Achieve your survey goals by empowering your survey respondents.
Too often, surveys are designed for the analyst, rather than the respondent. This book challenges the status quo by putting respondents’ needs at the heart of survey development. It encourages you to stop, listen, and then design to improve response rates and collect high quality data.
Drawing on their experience at the UK Office for National Statistics, the authors:
- Show you how to design better surveys by combining social research and user experience best practice.
- Equip you with the tools to design inclusive and accessible surveys.
- Enable you to overcome practical research problems, including managing participant recruitment, and working to any budget.
- Provide links to helpful web material and further reading as part of the book′s online resources.
Promoting a new way to conceptualise and conduct survey design, this book expands your theoretical thinking and shows you, step-by-step, how to put it into practice.
สารบัญ
Chapter 1: The foundations of respondent-centred design
Chapter 2: Respondent-centred design in practice
Chapter 3: Agile project management applied to surveys
Chapter 4: Research operations part one: Research design and management
Chapter 5: Research operations part two: Conducting and analysing your research
Chapter 6: Creating a respondent-centred survey engagement strategy
Chapter 7: Creating respondent-centred household composition and socio-demographic survey questions
Chapter 8: Creating respondent-centred labour market survey questions
Chapter 9: Conclusion
เกี่ยวกับผู้แต่ง
Emma Dickinson is a Senior Social Researcher and is the deputy Data Collection lead in DQHub. Emma is an experienced qualitative researcher and a subject matter expert in the collection of socio-demographic information. Prior to working in DQHub she led the transformation of these questions on ONS’ social surveys in the Research and Design Team. There she demonstrated the importance of using respondent centred design to ensure minimal respondent burden and maximum data accuracy during the response process. Before her transformation role, Emma worked in ONS’ Data Collection Methodology Unit and led qualitative research projects to develop official government surveys. Emma is passionate about qualitative research methods and the amalgamation of both traditional and innovative techniques to thoroughly explore a research question.