The use of online questionnaires in tourism, hospitality and events is a growing area
of interest. Businesses are increasingly using social networking sites to collect
gaining in popularity for both individuals and organisations and it is interesting to
debate how useful they are for data collection. The use of social networking sites to
collect data is appealing because they are easy to access and you are able to target
particular market segments such as the millennials who are very active in their use of
systems. There are issues with online surveys because people may not trust them and
it is easy to ignore them, so response rates may be low. You may want to consider
conducting your survey or questionnaire both online and on paper so that you target
a wider set of respondents.
Other organisations offer to design and conduct surveys on your behalf online, and
these are becoming important in the research process. Companies such as
Surveymonkey (
www.surveymonkey.co.uk
) and Qualtrics offer online and analytical
tools to help you with the design and analysis of your questionnaire. At Plymouth
University, we bought the Qualtrics package for our students in the business area and
this is being increasingly used by them to conduct their research. We saw in
Illustration 5.2
, for example, that Luke employed an online survey using Qualtrics to
research the consumer view of local food. A colleague at our university has become
an expert in the use of Qualtrics and he provides his short guide to this in
Illustration
5.5
.
Illustration 5.5 Using the Qualtrics insight platform, by Rob Giles
Introduction
Data collection is a science combining elements of technology,
psychology, statistics and data interpretation before conclusions can be
suggested and tested for consistency.
Cloud-based survey builders have become an increasingly popular
method for collecting quantitative data. There are many to choose from,
however Qualtrics provides an illustration of how, with a user-friendly
and highly flexibly interface, the focus for the research can be placed on
the research objective rather than on technical restrictions.
Free questionnaire applications are likely to handicap your research and
increase the time and effort required by the researcher. For serious
researchers and professionals, it is not a question of how one might
compromise from the ideal research solution but more a case of how an
improved solution might be possible utilising some of the many advanced
features that are available within the application.
The following is a brief explanation that highlights just some of the
features regularly used by researchers to elicit the maximum response
rate possible. Ensuring both the quality and appropriateness of the data
collected will inevitably result in more rigorous hypothesis testing and
generally improved outcome and recommendations.
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