O-NET OMB Vol1 Rev12-10-08

O-NET OMB Vol1 Rev12-10-08.pdf

O*Net Data Collection Program

OMB: 1205-0421

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U.S. Department
of Labor

Employment
and Training
Administration

®

O*NET Data
Collection Program
Office of Management and Budget
Clearance Package Supporting Statement

December 10, 2008

Table of Contents
Section
A. 

Page

Justification ....................................................................................................................................... 1 
A.1  Circumstances of Information Collection ................................................................................... 1 
A.1.1  What Is the O*NET Program? ...................................................................................... 2 
A.1.2  The O*NET Data Collection Approach ......................................................................... 6 
A.1.3  Summary of the O*NET Data Collection Program ....................................................... 9 
A.1.4  Steps in the Data Collection Process ........................................................................... 9 
A.1.5  Summary of Response Rate Experience to Date ...................................................... 13 
A.1.6  Statutory and Regulatory Information......................................................................... 16 
A.1.7  Federal Register Notice .............................................................................................. 18 
A.2  Uses, Products, and Services Based on the O*NET Program................................................ 18 
A.2.1  The O*NET Database, O*NET OnLine, O*NET Code Connector, O*NET
Knowledge Site, and O*NET Career Tools ................................................................ 18 
A.2.2  O*NET Web Site Statistics ......................................................................................... 20 
A.2.3  Examples of O*NET Data and Products in Use ......................................................... 23 
A.2.4  Examples of the O*NET Program in Published Literature ......................................... 35 
A.2.5  Looking to the Future with Competency Models ........................................................ 37 
A.2.6  Workforce Innovation in Regional Economic Development ....................................... 38 
A.3  Uses of Information Technology .............................................................................................. 39 
A.3.1  Web Questionnaires ................................................................................................... 39 
A.3.2  Project Web Site ......................................................................................................... 40 
A.3.3  The Case Management System and Data Collection Utilities.................................... 41 
A.3.4  Additional Uses of the Internet for Data Collection .................................................... 42 
A.4  Efforts to Identify Duplication ................................................................................................... 43 
A.5  Efforts to Minimize Burden on Small Establishments .............................................................. 44 
A.6  Consequences of Collecting the Information Less Frequently ................................................ 45 
A.7  Special Circumstances ............................................................................................................ 46 
A.8  Consultation Outside the Agency ............................................................................................ 47 
A.9  Payments or Gifts to Respondents .......................................................................................... 47 
A.9.1  Incentives for the Point of Contact and the Employer ................................................ 47 
A.9.2  Incentives for the Employee ....................................................................................... 49 
A.9.3  Incentives for Occupation Experts .............................................................................. 50 
A.10  Assurance of Confidentiality .................................................................................................... 50 
A.11  Questions of a Sensitive Nature .............................................................................................. 51 
A.12  Estimates of Annualized Hour Burden .................................................................................... 52 
A.13  Annual Reporting Burden Cost ................................................................................................ 55 
A.14  Estimates of Annualized Cost to Government......................................................................... 55 
A.15  Reasons for Program Changes or Adjustments Reported in Sections A.13 and A.14 ........... 55 
A.16  Time Schedule, Publication, and Analysis Plans .................................................................... 56 
A.16.1  Data Analysis Tasks Conducted for Each Cycle ........................................................ 56 
A.16.2  Creation of the Occupation Database ........................................................................ 60 
A.17  Display of Expiration Date ....................................................................................................... 60 
A.18  Exceptions to Certification Statement ..................................................................................... 60 

iii

B. 

