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1.) An excellent questionnaire should be clear, useful, and focused on your concept or idea.

and is
pertinent to your subject.
2.) Instructions for the interviewer should be included next to the relevant questions. The response
is recorded following the question, along with instructions on where to ask follow-up questions
to elicit further information. A questionnaire should, in general, be as brief as feasible.
3.) Choose the relevant information. Determine the target audience.
Choose the approach(es) you'll employ to get in touch with your target audience.
You must choose precisely whom you will ask to take part in the survey based on the answer to
this question.
4.) 2. There are two situations when seemingly repeated inquiries could be used: opening questions
or easy-to-answer beginning questions that don't come off as intimidating. Dummy questions or
using bogus questions to cover up a survey or a study's sponsor.
5.) Three benefits of open-ended inquiries are the possibility of an infinite number of viable replies
and the possibility of unexpected results. Respondents can now provide detailed answers as
well as quantitative and illustrative information.
6.) The Question is poorly phrased and hence challenging to grasp.
The query can strike the respondent as being too private.
The respondent may not have any idea of the subject
7.) The interview shouldn't last more than 45 minutes in a rural setting.
8.) Ask the respondent to contemplate and consider
expresses sentiment and opinion
They give the reply command of the dialogue.

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