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FBO DAILY - FEDBIZOPPS ISSUE OF JUNE 19, 2016 FBO #5322
SOLICITATION NOTICE

R -- Nationwide Survey and Focus Groups in Chile - Additional Information

Notice Date
6/17/2016
 
Notice Type
Combined Synopsis/Solicitation
 
NAICS
541910 — Marketing Research and Public Opinion Polling
 
Contracting Office
Department of State, Office of Acquisitions, Acquisition Management, 1735 N. Lynn St., Arlington, Virginia, 22209, United States
 
ZIP Code
22209
 
Solicitation Number
SAQMMA16Q0246
 
Archive Date
7/25/2016
 
Point of Contact
Amanda M. Rajah, , Terence G. Lord,
 
E-Mail Address
RajahAM@state.gov, lordtg@state.gov
(RajahAM@state.gov, lordtg@state.gov)
 
Small Business Set-Aside
N/A
 
Description
In addition to this attachment, refer to Section L-002 for guidance on registering for a DUNS number, followed by a CAGE (for US Vendors) NCAGE (for non-US vendors) code, then a System for Award Management (SAM) profile. includes submittal instructions, terms and selection criteria The following solicitation provisions apply to this acquisition. This is a combined synopsis/solicitation for commercial items prepared in accordance with the format in Subpart 12.6, as supplemented with additional information included in this notice. This announcement constitutes the only solicitation; quotes are being requested and a written solicitation will not be issued. This is a firm fixed price acquisition being conducted under FAR part 12 in conjunction with FAR 13 Simplified Acquisition Procedures (13.106). The Office of Opinion Research (OPN) of the U.S. Department of State (the Client) is considering commissioning a nationally representative public opinion survey and a series of 9 focus groups in three cities in Chile in during mid-2016 as described below. SUMMARY OF CONTRACTOR’S RESPONSIBILITIES FOR NATIONWIDE SURVEY · • Designing an appropriate sample; · • Translating, back-translating, formatting, and printing the questionnaire submitted by the Office of Opinion Research; · • Conducting a pretest; · • Managing fieldwork; · • Coding questionnaires, entering data, checking and cleaning the data; and · • Providing required deliverables: detailed sampling design, translation and back-translation of questionnaire, pretest report, final field version of questionnaire and show cards, marginal frequencies, data in ASCII and SPSS formats, codebook, methodological report, contact sheets for selected interviewers, copies of 10 completed field questionnaires, and additional supporting documentation as necessary. These responsibilities are described in detail below. Sample Design: Design and implement a probability sample design for face-to-face interviews in respondents’ homes to achieve a nationally representative sample of at least 1,500 adults age 18 and older. Before the beginning of fieldwork the Contractor shall submit a spreadsheet or SPSS file showing all of the primary sampling units (PSUs) for each stratum, together with a description of how each unit was selected. The Contractor shall indicate the skip intervals and random starting points used in the selection process, as well as the order in which the primary sampling units were selected within each stratum. Questionnaire: OPN will provide an English-language questionnaire that will include approximately 35 substantive questions (30 closed-ended, 5 open-ended), focusing on public attitudes toward domestic economic and social issues, as well as international affairs. In addition, for each respondent the questionnaire and final data set will include: Demographics : including but not limited to gender, exact age, education, occupation, household income, number of adults in household who are eligible for the survey, economic class, city, region, urban/rural, political party support, religion and ethnicity Interviewing information : · date of interview (month, day, day of week); · interview start time, interview end time, duration of interview in minutes; · variables used to stratify the sample; a unique code for each primary sampling unit, secondary sampling unit, and ultimate sampling point; and a variable indicating the order in which the PSUs were selected within each stratum if systematic sampling is used; · interviewer ID, supervisor ID, field manager ID, data entry/keypuncher ID; · interviewers’ indication of the privacy of the interview and the comfort, comprehension and candor of the respondent; · whether the respondent is the originally selected respondent or a substitute, the number of visits/call-backs necessary to achieve a successful interview, whether the interview was back-checked, and the method of back-checking (supervisor’s presence during the original interview, separate face-to-face interview by either the supervisor or another interviewer, telephone call, and/or a letter or postcard). Translation and Back-translation of Questionnaire: The Contractor is responsible for translating the questionnaire into colloquial Spanish, and for back-translating the translated questionnaire into English. The back-translation must be done by someone who has not seen the original English questionnaire. The Client will review the translation and consult with the Contractor on necessary changes. The Client must approve the final translation before the pretest. Pre-test : After the Client approves the translation, the Contractor will pretest the full questionnaire with at least 25 randomly-selected representative interviews that will not be included in the final sample. The Contractor will provide the Client with a pretest report, including a demographic summary of the participants and a discussion by question of any problems or suggested changes to the questionnaire. The Client must approve any changes to the questionnaire. Fieldwork: Fieldwork will be done by face-to-face interviews in respondents’ homes. All interviews shall be conducted in strict adherence to the sampling plan. The Contractor is responsible for organizing and overseeing