articleField MethodsMar 3, 2008Closed access

Comparing Response Rates from Web and Mail Surveys: A Meta-Analysis

University of Virginia

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Abstract

This study meta-analyzes thirty-nine study results published within last ten years that directly compared Web and mail survey modes. Although considerable variation exists across the studies, the authors' findings show that mail surveys have higher response rates than Web surveys in general. Two study features (i.e., population types and follow-up reminders) are shown to contribute statistically to the variation of response rate differences between Web and paper surveys in the comparative studies. College respondents appear to be more responsive to Web surveys, while some other respondents (e.g., medical doctors, school teachers, and general consumers) appear to prefer traditional mail surveys. Follow-up…

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1,172
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FWCI
120.67
Percentile
100%
References
84
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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Web survey
  • Non-response bias
  • Variation (astronomy)
  • Incentive
  • Psychology
  • Survey methodology
  • Survey data collection
  • World Wide Web
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