Notice: the WebSM website has not been updated since the beginning of 2018.

Web Survey Bibliography

Title Are telephone Surveys a dying bread. How declining response rates can be explained and resolved
Year 2009
Access date 23.11.2009
Abstract

Theoretical background. Since approximately ten years, telephone surveys in Germany belong to the most frequently used survey modes in the social sciences, which is especially due to its low costs compared with e.g. face

‐to‐face surveys and its high flexibility concerning organization and conduct (ADM 2008). However, these advantages are increasingly opposed by declining response rates in academic as well as commercial surveys. Over time, response rates have steadily diminished, whereas different sources partly supply highly diverse figures: some report on response rates below 40 percent, some on rates around 70 percent (cf. Berinsky 2008, 309f; De Leeuw & De Heer 2002; Schnell, Hill & Esser 1999, 286ff.). The key explanations are non‐contact and refusals (Berinsky 2008, 310; Lavrakas 2008, 252). Our own surveys reveal that non‐contact as well as refusal rates rose within the last five years about 5‐10 percentage points, whereby the rates differ from survey to survey. While in September 2003 29 percent of all households could not be reached, in May 2008 that was the case regarding 44 percent of the households. And while in September 2003 31 percent of the interviewees refused, 43 percent did so in February 2008. Literature suggests numerous explanations for both phenomena. Non‐contact occurs e.g. because of increased mobility or the absence of a landline telephone in households (cf. Pew 2008). In Germany, around 5‐7 percent of the population do not have landline telephones but only cell phones (cf. Hunsicker & Schroth 2007). If this trend continues, telephone surveys on the basis of landlines cannot be regarded as being representative anymore. Refusals occur e.g. because of over‐surveying, insufficient trust in survey institutes or lack of time (vgl. Schnauber & Daschmann 2008). Against this background, the question arises whether telephone surveys are still feasible in the long run. First, it is possible that the non‐response is systematic and biases the survey results, which hence (as mentioned above) cannot be interpreted as being representative anymore (Schnauber & Daschmann 2008, 98). Second, the resolution of the problems or the change to another survey mode (e.g. inclusion of cell phones) would trigger high additional costs. Nevertheless, there are some approaches to meet these obstacles. By modifying e.g. the call time or the number of call attempts, the number of contacts could be improved. By altering the introductory phrases and by enhancing the professionalism of the interviewers, e.g. by extensive training, one could try to reduce refusal rates (cf. Meier, Schneid, Stegemann & Stiegler 2005). ‐term telephone surveys conducted at our department yield a huge data basis to answer the questions deduced above. On the one hand, we aim to analyze the difficulty of decreasing response rates and hence the decreasing quality of the surveys. On the other hand, we pursue the question as to whether the theoretically derived explanations for non‐contact and refusals can be confirmed by our empirical data. In summary, we try to answer the question as to whether telephone survey will still be feasible in the future or not.

Method and conduct. Long

Access/Direct link

Conference homepage (abstract)

Year of publication2009
Bibliographic typeConferences, workshops, tutorials, presentations
Print

Web survey bibliography - WAPOR 62nd Annual Conference, 2009 (13)