Collection of Information Employing Statistical Methods .......................................................... 61 
B.1  Sampling Universe, Sampling Methods, and Expected Response Rates .............................. 61 
B.1.1  Establishment Method ................................................................................................ 61 
B.1.2  Occupation Expert Method ......................................................................................... 86 
B.2  Procedures for the Collection of Information ........................................................................... 87 
B.2.1  Establishment Method ................................................................................................ 88 
B.2.2  Occupation Expert Method ......................................................................................... 94 
B.3  Methods to Maximize Response Rates ................................................................................... 97 
B.4  Tests of Procedures ................................................................................................................ 99 
B.4.1  1999 Pretest Experiments .......................................................................................... 99 
B.4.2  Wave 1.1 Experiment ................................................................................................. 99 
B.4.3  Point-of-Contact Incentive Experiment ....................................................................... 99 
B.4.4  Experiments in Weight Trimming ............................................................................. 100 
B.4.5  Experiments in Model-Aided Sampling .................................................................... 100 
B.4.6  Alternative Measures of Uncertainty ........................................................................ 101 
B.4.7  Suppression of Estimates with Poor Precision ......................................................... 101 
B.4.8  Dual-Frame Sampling for Hard-to-Find Occupations ............................................... 102 
B.4.9  Alternative Levels of Population Coverage .............................................................. 102 
B.4.10  Analysis of Unit and Item Nonresponse ................................................................... 103 
B.4.11  Additional Tests of Procedures ................................................................................ 103 
B.5  Statistical Consultants ........................................................................................................... 103 

References ............................................................................................................................................... 105 
Appendices
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
G.
H.
I.
J.

iv

Questionnaires
Advisory Panel for the Dictionary of Occupational Titles: Final Report
Citations from the Workforce Investment Act, the Carl D. Perkins Career and
Technical Education Act, and the Code of Federal Regulations
Federal Register Notice
Publications Referencing the O*NET Data Collection Program
Mailing Materials
Paper on Model-Aided Sampling for the O*NET Data Collection Program
Nonresponse Analysis for Analysis Cycles 4 Through 8
The Generalized Exponential Model for Sampling Weight Calibration for
Extreme Values, Nonresponse, and Poststratification
The Employment and Training Administration’s Responses to the U.S. Bureau of
Labor Statistics’ Questions About the Draft O*NET OMB Clearance Package

List of Exhibits
Number
1. 
2. 
3. 
4. 
5. 
6. 
7. 
8. 
9. 
10. 
11. 
12. 
13. 
14. 
15. 
16. 
17. 
18. 

Page

O*NET Content Model ..................................................................................................................... 3 
O*NET Data Collection Program Questionnaires ............................................................................ 4 
Database Updates ......................................................................................................................... 19 
Main Organization Types Submitting O*NET Certifications........................................................... 22 
O*NET Product Downloads ........................................................................................................... 23 
Distribution of Frame and Sample Establishments by Employment Size ...................................... 45 
Estimate of Hour and Cost Burden by Year ................................................................................... 53 
Hour and Cost Burden for FY2006–FY2008 Compared with Estimated Hour and Cost
Burden for 2009–2011 ................................................................................................................... 57 
Data Analysis and Publication Schedule ....................................................................................... 57 
Summary of Sample Selection Process......................................................................................... 66 
Half-Width of 95% Confidence Intervals ........................................................................................ 75 
Classification of Establishments by Occupation Model-Aided Sampling Status............................ 79 
Overlap of Full and Supplemental Frames .................................................................................... 82 
Establishment Method Data Collection Flowchart ......................................................................... 90 
Establishment Method Data Collection Results ............................................................................. 94 
Occupation Expert Method Data Collection Flowchart .................................................................. 96 
Occupation Expert Method Data Collection Results ...................................................................... 97 
Statistical Consultants .................................................................................................................. 104 

v

A. Justification
A.1

Circumstances of Information Collection

This Supporting Statement is a request and justification for a 3-year clearance from the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to continue the Occupational Information Network
(O*NET®) Data Collection Program. The O*NET Data Collection Program continually operates
to populate and maintain a current database on the detailed characteristics of workers,
occupations, and skills. The program uses an occupational taxonomy, the O*NET-SOC, which is
based on the Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) mandated by OMB for use by all
federal agencies collecting occupational and labor market information (2000). The O*NET-SOC
comprises occupations at the most detailed level of the SOC and includes additional occupational
specificity as needed. In addition, new and emerging occupations in high-growth sectors of the
economy are being identified and added to the taxonomy. So far, data have been published for
780 O*NET-SOC occupations. This request is to continue to collect new data on selected highgrowth occupations, together with new and emerging O*NET-SOC occupations, over the next 3
years (calendar years 2009 to 2011), subject to annual budget levels.
The continued population of the O*NET database is important because the O*NET
database is the most current and comprehensive standard source of occupational information in
the United States. The O*NET Data Collection Program remains at the center of an extensive
network of occupational and skill information used by a wide range of audiences, including
individuals making career decisions; public agencies such as workforce investment boards
(WIBs) and One-Stop Career Centers making training investment decisions; educational
institutions preparing a future workforce; and employers making staffing and training decisions.
This program provides a common language and framework to facilitate communication
about industry skill needs among business, education, and the workforce investment system. The
resulting O*NET database is used to develop industry competency models and occupational
competency profiles. O*NET data include information about transferable skills and are used for
skills gap analysis, facilitating a mobile workforce responsive to changing economic needs. The
O*NET database and companion O*NET Career Exploration Tools are used by many private
companies and public organizations to tailor applications to their needs and those of their

