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Winning by designDespite broad research supporting the negative implications of long survey design in market research - order bias, respondent fatigue, interviewer bias and poor survey design is still very common in South Africa. Caitlin Noonan and Marguerite Steyn from Kantar discussed this in their research paper, "Win by design", at the recent Southern African Market Research Association Conference. ![]() If the trend in long surveys continues, say Noonan and Steyn, surveys will eventually become obsolete, so a drastic change in design needs to happen to ensure that surveys remain relevant and provide guidance to answer marketers’ core questions and objectives. The market research industry is in a state of technological transformation where new tech tools are causing disruptions, and with the data collection pool broadening to mobile and online research, the need to become device and data agnostic is becoming more prevalent. Even more crucial is the need to design properly for mobile and online research. To really reveal key insights, they say surveys should be more concise and smartly designed, regardless of the data collection tool used. Noonan and Steyn evaluated mobile and face-to-face data to identify their top 10 tips to help reduce order bias, respondent fatigue and interviewer bias, while making the surveys engaging. The top 10 tips:
By using these 10 guidelines when designing a survey, the results from their study prove that you will get better quality data, as it eliminates some of the negative human behavioural traits evident in respondents during interviewing. And improved data leads to valuable and actionable insights to guide business decisions and ultimately ensures the relevancy of surveys. About the authors:![]() Caitlin Noonan is a Consultant for the Mobile Practice for Kantar’s Insights Division in Sub-Saharan Africa. ![]() Marguerite Steyn is a Senior Research Executive at Kantar TNS.
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