all aspects of fieldwork, including: preparing and printing the final questionnaires; selecting and training interviewers; assigning contact lists to interviewers; supervising interviewers; enforcing quality controls; monitoring and recording contact and non-response rates; and providing weekly feedback to the Office of Opinion Research on the status of fieldwork. If, in the course of fieldwork, it is apparent that there is an unusually large proportion of persons refusing to be interviewed, the Contractor must inform the Client. Contact with every sampled household or adult should be attempted at least 3 times during fieldwork. The contact attempts should be spread over different times of the day and days of the week and weekend. Note: the minimum achieved sample for the survey is 1,500 fully completed interviews. Data Management: The Contractor is responsible for processing, cleaning, and coding the data in English, enforcing quality controls for data entry, and detecting data fabrication, if any. Closed-end or pre-coded questions : The Contractor shall use the codes specified on the final questionnaire for all items. Open-end questions : The Contractor will develop categories of responses based on 200 randomly selected questionnaires from all regions of the sample, providing at least 5 sample responses for each proposed category. Categories must be approved by the Client prior to coding responses. The “Other” category should not include more than 10% of the total responses for any question. If any single response in the “Other” category amounts to more than 2%, then the Contractor will code this response as a separate response, not as “Other.” Deliverables: The Contractor shall deliver the following to OPN by email (except as otherwise noted): 1) Detailed sampling design; 2) Translation and back-translation of the questionnaire; 3) Pretest report; 4) Field version of the questionnaire and all show cards; 5) Marginal frequencies (weighted, if appropriate) for all questions, including demographics; 6) The final, cleaned data files including all survey questions, demographics, interviewing information and (if applicable) weight values; these files shall be in two formats: a. ASCII, with all records having the same length b. SPSS Windows format (*.sav), with all variables and values labeled in English; 7) A complete codebook for all survey questions, demographics, interviewing information, and (if applicable) weight values, identifying the column positions of all variables in the ASCII file; 8) A detailed methodological report which contains sufficient details on the sampling design and weighting so that independent researchers would be able to replicate the survey using only information in the report. In particular, the methodological report shall include the following: · A brief report of any unusual problems or significant events which may have influenced the conduct of the survey or the responses given; · A description of field interviewing, including: exact dates of field work; interviewer selection, training and supervision; and enforcement of quality controls; · A description of the sampling design and procedure, including: o The universe sampled; o The populations excluded from the sample and why these were excluded; o Description of statistical documentation used to design the sample (e.g., census data) and date of the information; o All forms of stratification used, and the basis for stratification; If you use differential probabilities of selection in sampling (e.g., stratification with different rates by strata), provide the justification for using those rates and describe the expected effects on the variances. o Selection procedure at each stage of sampling: primary sampling unit (PSU), secondary sampling unit (SSU), sampling point, household and individual respondent; o For PSUs and SSUs, indicate the order in which each unit was selected. For systematic sampling, indicate the random starting point and the skip interval; · If you weight the data, provide a detailed description of weighting procedures. The Client must be able to recreate weight values based on this documentation, the data sources, and the data file. Any weights should account for: o The probability of selection of the household and the adult (the base weights should be the inverse of the probability of selection); o Nonresponse and non-coverage; o Adjustments to match population data (describe sources of population data). · Report on sampling performance, including: o Information on sampling point substitution, including: a list of sampling points that were replaced, the reason for their replacement, the procedures for replacement, and the replacement sampling points; o Rate of respondent substitution and procedures for substituting respondents; The number of completed interviews, partial interviews, refusals, failed contacts (e.g. no one at home), cases that are not eligible (e.g. not a housing unit, no adults in the household), and cases of unknown eligibility (e.g. unable to locate address), and the resulting response rate (“RR1” as defined in “Standard Definitions” by the American Association for Public Opinion Research: found here PDF. o The response rate (as defined above) for each city/province/region/interviewer; o An estimate of sampling error that takes into account the actual sampling procedures used (stratification, clustering, etc.). Include a brief explanation of how interviewing and fieldwork procedures affected the theoretical margin of error. 