The Impact of day of Mailing on Web Survey Response Rate and Response Speed

被引:2
|
作者
Lynn, Peter [1 ,2 ]
Bianchi, Annamaria [3 ]
Gaia, Alessandra [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Essex, Survey Methodol, Colcheste, England
[2] Univ Essex, Inst Social & Econ Res, Wivenhoe Pk, Colcheste CO4 3SQ, Essex, England
[3] Univ Bergamo, Econ Stat, Bergamo, Italy
[4] Univ Milano Bicocca, Milan, Italy
关键词
adaptive design; survey invitation; survey nonresponse; targeted survey design; web surveys; MIXED-MODE DESIGN; PARTICIPATION;
D O I
10.1177/08944393231173887
中图分类号
TP39 [计算机的应用];
学科分类号
081203 ; 0835 ;
摘要
The day of the week on which sample members are invited to participate in a web survey might influence propensity to respond, or to respond promptly (within two days from the invitation). This effect could differ between sample members with different characteristics. We explore such effects using a large-scale experiment implemented on the Understanding Society Innovation Panel, in which some people received an invitation on a Monday and some on a Friday. Specifically, we test whether any effect of the invitation day is moderated by economic activity status (which may result in a different organisation of time by day of the week), previous participation in the panel, or whether the invitation was sent only by post or by post and email simultaneously. Overall, we do not find any effect of day of invitation in survey participation or in prompt participation. However, sample members who provided an email address, and, thus, were contacted by email in addition to postal letter, are less likely to participate if invited on Friday (email reminders: Sunday and Tuesday) as opposed to Monday (email reminders: Wednesday and Friday). Given that no difference between the two protocols is found for prompt response, the effect seems to be due to the day of mailing of reminders. With respect to sample members' economic activity status, those not having a job and the retired are less likely to participate when invited on a Friday; this result holds also for prompt participation, but only for retired respondents. Also, sample members who work long hours are less likely to participate when invited on a Friday; however, no effect is found for prompt response.
引用
收藏
页码:352 / 368
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Effects of Incentives and Prenotification on Response Rates and Costs in a National Web Survey of Physicians
    Dykema, Jennifer
    Stevenson, John
    Day, Brendan
    Sellers, Sherrill L.
    Bonham, Vence L.
    EVALUATION & THE HEALTH PROFESSIONS, 2011, 34 (04) : 434 - 447
  • [12] Response rate differences between web and alternative data collection methods for public health research: a systematic review of the literature
    Blumenberg, Cauane
    Barros, Aluisio J. D.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2018, 63 (06) : 765 - 773
  • [13] Impact of question topics and filter question formats on web survey breakoffs
    Chen, Zeming
    Cernat, Alexandru
    Shlomo, Natalie
    Eckman, Stephanie
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MARKET RESEARCH, 2022, 64 (06) : 710 - 726
  • [14] Investigating the Relationship among Prepaid Token Incentives, Response Rates, and Nonresponse Bias in a Web Survey
    Parsons, Nicholas L.
    Manierre, Matthew J.
    FIELD METHODS, 2014, 26 (02) : 191 - 204
  • [15] Impact of Web Survey Invitation Design on Survey Participation, Respondents, and Survey Responses
    Liu, Mingnan
    Kuriakose, Noble
    Cohen, Jon
    Cho, Sarah
    SOCIAL SCIENCE COMPUTER REVIEW, 2016, 34 (05) : 631 - 644
  • [16] The effect of a monetary incentive for administrative assistants on the survey response rate: a randomized controlled trial
    Agarwal, Arnav
    Raad, Dany
    Kairouz, Victor
    Fudyma, John
    Curtis, Anne B.
    Schunemann, Holger J.
    Akl, Elie A.
    BMC MEDICAL RESEARCH METHODOLOGY, 2016, 16
  • [17] Horizontal or Vertical? The Effects of Visual Orientation of Categorical Response Options on Survey Responses in Web Surveys
    Hu, Jingwei
    SOCIAL SCIENCE COMPUTER REVIEW, 2020, 38 (06) : 779 - 792
  • [18] What's the Benefit of a Video? The Effect of Nonmaterial Incentives on Response Rate and Bias in Web Surveys
    Kalleitner, Fabian
    Muehlboeck, Monika
    Kittel, Bernhard
    SOCIAL SCIENCE COMPUTER REVIEW, 2022, 40 (03) : 700 - 716
  • [19] Incentivizing Longitudinal Survey Research: The Impact of Mixing Guaranteed and Non-guaranteed Incentives on Survey Response
    Blaney, Jennifer M.
    Sax, Linda J.
    Chang, Connie Y.
    REVIEW OF HIGHER EDUCATION, 2019, 43 (02) : 581 - 601
  • [20] MODES OF SURVEY AND RESPONSE QUALITY
    Diaz de Rada, Vidal
    REVISTA INTERNACIONAL DE SOCIOLOGIA, 2019, 77 (01):