1

Justification

OMB Supporting Statement

customers. The broad utility of the O*NET tools contributes to U.S. competitiveness in a global,
21st-century economy.1
The O*NET Data Collection Program employs a multiple-method approach to updating
the O*NET database. The primary method involves a two-stage sample design to survey
establishments and workers in those establishments. When necessary, this method may be
supplemented with a sample selected from additional sources, such as professional and trade
association membership lists, resulting in a dual-frame approach. An alternative method, based
on sampling from lists of identified occupation experts, is used for occupations for which the
primary method is inefficient. This method is reserved for selected occupations, such as those
with small employment scattered among many industries, and those for which no employment
data currently exist on which to base a sample, such as new and emerging occupations. With all
methods, the O*NET survey instruments are used.2 The rest of Section A describes the O*NET
Program and reviews statutory and regulatory information.
A.1.1 What Is the O*NET Program?
The O*NET Program is a comprehensive system for collecting and disseminating
information on occupational and worker requirements. The O*NET data supersede the U.S.
Department of Labor’s (DOL’s) Dictionary of Occupational Titles (DOT) and provide additional
occupational requirements not available in the DOT. The DOT is no longer updated or
maintained by DOL.
As shown in Exhibit 1, the O*NET Program uses a data structure, the Content Model, to
organize occupational information and to provide a common language of standardized and
defined occupation descriptors and measures for use by all audiences. The O*NET Content
Model is the result of extensive research, and its development is fully documented (Peterson,
Mumford, Borman, Jeanneret, & Fleishman, 1995, pp. 2-6; Peterson, Mumford, Borman et al.,
1997; Peterson et al., 2001). It comprises worker-oriented and job-oriented characteristics at both
an occupation-specific level and across occupations, as the exhibit illustrates.

1

For details on the uses of the O*NET Program, see Section A.2. More information about the O*NET Data
Collection Program can be found at the National O*NET Program’s public Web site, http://www.onetcenter.org/
(the O*NET portal page that links to several O*NET-related Web sites) and at http://www.doleta.gov/programs/
onet (U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration, Web site).
2
For detailed information on these methods, see Sections B.1 and B.2.

2

OMB Supporting Statement
Exhibit 1.

Justification
O*NET Content Model

Each of the six domains of the Content Model groups information hierarchically. For
example, the Worker Characteristics domain contains four types of information: Abilities,
Occupational Interests, Work Values, and Work Styles. From these four, the Abilities domain, in
turn, contains four types of abilities: Cognitive, Psychomotor, Physical, and Sensory. Each of
these types of abilities contains further levels of detail. For example, the Psychomotor type
includes Fine Manipulative, Control Movement, and Reaction Time and Speed. Finally, Fine
Manipulative contains three specific descriptors: Arm-Hand Steadiness, Manual Dexterity, and
Finger Dexterity. Hierarchies both organize the information and allow for different levels of
specificity. By organizing occupational information hierarchically, the O*NET taxonomies of
information and SOC-based occupations facilitate the use of a common language to describe the
world of work.
The O*NET Program takes the best knowledge about both content and methodology
from the last 60 years of research, since the first DOT. The descriptors and rating scales for
O*NET data were developed through extensive research, drawing primarily from job analysis in
industrial/organizational psychology and human resource management (Peterson et al., 1995).
3

