There’s no place like home? Assessing how the interview method affects PPI results >
In this age of ‘lean data’, organizations are seeking ways to reduce the data collection burden and cost in order to get meaningful, actionable data about their clients. Practitioners value the PPI for its statistical rigor, relatively low implementation cost, simplicity and transparency…the PPI is ‘lean data’. The national surveys upon which the PPI is based are conducted by enumerators in respondents’ homes, so the PPI is most accurate when it replicates that and the survey is done in-person and at-home. However, it can become expensive and time-consuming to administer the PPI if regular visits to a client’s home are not already built into an organization’s business model.
Given the trend to explore leaner ways to collect impact data, including PPI data, we wanted to test alternative interview methods that could potentially be less expensive, faster, and make it easier for organizations to administer the PPI. With funding from the Ford Foundation, Grameen Foundation worked with Mark Schreiner, developer of the PPI, to test the accuracy of the following alternative methods:
- In-person/away-from-home: an enumerator separately interviews multiple participants in one visit at a central point away from their homes—for example—at a microfinance loan group meeting. Individual interviews are conducted privately,
- In-person/by-phone: an enumerator interviews participants by telephone
- Automated/by-phone: PPI questions are administered to clients via interactive-voice response (IVR) or SMS/text-messaging 1
The study results show that the interview method does affect estimated poverty rates, primarily due to its effect on survey completion rates. Completion of an interview is linked both with the method and with participants’ poverty. By-phone methods had the lowest completion rates. This leads to lower poverty-rate estimates because less-poor households are more likely to have access to phones and participate in the interview. The completion rates in our study are shown in the table below.
Interview Method | Completion Rate |
Benchmark (In-person/at-home) | 84% |
In-person/away-from-home | 91% |
In-person/by-phone | 60% |
IVR | 12% |
The study findings indicate that, holding all else constant, the in-person/away-from-home method can substitute in-person/at-home as long as its completion rate, as defined in the study2, is similar to that of the at-home method. The in-person/by-phone method was found to underestimate poverty rates and may not be an acceptable substitute. Automated methods such as IVR or SMS are unlikely to give results close to the at-home method (regardless of completion rates) and are not recommended.
It’s important to note that ‘In-person/at-home’ interviews are the ideal, officially recognized method for collecting PPI data. However, we recognize that it may not always be practical for social enterprises to use the method that gives the most accurate results. Sometimes trade-offs must be made. The goal of this study is therefore to help users make deliberate, transparent decisions about which interview method to opt for, after taking into account the associated risks and costs.
The full report can be downloaded here. We’re interested in hearing about your experiences collecting PPI or other impact data via alternative interview methods. Send your story to ppi@poverty-action.org.
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