As a small business owner, I often get people calling up with some survey or another. They want to know whether my business is growing, whether I’ll be hiring more people this year, and what software and services I sell. If these surveys are the basis of the economic polls predicting what’s happening this year, I’d advise the world to discount most of the answers. The questions sounds like they were written presupposing particular answers; since the questions often don’t make sense the answers won’t either.
As an example, the local MBE had a survey about shipping, which included the question “How much extra would you pay for faster shipping?” to which I answered “depends on how important it is that it get there faster”. This was not considered a reasonable answer; I was meant to put a dollar figure on it, according to the rules the survey-taker had. Which she wasn’t meant to show me, as they explicitly stated the survey-takers were not to explain the questions to people taking the survey (why not? I don’t know, and she didn’t either.)
Today’s gem was for software and services companies. I am a consultant; I don’t sell or resell software and I don’t write software packages for people either (I don’t count the odd XSLT stylesheet or XML editor customization although I guess I could). After saying that I don’t create or resell software, the questions included what proportion of my company’s revenue is from selling software or hardware, what platforms the solutions run on, and whether my company is a member of vendor partner programs that are designed for software resellers. More interesting were the questions about whether I get kickbacks commissions for recommending software — I assume this must happen although whether people would really admit to it on the phone to a survey-taker is another matter. (And, for the record, I don’t.)
In all, 27 minutes of oddball questions with a large proportion of answers being “the question is not applicable” and the survey-taker asking “so do you want me to put you down as ‘don’t know’ or ‘refuse to answer’?” And, of course, she didn’t know why ‘not applicable’ was not considered a reasonable answer. I hope the survey purveyors can make more sense out of the answers than I could of the questions.
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