Effects of Forced Responses and Question Display Styles on Web Survey Response Rates

<p>Researchers have increasingly adopted a web survey for data collection. Previous studies have examined factors leading to a web survey’s success. However, virtually no empirical work has examined the effects of the three levels of forced responses or the two styles of question items display...

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Main Authors: Chatpong Tangmanee, Phattharaphong Niruttinanon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ümit Hacıoğlu 2015-06-01
Series:International Journal of Research In Business and Social Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ssbfnet.com/ojs/index.php/ijrbs/article/view/398
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spelling doaj-57fc0a856da9441c968202723e60a5f72020-11-25T01:13:26ZengÜmit HacıoğluInternational Journal of Research In Business and Social Science2147-44782015-06-01425462170Effects of Forced Responses and Question Display Styles on Web Survey Response RatesChatpong Tangmanee0Phattharaphong NiruttinanonChulalongkorn University<p>Researchers have increasingly adopted a web survey for data collection. Previous studies have examined factors leading to a web survey’s success. However, virtually no empirical work has examined the effects of the three levels of forced responses or the two styles of question items displayed on a web survey’s response rate. The current study attempted to fill this void.</p><p>Using a quasi experiment approach, we obtained 778 unique responses to six comparable web questionnaires of identical content. The analysis confirmed that (1) there were statistically significant differences across the surveys with the 100%-, 50%- and 0%-forced responses, and (2) there is not a significant difference between the response rates between surveys with scrolling and those with paging styles.</p><p>In addition to extending the theoretical insight into factors contributing to a web survey’s response rate, the findings have offered recommendations to enhance the response rate in a web survey project.</p>http://www.ssbfnet.com/ojs/index.php/ijrbs/article/view/398Forced responsesquestion display stylesscrollingpagingresponse rateweb survey
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chatpong Tangmanee
Phattharaphong Niruttinanon
spellingShingle Chatpong Tangmanee
Phattharaphong Niruttinanon
Effects of Forced Responses and Question Display Styles on Web Survey Response Rates
International Journal of Research In Business and Social Science
Forced responses
question display styles
scrolling
paging
response rate
web survey
author_facet Chatpong Tangmanee
Phattharaphong Niruttinanon
author_sort Chatpong Tangmanee
title Effects of Forced Responses and Question Display Styles on Web Survey Response Rates
title_short Effects of Forced Responses and Question Display Styles on Web Survey Response Rates
title_full Effects of Forced Responses and Question Display Styles on Web Survey Response Rates
title_fullStr Effects of Forced Responses and Question Display Styles on Web Survey Response Rates
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Forced Responses and Question Display Styles on Web Survey Response Rates
title_sort effects of forced responses and question display styles on web survey response rates
publisher Ümit Hacıoğlu
series International Journal of Research In Business and Social Science
issn 2147-4478
publishDate 2015-06-01
description <p>Researchers have increasingly adopted a web survey for data collection. Previous studies have examined factors leading to a web survey’s success. However, virtually no empirical work has examined the effects of the three levels of forced responses or the two styles of question items displayed on a web survey’s response rate. The current study attempted to fill this void.</p><p>Using a quasi experiment approach, we obtained 778 unique responses to six comparable web questionnaires of identical content. The analysis confirmed that (1) there were statistically significant differences across the surveys with the 100%-, 50%- and 0%-forced responses, and (2) there is not a significant difference between the response rates between surveys with scrolling and those with paging styles.</p><p>In addition to extending the theoretical insight into factors contributing to a web survey’s response rate, the findings have offered recommendations to enhance the response rate in a web survey project.</p>
topic Forced responses
question display styles
scrolling
paging
response rate
web survey
url http://www.ssbfnet.com/ojs/index.php/ijrbs/article/view/398
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