Telephone surveys have been a ubiquitous method of collecting survey data, but the environment for telephone surveys is changing. Many surveys are transitioning from telephone to self-administration or combinations of modes for both recruitment and survey administration. Survey organizations are conducting these transitions from telephone to mixed modes with only limited guidance from existing empirical literature and best practices. This article summarizes findings by an AAPOR Task Force on how these transitions have occurred for surveys and research organizations in general. We find that transitions from a telephone to a selfadministered or mixed-mode survey are motivated by a desire to control costs, to maintain or improve data quality, ...
The Australian market research industry relies on telephone interviewing as one of its major data co...
This article presents a model using data from 205 telephone surveys conducted in the same survey lab...
Non-response to telephone surveys threatens the accuracy of the collected data and leads to increase...
This article reviews recent trends in modes of conducting surveys and presents results from a series...
Survey research has long grappled with the concept of survey mode preference: the idea that a respon...
In this paper, we analyze to what extent a sequential mixed mode survey, consisting of push-to-web, ...
In an effort to increase response rates and control survey costs, survey designers have come to incr...
Telephone interviewing is the major data collection method for the market research industry. Althoug...
Abstract Background Epidemiological and other studies that require participants to respond by comple...
Telephone surveying has become the major mode of data collection in the sample survey field since th...
"Conducting survey interviews on the internet has become an attractive method for lowering data coll...
Increased incidence of telephone answering machines and the use of such devices to screen calls pose...
This paper provides an overview of telephone survey research by colleges and universities and report...
Blackwell Science Ltd Using mobile phones to conduct survey interviews has gathered momentum recentl...
The landscape of survey research has arguably changed more significantly in the past decade than at ...
The Australian market research industry relies on telephone interviewing as one of its major data co...
This article presents a model using data from 205 telephone surveys conducted in the same survey lab...
Non-response to telephone surveys threatens the accuracy of the collected data and leads to increase...
This article reviews recent trends in modes of conducting surveys and presents results from a series...
Survey research has long grappled with the concept of survey mode preference: the idea that a respon...
In this paper, we analyze to what extent a sequential mixed mode survey, consisting of push-to-web, ...
In an effort to increase response rates and control survey costs, survey designers have come to incr...
Telephone interviewing is the major data collection method for the market research industry. Althoug...
Abstract Background Epidemiological and other studies that require participants to respond by comple...
Telephone surveying has become the major mode of data collection in the sample survey field since th...
"Conducting survey interviews on the internet has become an attractive method for lowering data coll...
Increased incidence of telephone answering machines and the use of such devices to screen calls pose...
This paper provides an overview of telephone survey research by colleges and universities and report...
Blackwell Science Ltd Using mobile phones to conduct survey interviews has gathered momentum recentl...
The landscape of survey research has arguably changed more significantly in the past decade than at ...
The Australian market research industry relies on telephone interviewing as one of its major data co...
This article presents a model using data from 205 telephone surveys conducted in the same survey lab...
Non-response to telephone surveys threatens the accuracy of the collected data and leads to increase...