Re: One of the SA stations must doing its job on tracking listeners.
> Hmm, guess I hit a nerve. They may be "research
> professionals," but I tend to take a dim view of calls where
> a fast-talking caller is shouting at me to be heard above
> the din of the room she's working in. That's what led me to
> the conclusion she was in a "boiler room." If it hadn't been
> about radio or TV, I would have hung up on the call. I doubt
> that most of my neighbors, similar age group folks who don't
> share my keen interest in media, would have as much
> patience.
Like restaurants, there are good and bad research companies. That sounds like a bad one. Many research companies "farm out" their calls, so the folks doing the calling may be selling long distance services or health coverage this week...
>
> I was on a regular call list for some station's music
> research studies when I lived in the Midwest. They called me
> about 4 times over a period of a couple of years to get my
> opinions about samples of songs. That was conducted much
> more professionally than the call I received last night.
As it should be. Callout often uses a strict percentage of new respondents and call-backs (called "panel participants) for efficiency. You got on a panel, which indicates they track historic acceptance, too.
> (no
> shouting, no background noise and a normal rate of speaking)
Probably done in house or by a company call center. Many, like Radio One, Citadel, etc. have call centers that do multiple markets from one location to insure quality control and supervision.
> If anyone here has some connection to the company that does
> these studies in SA ("Hamilton Telesv" according to my
> Caller ID), you might let them know that they are coming off
> like sleazy telemarketers. If I knew what station was paying
> for their services, I'd tell the station myself.
This sounds like a farm out of the call portion. Unless we know what station they were focusing on, there is no way to tell them their research company hired a nasty call center. Most stations would like the callers to be dedicate to radio call out and have an understanding of the terms listeners use, be able to know what dial position is what station, etc. Otherwise, you get bad results.
I think you were called by a non-radio call center.
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