Millennials have been the focus of quite some research because of their
differences with older cohorts. Besides, young respondents have been considered as a
hard target population for surveys. However, to our knowledge, no research has compared
the levels and types of survey participation of the Millennials versus the older generations.
Using a dataset of 1,570,301 panelists of an opt-in online panel in eight countries from
Europe, Latin America and North America, we show that Millennials differ ...
Millennials have been the focus of quite some research because of their
differences with older cohorts. Besides, young respondents have been considered as a
hard target population for surveys. However, to our knowledge, no research has compared
the levels and types of survey participation of the Millennials versus the older generations.
Using a dataset of 1,570,301 panelists of an opt-in online panel in eight countries from
Europe, Latin America and North America, we show that Millennials differ from older
cohorts in terms of survey participation. Millennials show lower participation rates than
older cohorts. Moreover, they present significantly higher proportions of surveys
answered using smartphones. However, differences across cohorts in terms of break-offs
and survey evaluation are mainly nonsignificant and/or nonmeaningful.
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