Justification

OMB Supporting Statement

The descriptors in the O*NET Program are meant to be exhaustive. The primary sources of data
are job incumbents and occupation experts. The Standard Occupational Classification is used as
the basis for classifying occupations. The use of questionnaires and rating scales reflects the
most currently accepted approach to job analysis. The scales used for the O*NET ratings are
Importance, Level, and Frequency. Each descriptor in the O*NET questionnaires may use one or
more scales. For example, the O*NET Skills descriptor Coordination is rated on both a 5-point
Importance scale and a 7-point Level scale. For the complete set of O*NET questionnaires,
which include O*NET descriptors, see Appendix A.
Exhibit 2 summarizes the number of descriptors and scales in the O*NET Data
Collection Program questionnaires. Descriptors are identified from O*NET Content Model
domains. Data are collected by means of 239 descriptors that include 400 scales (e.g.,
Importance, Level, Frequency). Currently, to collect ratings for the Abilities and Skills domains,
trained occupational analysts review updated information (e.g., Tasks, Generalized Work
Activities) provided by job incumbents.3 No data collection is planned for the Workforce
Characteristics domain. Information for it is provided through links to the employment, wage,
and long-term projections databases produced by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), the
state employment security agencies, and other agencies.
Exhibit 2.

O*NET Data Collection Program Questionnaires

O*NET Data Collection Program
Questionnaire

Number of
Descriptors

Number of
Scales per
Descriptor

Total Number
of Scales

Data Source

Skills

35

2

70

Analysts

Knowledge

33

2

66

Job incumbents

16

1

16

Job incumbents

5

1

5

Job incumbents

Generalized Work Activities

41

2

82

Job incumbents

Work Context

57

1

57

Job incumbents

Abilities

52

2

104

Analysts

2

Varies

Job incumbents

400

NA

Work Stylesa
Education and Training

a

Tasksb
Total (not including Tasks)

Varies
239

NA

Notes: Occupation experts use the same questionnaires as job incumbents for those occupations whose data
collection is by the Occupation Expert Method. NA = not applicable.
a

The Knowledge Questionnaire packet also contains the Work Styles Questionnaire and the Education and Training
Questionnaire.
b
All job incumbents are asked to complete a Task Questionnaire in addition to the domain questionnaire.

3

For a discussion of the preferred data source, see Section A.1.2.

4

OMB Supporting Statement

Justification

Versions of the O*NET Database

The first version of the O*NET database released to the public was O*NET 98. O*NET
98 moved from the DOT’s more than 12,000 occupations to a more user-friendly 1,122
occupations based on the BLS Occupational Employment Statistics (OES) codes. The O*NET
98 database contained 306 descriptors and 684 scales. A review of O*NET 98–specific scales
and descriptors during the preparation for pretest data collection led to some consolidation and
refinement of descriptors and scales to reduce burden on the public and increase employee
response rate.4
The O*NET 98 database was first replaced with the O*NET 3.1 database and has been
updated eight times as new data have been collected and analyzed. The current database, O*NET
version 12.0, contains the same descriptors used in O*NET 98; however, the occupations have
been restructured and coded to encompass the most detailed level of the 1998 SOC, with more
occupational specificity added as needed. Research is under way to identify additional new and
emerging occupations in high-growth industries. New occupations emerge because of changes in
technology, society, law, business practices, and markets. As these new and emerging
occupations are identified and data are collected, they will be integrated into the O*NET-SOC
occupation classification and database.
O*NET 12.0 has a Web-based accessing application, O*NET OnLine, which is available
to the public at no cost at http://online.onetcenter.org/. An electronic version of the 12.0 database
can be downloaded at http://www.onetcenter.org/. The O*NET 12.0 database has been
restructured to incorporate improvements made to the O*NET data collection instruments and is
the structure currently being offered to developers.
Data in the O*NET database include the mean ratings on each of the items (or
descriptors) in the O*NET questionnaires. Ratings have been standardized to facilitate
interpretation and comparison. In addition to mean rating data on level and importance for
various questionnaire items, text information on occupational definitions, descriptor definitions,
scale anchors, and task descriptions are also included.
The Foundation for the O*NET Program

The DOT, first published by DOL in 1939, provided the occupational classification and
descriptions required for operation of the public employment service. Information for the DOT
was collected primarily through observation and interview by trained occupational analysts.
These collection techniques were applied to a small number of job incumbents from what can
best be characterized as a “convenience” sample. The DOT has not been maintained or updated
since 1991; many of its observations were conducted during the 1970s.
4

See Revision of O*NET Data Collection Instruments, available at http://www.onetcenter.org/resData.html.

