Telephone survey
respondents sometimes tell me that they will do my telephone survey, but they
don’t usually do surveys. Experience has
given me some skill at getting people to answer survey questions, but my voice
probably deserves most of the credit. I
have a deep and authoritative-sounding voice.
One reason that many
people do not participate in telephone surveys is personal or hot-button
questions. We tell people when we read
the introduction to a questionnaire that the survey is confidential. We tell them that their responses will be
reported in the aggregate and not individually.
Respondents often do not hear this.
If they do hear it, they perceive it more from the tone of voice of the
interviewer. Some respondents ask direct
questions about the confidentiality of a survey. If an interviewer can answer such questions
without getting flustered, the interviewer can usually establish rapport with
the respondent.
Establishing rapport with
a survey respondent is important not simply to get them to participate at all,
but also to give honest answers to hot-button and personal questions. If a respondent perceives that an interviewer
is truly neutral the respondent will honestly give answers that may be considered
socially unacceptable. If we do a survey
about household financial management, we want accurate information about
gambling habits and credit card debt. We
ask demographic questions about age, income, marital status and education level
so that we can make sure that we get a representative sample of a
population. We usually ask these
questions at the end of the questionnaire.
An interviewer who can establish rapport at the beginning of the call is
less likely to have a respondent refuse to answer these personal questions.
Sometimes it is too easy
to establish rapport. Some respondents
love to talk. Several years ago I worked
on a survey in which we asked women about their experiences at the maternity
center of a local hospital. One woman
went into great detail about childbirth, but was offended that I asked about
her annual household income. Some
respondents want to talk about anything but the questions on the survey. They view the call as an opportunity to get
something off their chest. The
interviewer’s responsibility in such situations is to keep the call on track by
continually bringing the respondent back to the questions. This often requires tact and diplomacy, which
is also part of establishing rapport.
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