much that they inspire blog posts. A front page article on July…

How to Ask Gender on Surveys

How to Ask Gender on Surveys

Data Collection, Future Trends, Survey DesignBy Joe HopperJune 28, 2017

Gender used to be one of the easiest questions to write for a survey. There was male and there was female, so we simply asked: “Which are you?” But our culture has begun acknowledging the fluidity of gender identity and gender assignment, and now, too, must survey research. Just this week we had a potential…

Does Starting with a Story Bias Your Findings?

Does Starting with a Story Bias Your Findings?

Data Analysis & Analytics, Public Relations, Survey Design, Turning Data into StoriesBy Joe HopperJune 21, 2017

Two audience members at our LIMRA talk (see Public Studies: Advice for the PR Team and Advice for the Research Team) asked questions about biased research findings. Doesn’t starting with the research story and writing dream headlines lead you down a path of finding or confirming what your internal client wants to hear? I suppose…

PR Studies: Advice for the Research Team

PR Studies: Advice for the Research Team

Public Polling, Public Relations, Survey Design, Survey Tips, Turning Data into StoriesBy Joe HopperJune 14, 2017

Research for PR is definitely not “research lite” as my former boss used to think. It is the opposite, and requires more attention to rigor than strategic research. Why? Because no other research gets such intense scrutiny from people outside our firm and from audiences beyond our clients. It can’t be “directional.” It has to…

When to Use Multi-Check vs. Yes-No Questions

When to Use Multi-Check vs. Yes-No Questions

Survey Design, Survey TipsBy Joe HopperMay 17, 2017

Here are two ways you might ask a question to document multiple behaviors, purchases, interests, etc. They seem like they would be equivalent, but they are not. The first is called a multi-check format: The second is called a yes-no grid: If respondents were super careful, thoughtful, and unbiased in how they answer, the information…

Good Reasons to Ask Bad Questions

Data Collection, Survey Design, Survey TipsBy Joe HopperMay 10, 2017

In the Versta Research spring newsletter, Build a Better Customer Satisfaction Survey, we mentioned—but did not speak to—the seventh question in our newly developed survey for clients. It was added at the last minute. We put it right at the top, so it is the first question you see. If you didn’t yet test drive…

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