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			A.8. Abstract: Each
			month the Current Employment
			Statistics (CES) program surveys
			about 145,000 businesses and government agencies, representing
			approximately 557,000 individual worksites, in order to provide
			detailed industry data on employment, hours, and earnings of
			workers on nonfarm payrolls. The CES program produces nonfarm
			employment series for all employees, production and nonsupervisory
			employees, and women employees. Most employment series begin in
			1990, although employment by aggregate industry sector and most
			major industry sectors is published as far back as 1939. 
 This
			outreach survey has multiple objectives.  First, we would like to
			learn more about our user audience, for example, who are they,
			which CES data do they prefer to use, and how often do they visit
			our website?  Related objectives include the following: 
				Which
				specific data products are used?What
				level of detail is preferred in our data products?Which
				publications are used, and preferred?How
				are CES data accessed, and how satisfied are data users with
				access to the data, the usability of our website, and
				documentation provided on the website?Does
				the current release schedule meet data users’ needs?
				 
				Which
				analytical measures are most useful?  Are there suggestions for
				alternative measures?Is
				the process of revising CES data understood?  Do data users
				believe the revision process improves or degrades the data? 
				Which parts of the process are liked or disliked?How
				satisfied are data users with the analytical research summaries,
				news releases, and articles provided by BLS?Is
				BLS customer service satisfactory?What
				data products would they like to see BLS produce? 
 We will
			contact potential survey respondents by placing a link to the
			survey on our website, and inviting visitors to give us feedback. 
			In addition, we will send the survey invitation to a list of 150
			data users who have contacted BLS with questions about the CES
			data. 
			 
 We will
			send potential respondents an email with the survey invitation. 
			We will follow-up email addresses that bounce and send the survey
			invitation to corrected email addresses.  We will allow four weeks
			for the data collection (from survey invitation to the closing of
			the survey).   
			 
 All of our responses
			will be collected via web (using SurveyMonkey).    No pledge of
			confidentiality will be given.  Respondents will be told “This
			survey is being administered by SurveyMonkey.com and resides on a
			server outside of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) domain. The
			BLS cannot guarantee the protection of survey responses and
			advises against the inclusion of personally-identifiable
			information.” 
  Based
			on our testing, we assume that it will take respondents an average
			of 15 minutes to complete the survey. Based on
			the experiences of similar surveys, we expect a 20 percent
			response rate for the email invitation sent to CES data users that
			have previously been in contact with us (30 responses).   We also
			have over 6,000 email subscribers to CES data who will be notified
			when we update our homepage to add the survey link, but they will
			not receive an individual survey invitation.  We expect 4.5
			percent of this group to participate in the survey (270
			responses). 
 We are
			using the results of this survey internally for planning
			purposes.  We are not employing statistical methods
			because we don’t have a sample frame of all
			CES data users and therefore, can’t extrapolate the results
			to all CES data users. 
 A copy
			of the survey and the email invitations are attached. 
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