Jun 03 2019 Six Ways Your Survey Research May be Misleading You
Are you comfortable with doing surveys in which up to half of the responses you’re receiving are fraudulent? Or in which you’re getting a heavily biased group of respondents?
Are you comfortable with doing surveys in which up to half of the responses you’re receiving are fraudulent? Or in which you’re getting a heavily biased group of respondents?
How to Do Research That Is Faster, Cheaper, and More Flexible
Evangelical pastors often struggle with financial pressures at church and at home; three out of ten have no personal savings at all
Our new report details how someone trying to find a local church’s website by searching through their denomination has only a 32% chance of success. Find out more
Research clients speak out on research vendors and the adoption of new tools and techniques
The use of sliders in online surveys has become common, as researchers seek to enhance respondent engagement. The only problem is that if you’re using sliders, there’s a pretty good chance you are getting back biased data.
Many assumptions about Christian donors have emerged over the years, and come to be treated as “conventional wisdom.” But how wise is it to believe something that may or may not be founded on reality?
The average American thinks non-profit organizations spend 60% more on overhead than they reasonably should
How People Feel the Christian Faith Really Impacts (or Doesn’t Impact) America
When you use an online access panel for research, you depend on those respondents to help inform your critical business decisions. But what if your survey is the ninth one your respondents have taken today?
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