5

Justification

OMB Supporting Statement

In the late 1980s the Employment and Training Administration of DOL began a review of
the DOT program. The purpose was to address concerns about the cost and difficulty of
maintaining the DOT with existing methods and to address the need for additional and more
current information. In 1990, as part of the DOT review, the Secretary of Labor appointed the
Advisory Panel for the Dictionary of Occupational Titles. In response to its charge to advise on
improvements to the DOT, this panel called for development of a new database of occupational
information, a concept that evolved into the O*NET database. An important theme throughout
the panel’s recommendations was the development of a common language about jobs,
occupations, and skills. The panel’s complete report is presented in Appendix B.
A.1.2 The O*NET Data Collection Approach
The O*NET Data Collection Program is key to the continued effort to update the O*NET
database to reflect the most current occupational skills and attributes, with special emphasis now
on high-growth sectors of the economy and new and emerging occupations. In the research
leading to the O*NET Data Collection Program, various sources and methods for collecting
occupational information were examined, including collection of data from job incumbents and
supervisors and development of ratings by occupation experts and occupational analysts. On the
basis of this work, the O*NET team determined that the preferred source of data for most
domains (Generalized Work Activities; Work Context; Knowledge; Education and Training; and
Work Styles) is job incumbents.
By contrast, occupational analysts, who are provided with updated information from job
incumbents, are preferred for the Abilities domain, which tends to be more abstract than the
other domains. The Skills domain, whose variables are somewhat abstract, is a strong candidate
for either source of collection; it is now updated by occupational analysts. A study conducted in
2006 found no clear evidence that one source of raters provides more valid or “accurate” data
than the other for the Skills domain (Tsacoumis & Van Iddekinge, 2006).5 Consequently,
considerations of relative practicality, such as cost, informed the decision to proceed with analyst
ratings of both abilities and skills. Other occupation experts, such as supervisors and trainers,
may be used where access to job incumbents proves difficult or where the sampling of business
establishments is inefficient.
Previous studies that compare various sources of job analysis ratings suggest that
incumbents are able to provide information across a variety of descriptor domains (Fleishman &
Mumford, 1988; Peterson, Owens-Kurtz, Hoffman, Arabian, & Whetzel, 1990). In addition,
5

The goal of the study was to compare the psychometric quality of incumbent skills ratings with that of analyst
skills ratings across a large sample of O*NET-SOCs. Although some mean differences between incumbent and
analyst ratings were observed, the results yielded only minimal differences between the two systems of obtaining
skills information, supporting previous research.

6

OMB Supporting Statement

Justification

“large samples of knowledgeable job incumbents are available, which should contribute to the
reliability of the resulting descriptive system” (Peterson, Mumford, Levin, Green, & Waksberg,
1999, pp. 2-6). Furthermore, the world of work is constantly changing, and technological
advancements are occurring so rapidly that an efficient, effective way to remain current and
accurate is to obtain the information directly from those performing the work.
As part of a random sample, workers selected to participate in the O*NET Data
Collection Program are asked to rate the requirements of their own jobs as defined by the
O*NET questionnaire items. The responses are tabulated into statistics, such as mean ratings for
each scale. Collecting representative information from job incumbents presents many challenges;
among them is determining the best method for identifying a representative sample of job
incumbents in each occupation. The Advisory Panel for the Dictionary of Occupational Titles
had recommended using sampling techniques that would ensure the representativeness and
accuracy of the occupational data. Sampling allows an estimate of the population. By contrast,
no systematic sampling methods were used in the development of the original DOT. The O*NET
Program is concerned, in particular, with identifying sampling approaches that minimize burden
on employers and the public, achieving broad coverage of the workers in each occupation,
ensuring acceptable response rates, and supporting overall cost-efficiency.
Each sampling option has been evaluated in light of these criteria; each offers advantages
and disadvantages. Three types of sampling frames are available for identifying samples of
workers in each occupation: (1) lists of individual workers identified through professional and
trade associations, licensing agencies, and unions; (2) households; and (3) employer
establishments.
Identifying sampling frames of workers through professional and trade associations and
unions retains the advantage of lower response burden because contacts with a sample of
employers are replaced with contact with one or a few associations. Although it adds the cost of
soliciting and maintaining association cooperation, this procedure also removes the cost of
soliciting and maintaining employer cooperation. However, a major limitation of using special
sampling frames of professional and trade associations and unions is coverage: rarely does
association membership encompass a broad coverage of employment in the occupation. In
addition, the membership of many associations consists of people in multiple occupations, retired
individuals, and other interested parties. Moreover, few associations keep occupational
information on their membership, causing the identification of job incumbents in a specific
occupation to be problematic. Where coverage of employment in an occupation by association
membership is significant and members of the occupation in the association can be identified, a

