If the surveyor is calling you and asking a lot of personal questions, it may be a scam. If you do not feel comfortable, hang up immediately.
In one context, it may be Social Engineering. However, when a person on the phone asks personal questions this might be the type of attack that could lead to identity theft. This type of attack is a criminal act not a tort. People should be cautious about answering ANY personal questions when *you* did not initiate the phone call. Do not give your name, address, family names, pet names, your email address, and never, ever give your Social Security Number OR Banking information. Each piece of information gives the caller details about you, through which they can build a profile about you, and research you via the Internet. Never give info if promised a gift for doing the survey. The only 'gift' you'll get is a stolen identity.
He might be dealing with identity theft. It is important to never give information over the phone, even if you think it is someone that you can trust.
It is a form of social engineering attack known as pretexting, where attackers gather personal information by pretending to be someone they're not to gain trust and manipulate victims into revealing sensitive information. This stolen information can then be used for malicious purposes like identity theft or fraud.
The leading questions in a sample survey is the purpose of the survey and the expectations of the interviewees.
The typical order of a survey includes an introduction, demographics questions, main survey questions, and closing statement/thank you message.
Yes, personal interviews can be a valuable tool for gathering in-depth and detailed information in a survey. Interviewers can ask follow-up questions to clarify responses and probe deeper into participants' perspectives. However, personal interviews can be time-consuming and resource-intensive compared to other survey methods.
survey. Can be telephone survey or survey by personal interview.
A survey can be dangerous if it collects sensitive or personal information that is not properly safeguarded, leading to potential privacy breaches or identity theft. Additionally, biased or leading survey questions can manipulate respondents' opinions and influence their decisions, leading to inaccurate or misleading results.
Phishing
When you get a call and you see PPP on the caller ID it means Public Policy Polling. The calls are coming from a polling company wanting you to complete a survey.
The questions found in an apparel survey depends on the goal of the survey. You can ask about how the participant chooses what clothes to buy and do clothes have to be on sale for them to make a purchase.