An Increase Matters, Not the Actual Value: Early Bird Incentives in Longitudinal Surveys

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18148/srm/2025.v19i1.8478

Keywords:

survey incentives, early bird incentives, push-to-web, Mixed-mode

Abstract

This paper provides unique new evidence regarding the effect on response rates of increasing the value of an early bird incentive (EBI) sent to respondents completing an online questionnaire during the first five weeks of fieldwork. The experiment analysed in this paper, embedded in wave 12 of Understanding Society, a longitudinal mixed-mode survey, tested an increase of the EBI from £10 to £20. Moreover, the experiment additionally covered a subsample who were being administered the web-first mixed-mode design for the first time, having previously been administered a CAPI-only design and, therefore, had not been offered the EBI. This allowed us to explore the mechanisms that drive the effect of the incentive increase on response rates. We also examined the effect of the increased incentives on fieldwork efforts and sample composition. We found that increasing the value of the incentive had a positive effect on response rates for panel members who had been offered the EBI previously, whereas the higher value had no significant effect on those who had not previously been offered an EBI. The effect was particularly pronounced for certain low-response propensity groups.

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Published

2025-04-10

How to Cite

Cabrera Álvarez, P., & Lynn, P. (2025). An Increase Matters, Not the Actual Value: Early Bird Incentives in Longitudinal Surveys. Survey Research Methods, 19(1), 13–24. https://doi.org/10.18148/srm/2025.v19i1.8478

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