An Assessment of Equivalence Between Online and Mail Surveys in Service Research
- 1 May 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Service Research
- Vol. 8 (4) , 346-355
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1094670506286323
Abstract
This article examines whether online and mail surveys produce convergent results, which would allow them to be used in mixed-mode service quality studies. In the context of a large business-to-business service quality assessment, an analysis of the accuracy and completeness of respondent answers to both open and closed questions suggests that online and mail surveys produce equivalent results. Composite reliability shows consistently high levels for both groups, and the means and variance-covariance matrices are equal across modes. However, minor differences occur between the two survey methods; online respondents provide more improvement suggestions, indicate more often to which competitor they want to switch, and provide lengthier answers in response to requests for examples of positive experiences with the company. This research provides important findings regarding the process for, and results of, comparing two survey modes.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- An Examination of the Equivalence of Web-Based Versus Paper-and-Pencil Upward Feedback Ratings: Rater- and Ratee-Level AnalysesEducational and Psychological Measurement, 2004
- WEB‐BASED AND MAIL SURVEYS: A COMPARISON OF RESPONSE, DATA, AND COSTJournal of Business Logistics, 2003
- Using pencil and paper, Internet and touch-tone phones for self-administered surveys: does methodology matter?Computers in Human Behavior, 2003
- Customer evaluations of after-sales service contact modes: An empirical analysis of national culture's consequencesInternational Journal of Research in Marketing, 2002
- Experimental comparison of Web, electronic and mail survey technologies in operations managementJournal of Operations Management, 2001
- Web SurveysBulletin of Sociological Methodology/Bulletin de Méthodologie Sociologique, 2000
- A measure of skewness and kurtosis and a graphical method for assessing multivariate normalityStatistics & Probability Letters, 1984
- Promised Incentives in Media Research: A Look at Data Quality, Sample Representativeness, and Response RateJournal of Marketing Research, 1984
- Evaluating Structural Equation Models with Unobservable Variables and Measurement ErrorJournal of Marketing Research, 1981
- The Effect of Monetary Inducement on Mailed Questionnaire Response QualityJournal of Marketing Research, 1980