9) Selected contact sheets for 10 specific interviewers which the Client will specify after receipt of the final data set. These may be sent either in hard copy or as a scanned email attachment; 10) Ten completed questionnaires which the Client will specify after receipt of the final data set (either in hard copy or as a scanned email attachment); 11) The Client may request additional supporting documentation to fully understand the design and conduct of the survey (e.g., interviewer maps). Time Schedule: Each stage of the survey project should be conducted according to a schedule agreed to by the Contractor and the Office of Opinion Research. The period of performance is anticipated to be one year from contract award. SUMMARY OF CONTRACTOR’S RESPONSIBILITIES FOR FOCUS GROUPS In addition to the nationwide survey, The Office of Opinion Research (the Client) is considering commissioning 9 focus groups in Chile on the social, economic and political views of the Chilean middle class. We would like to conduct the groups in June/July 2016, with exact timing to be determined upon consultation with the Contractor. Each focus group discussion shall last about 120 minutes. The Office of Opinion Research will provide (1) the English-language version of the focus group discussion guide, a screening questionnaire indicating the criteria for selecting respondents, and a short follow-up questionnaire. Project Overview The Contractor shall be responsible for the following tasks: 1) Consulting on the design of the discussion guide, screening questionnaire, and follow-up questionnaire with the Office of Opinion Research; 2) Translating into Spanish the discussion guide, screening questionnaire, and follow-up questionnaire and backtranslation of these documents into English. 3) Identifying and selecting participants using the screening questionnaire; 4) Managing the fieldwork – including providing suitable space for the discussion groups, providing incentives, briefing the moderator(s) and conducting the groups; 5) Providing viewing facilities for observation of each discussion group by Office of Opinion Research staff; 6) Providing audio and video recording of the discussion for all group discussions. If possible, this should be in digital format; 7) Providing full and accurate transcriptions of all group discussions in Spanish and English translations of transcripts; 8) Providing summaries of each group, a methodological report, and a final analytical report to the Office of Opinion Research by established deadlines (see below for detailed list of deliverables); 9) Maintaining frequent and regular contact with the Office of Opinion Research for the duration of the project. Focus Group Composition and Locations: The Contractor shall propose a research design for a total of 9 groups, each consisting of 8-10 middle class Chileans age 18-50. We propose the group composition be separated by age (youth 18-29, adults age 30-50) and by gender, but welcome your recommendations. Also we want broad geographic coverage, with groups in Santiago, and perhaps Concepcion and Antofagasta. You are welcome to recommend other cities in the south and north. Discussion Guide and Screening Questionnaire: The client will develop an English-language version of the discussion guide, screening questionnaire, and a follow-up questionnaire in consultation with the Contractor. The Contractor is responsible for translating these documents into colloquial Spanish and having them backtranslated into English by someone who has not seen the original English documents. The Office of Opinion Research will review the Spanish translation and backtranslation and consult with the Contractor on necessary changes. The Client must approve the final translation before recruitment begins. Recruitment: Participant recruitment shall commence upon Office of Opinion Research approval of the Spanish version of the discussion guide, screening questionnaire, and follow-up questionnaire. The Contractor shall be responsible for i dentification of prospective participants – preferably through a randomized method of contact and collection of data from the screening questionnaire. Participants must not be neighbors, friends, relatives, co-workers or members/activists in the same organization. Recruiters should be closely supervised in the field during the entire recruitment process. Fieldwork supervisors should be on hand during the scheduling of the focus groups and during the beginning of each discussion in order to manage any unforeseen circumstances. Field staff should recruit at least 10-12 people per session to ensure 8-10 participants per group. The Office of Opinion Research must agree to the final selection of participants before the discussion groups begin. Each participant should receive an appropriate incentive. Those who turn up but are not selected for the group should also receive some remuneration for their willingness to participate. Fieldwork: Exact timing for fieldwork shall be coordinated with Office of Opinion Research travel to observe the groups. The Contractor shall provide suitable space with adequate viewing facilities for observation of each discussion group by Office of Opinion Research staff. The Contractor shall provide simultaneous English translation of the groups (as necessary). The Contractor shall provide trained and highly skilled moderator(s) for each discussion group. Group discussion shall last about 120 minutes and shall be conducted according to the discussion guide. At the conclusion of each group discussion, participants will fill out a brief self-completed questionnaire. Following each discussion group, moderator and project manager will participate in a 30-60 minute debrief with Office of Opinion Research staff. Data Management: For the purpose of the proposed study, data refers to: 1) Complete verbatim audio and video tapes/files of group discussions; 2) Complete verbatim transcripts of each audio recording, clearly identifying each speaker; 3) Complete high quality English-language translation of all transcripts, clearly identifying each speaker; 3) Brief informal summary reports (1-2 pages, in English) of each group, highlighting the opinions expressed and any problems encountered. They do not need to be polished formal reports; 4) Tabulation of participant responses to screening questionnaire and the post-discussion follow-up questionnaire, and; 6) Methodological report detailing recruitment procedures, fieldwork, demographic