Surveys and questionnaires are common tools used in construction and engineering project organization

research, though there is a dearth of literature on how to best conduct surveys of issues related to these

topics. In this paper, we analyzed how three factors鈥攃hoice of response mode, incentive timing, and

urbanicity鈥攁ffect response rate, response speed, and degree of survey completion. The survey design used

postal contact to solicit participation in a web survey of the general public in Oklahoma and Colorado

regarding oil and gas development and hazards. We found that offering a choice of two response modes

(web response or mailed paper response) had no significant effect on response rate, response speed, or the

degree of survey completion compared to those only offered the web response option. We also found that

the timing of a guaranteed incentive (i.e. receiving a monetary incentive in the initial contact versus in the

first follow-up) did not significantly affect response rate or the degree of survey completion but did result

in a faster response time. Urbanicity of a target community significantly affected all three measures: urban

communities exhibited a higher response rate, quicker response speed, and a greater degree of survey

completion as compared to rural households, regardless of mode choice or the timing of the incentive.

Findings will help inform researchers who employ household surveys how survey design choices impact

public response.


Tracy, A. and A. Javernick-Will (2020). 鈥淚ncentivizing Survey Response: How Incentive Timing, Response Mode Choice, and Urbanicity Affect Survey Response鈥. Engineering Project Organizations Journal. Vol 9. .