Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "HFguy" wrote in message news:mbOKh.3869$282.773@trndny04... David Eduardo wrote: Actually, diaries are placed using a technique based on random digit dialers, with strict geographic controls within each market's metro. Participants are recruited based on quotas for age, sex, ethnicity, etc. based on Claritas quantifications of each market using root Census data and annual updates. In today's world, this is as close as you can get to a true random probability sample where there is no recruitment bias. There is nothing "hand picked" about the sample. Stations can not ask to have diaries sent to anyone. It's all random. And the diary method is going away, as the People Meter rolls out over the next few years. It's already in Philly and Houston, and does full electronic measurement of a perfectly balanced sample. I participated in an Arbitron radio survey many years ago. I was first contacted by phone and they asked if I would be interested in keeping a diary. I agreed and they sent the diary to me. The main problem I had was I often don't listen to a station for more than a few seconds to see if I like the music they're playing. If not, I move on to another station. I don't listen to most commercials either, so that's another reason for retuning. I do this a lot with FM. It's almost impossible to enter this kind of listening into a survey diary. There would be hundreds of entries in a day. Since I'm also an HF listener, I had to enter the shortwave stations in the diary. I imagine they threw mine out after they saw that. No, your diary was not thrown out. Any diary that has been properly returned is processed, including those that show zero listening. Arbitron tabulates just two things... station and time listening to it. Credits are given by quarter hour. To get a quarter hour credit, a listener has to have been tuned in for a minimum of 5 minutes in each quarter hour. So dial scanning or seeking does not give credit. Today, with the Portable People Meter, all of this is done electronically... with every station in a measured market encoded. This means non-encoded signals, like, let's say, and Ecuadorian SW station, will not get detected. Again, nobody in the advertising or radio industry believes this is a defect. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
transshark should leave | CB | |||
Leave Twisted, Leave | CB | |||
how rf leave the antenna | Antenna | |||
"leave his mother behind" | Shortwave |