400 likes | 590 Views
Considering the Establishment Survey Response Process in the Context of the Administrative Sciences. Diane K. Willimack U.S. Census Bureau. Survey Methodology draws upon multiple disciplines –. Statistics/sampling Psychology Sociology Economics Political science Computer science
E N D
Considering the Establishment Survey Response Process in the Context of the Administrative Sciences Diane K. Willimack U.S. Census Bureau
Survey Methodology draws upon multiple disciplines – • Statistics/sampling • Psychology • Sociology • Economics • Political science • Computer science • Human-computer interaction
Examples • Cognitive response model draws upon Cognitive Psychology • Survey participation decision models draw upon Social Psychology • Web survey design draws upon Software Development & Human-Computer Interaction
draws upon Household Survey Research Methods Establishment survey methodology
Survey Tourangeau’s(1984)Cognitive Response Model • Comprehension • Retrieval • Judgment • Communication
Business Survey Response Process Model for Establishment Surveys Sudman et al., ICES-2 Encoding in Memory / Record Formation Selection / Identification of Respondent(s) Assessment of Priorities (Motivation) • Comprehension • Retrieval • Judgment • Communication • from Memory and / or Records • Release of the Data
Organizational in Nature Response Process Model for Establishment Surveys Sudman et al., ICES-2 Encoding in Memory / Record Formation Selection / Identification of Respondent(s) Assessment of Priorities (Motivation) • Comprehension • Retrieval • Judgment • Communication • from Memory and / or Records • Release of the Data
Disciplines relevant for surveys of businesses and organizations – • Organizational behavior • Managerial science • Administrative science • Behavior of people in organizations
Synthesis of Literatures • Social psychology of organizations • Social behavior within organizations • Administrative behavior • Managerial science
Social Behavior • Attributes of Organization • Structure • Differentiation of functions • (De)centralization • Authority hierarchies • Coordination • Effectiveness Organizational Goals Produce goods & services Maintain viability over time People
Attributes of Organization • Structure • Differentiation of functions • (De)centralization • Authority hierarchies • Coordination • Effectiveness Organizational Goals Produce goods & services Maintain viability over time WORK! People
How is work accomplished? • Divisions of labor • Managerial hierarchies • Information subsystems
How is work accomplished? • Coordination • Communication • Cooperation • Individual self-control and self-directed behavior
The establishment survey response process = WORK. • Fails to contribute to organization’s goals • Intra-organizational “project” without organizational sanctions • Relies on social norms of cooperation and self-directed behavior
Dimensions of Social Behaviorin Organizations • Authority • Responsibility • Accountability • Influence • Allegiance / Loyalty
Dimensions of Social Behaviorin Organizations • Authority • Decision-maker re: survey participation • Release data • Delegate activity
Dimensions of Social Behaviorin Organizations continued • Responsibility • Without authority • Capacity • Knowledge of data sources • Access to data • Accountability • Job performance criteria & evaluation
Dimensions of Social Behaviorin Organizations continued • Influence • Authority • Reciprocation • Commitment / consistency • Social proof • Liking • Scarcity
Dimensions of Social Behaviorin Organizations continued • Allegiance / Loyalty • Personal goals Organization’s goals • Decisions & actions Organization’s goals
Social Behavior + Role-taking = Work Role-taking – the manifestation of social behavior among persons in organizations for the purpose of accomplishing work. • Coordination • Communication • Interpersonal interaction • Cooperation
Role Receiver: “Focal Person” Role Sender Sent Role Role Behavior Role Episode Expectations Received Role
Personal attributes of ‘LDP’ Organi- zational factors that convey to R Request for Information Sent Role: Data specs Influence Role Behavior: Compliance Interpersonal factors associated with ‘LDP’ Role Episode: Responding to a Survey Focal Person Role Sender “Local Data Provider” (LDP) Respondent (R) Expectations: Compliance Received Role: Interprets R’s request
Personal attributes of ‘LDP’ Role Sender Supervisor Expectations: Compliance Sent Role: Assignment Authority Role Behavior: Compliance Interpersonal factors associated with ‘LDP’ Role Episode between LDP and Supervisor Focal Person Organi- zational factors that convey to the Super- visor “Local Data Provider” (LDP) Received Role: Assigned work Performance criteria
Role Conflict • Role episodes between: • R and LDP • LDP and Supervisor
Role Episodes: A Framework for Evaluating Response Process • “Draw” the role episode diagram for people involved in providing survey data • Account for multiple roles of each player • Study, understand, analyze interactions between people in the organization
Role Episodes: A Framework for Evaluating Response Process continued • Use as a tool • Diagnose potential problems and breakdowns • Suggest strategies that facilitate response process • Avoid strategies that hinder organizational processes
Developing Data Collection Software for the U.S. Economic Census • Detailed establishment-level data • “Task analysis” with business respondents • “How do respondents go about pulling together all this data?”
Developing Data Collection Software for the U.S. Economic Census continued • Pervasive use of spreadsheets • Means of communication • Organizational norm for exchanging data • Some Rs lacked response “capacity” – e.g., knowledge of specific data items • Unable to “assign” items to LDPs • R LDP: sent role relied on differentiation of expertise
Developing Data Collection Software for the U.S. Economic Census continued • Re-engineered software • Versatile spreadsheet functionality • Supported organizational context for R’s and LDP’s roles
ICT Annual Company-level Data on expenses Annual Capital Expenditures Survey (ACES) Annual Company-level Data on capital expenditures Survey of Information & Communication Technology (ICT) Can these two surveys be joined?
ICT and ACEScontinued • Problem: Operating Expenses vs. Capital Expenditures • Different uses by management • Different treatment by tax rules • Possible implications: • Distributed knowledge • Different data systems? • Different respondents?
ICT and ACEScontinued • Pretesting results • Best ACES respondent best ICT respondent • ACES respondent wanted to – • Receive ICT form • Take responsibility for gathering ICT data • Role Episode: • Role sender – ACES respondent • Focal person – LDP for ICT data
ICT and ACEScontinued • Design solution • Separate forms / separate return envelopes • Used ACES respondent as contact person • Supports a variety of potential social behaviors by ACES respondent • No direct access to ICT data • Coordinates / compiles data from ICT sources • Direct access to ICT data • Gathers all data and responds
Survey organizations… • Are members of businesses’ external environment • Have indirect / disjoint relationship with businesses • Cannot manage the response process
Models of Social Behavior in Organizations • Framework for studying organizational context for survey response process • Address research questions • Who is the “right” respondent? • Interplay between Authority and Responsibility / Capacity • How to facilitate reporting from multiple data sources? • Respondents, “Local Data Providers,” and Role Episodes • What are effects of alternative data collection strategies on data quality?
Future Research • Other theories / models of social behavior in organizations • Management • Influence • Authority • Do this approach add value? • How can it be applied?
Feedback? Comments? Questions? • Go Forth and Research!! Diane K. Willimack U.S. Census Bureau diane.k.willimack@census.gov ph. 301-763-3538