profiles of each participant/group, and a brief report of any unusual problems or significant events that may have influenced the conduct of the group discussions; 7) A final analytical report in English presenting the main findings of the discussion, with attention to the similarities and difference between the groups, with a small number of illustrative quotes from the transcripts. This does not need to be a narrative report. It can be provided in matrix/table form. For example, for each section of the focus group discussion guide, the final report could consist of a list of the major themes within each focus group, with a few quotations to illustrate these findings; and a few sentences highlighting the key findings and the major comparisons between the groups; The Contractor is responsible for the management and the delivery of all data to the Office of Opinion Research (see below): Deliverables: Immediately following the completion of fieldwork, the Contractor is responsible for delivering to the Office of Opinion Research by email or by international air courier : • Clear, high-quality audio and video recording of each group discussion to Office of Opinion Research staff on site or, if electronic format is possible, by email to your point of contact in the Office of Opinion Research. Electronic files should be formatted for QuickTime or another software program agreed upon with the Client. Within 3 business days of completing each group, the Contractor is responsible for delivering to the Office of Opinion Research by email : • Brief informal summary reports; Within 7 business days of completing fieldwork, the Contractor is responsible for delivering to the Office of Opinion Research by email : • Methodological report; Within 15 business days of completion of fieldwork, the Contractor is responsible for delivering by email : • Full transcripts; • Tabulation of participants’ responses to the follow-up questionnaire for each group in a Microsoft excel file; • A final analytical report in English. Time Schedule: Each stage of the focus group project should be conducted according to a schedule agreed to by the Contractor and the Office of Opinion Research. The period of performance is anticipated to be one year from contract award. Sub - Contractors : If any part or stage of the focus group project will be sub-contracted to an individual or firm outside of your company, please identify the individual or firm, along with their relevant qualifications and the scope of their responsibility on the project. Confidentiality : The study is to be conducted in the name of the Contractor, in keeping with standard industry practice. The Client's identity shall not be revealed to field supervisors, interviewers or respondents in order to minimize bias. Further, the Client’s identity, details of the project and the survey results shall not be revealed to outside parties – e.g., media, academic or government – at any point before, during or after completion of the project without the express written permission of the Client. Archiving of Study: The Client may store parts of the study (questionnaires, data set, methodological summary) with a non-profit archive (e.g., the Roper Center, the National Archive and Records Administration). Projects will be embargoed for at least two years, and all identifiable markers of the Contractor will be removed. Billing and Payment: P ayment is typically authorized in three installments – the first upon approval of the final questionnaire and sampling plan for the survey, the second once the focus group discussion guide has been translated and approved, and the third upon receipt and approval of all required deliverables for both the public opinion survey and the focus groups. Please note, payment cannot be authorized upon commissioning the survey. All payments will be made in U.S. dollars. The method of payment is typically by electronic funds transfer if the Contractor provides appropriate banking information, but may also be made by U.S. Treasury check. NOTE: the submittal instructions go under L-001 and the evaluation criteria fall under M-001 in GFMS (attached to FBO notice). The following solicitation provisions apply to this acquisition: • FAR 52.212-3, "Offeror Representations & Certifications Commercial Items" (Feb 2016) The following contract clauses apply to this acquisition: • FAR 52.212-4, "Contract Terms and Conditions Commercial Items" (May 2015) • FAR 52.212-5, "Contract Terms and Conditions Required to Implement Statutes or Executive Orders" (Feb 2016). In addition to the required paragraphs, the following are the applicable optional paragraphs under 52.212-5: (8) 52.209-6,”Protecting the Government's Interest When Subcontracting with Contractors Debarred, Suspended, or Proposed for Debarment”. (Aug 2013) (31 U.S.C. 6101 note) (26) 52.222-19, Child Labor--Cooperation with Authorities and Remedies (Feb 2016) (E.O. 13126) (27) 52.222-21, Prohibition of Segregated Facilities (Apr 2015) (33)(i) 52.222-50, "Combatting Trafficking in Persons" (Mar 2015) (22 U.S.C. chapter 78 and E.O. 13627) (40) 52.223-18, Encouraging Contractor Policies to Ban Text Messaging While Driving (Aug 2011) (E.O. 13513) (49) 52.232-30, "Installment Payments for Commercial Items" (Oct 1995) (41 U.S.C. 4505, 10 U.S.C. 2307(f)) ___________________________________________________________________ For additional terms/conditions and instructions, including submittal contents and selection criteria, please refer to the relevant attachment. PLEASE SUBMIT YOUR QUOTE BY THE SPECIFIED DATE/TIME TO RAJAHAM@STATE.GOV. Submittals sent through this website will not be reviewed or considered.
 
Web Link
FBO.gov Permalink
(https://www.fbo.gov/spg/State/A-LM-AQM/A-LM-AQM/SAQMMA16Q0246/listing.html)
 
Record
SN04154334-W 20160619/160617234832-2d7a4e987830f72dedb3c5a1b27f1eb9 (fbodaily.com)
 
Source
FedBizOpps Link to This Notice
(may not be valid after Archive Date)

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