7

Justification

OMB Supporting Statement

special frame can sometimes be used to supplement the Establishment Method in a dual-frame
sample design.6
The Establishment Method provides the advantage of lower response burden and cost
when compared with a household survey, as well as good coverage for the large majority of
occupations. Response burden and costs are lower for two primary reasons: (1) there are more
workers per employer than per household, so fewer contacts are required to identify workers; and
(2) employer contacts can be minimized by focusing on those most likely to employ workers in
each occupation for which the sample is required. Efficient sample design is possible because the
distribution of employment in an occupation is usually a function of the industry of the
employer. Employment by occupation by industry is measured by the federal-state OES program
national estimates provided by the BLS.
The Establishment Survey provides good coverage of wage and salary employment so
long as an acceptable employer sampling frame is available. Coverage of self-employment is
more difficult, although the sampling frame used in O*NET surveys includes many
establishments operated by self-employed workers. Coverage of unpaid family workers in an
employer sampling frame is minimal or zero, but the number of workers involved is quite small
(121,000 nationwide in 2006; U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2007).
The Establishment Method, pretested in 1999 and 2000 remains the primary way to
update the O*NET database; most data are currently collected this way.7 Achieving high
response rates with the Establishment Method can be problematic, however, because it requires
cooperation at two levels: that of the employer and that of the sampled worker. To date, high
levels of cooperation nonetheless have been attained, and this method has proved successful.
Although the resulting response rates have been acceptable, the O*NET team continually works
to enhance response rates.8
An alternative method using occupation experts is employed to optimize the use of
burden hours and resources because some occupations are difficult to sample efficiently. This
situation occurs when it is difficult to locate industries or establishments with occupation
incumbents, employment is low, or employment data are not available, as is the case for many
new and emerging occupations. With the Occupation Expert (OE) Method, persons considered
experts in the target occupation are surveyed. These experts include supervisors and trainers, as
well as experienced job incumbents. The limitation of the OE Method is that locating experts can
be difficult. For some occupations, identifying a professional association proves difficult; in

6

This dual-frame sample design is further discussed in Section B.1.1
For a description of the pretest, see Section B.4.1.
8
For a discussion of current and future efforts to improve response rates, see Section B.3.
7

8

OMB Supporting Statement

Justification

other cases the association may lack membership information sufficient to identify experts for a
specific occupation.
Using the most appropriate sources of information (e.g., workers, occupation experts, and
analysts) and a multiple-method approach, the O*NET Data Collection Program collects and
yields high-quality occupational data efficiently.
A.1.3 Summary of the O*NET Data Collection Program
The O*NET Data Collection Program is an ongoing effort to populate and maintain the
O*NET database with valid, reliable, and current occupational data. The primary data collection
method used to update the O*NET database is the Establishment Method, a survey of
establishments and workers within those establishments. The Establishment Method uses a twostage design: (1) a statistical sample of establishments expected to employ workers in each
specific occupation, and (2) a sample of workers in the occupations within each sampled
establishment. The sampled workers are asked to complete the survey questionnaires.
Three domain questionnaires are used to collect data from sampled workers: Knowledge
(including Work Styles and Education and Training), Generalized Work Activities, and Work
Context. Each sampled worker is randomly assigned one of the three questionnaires. The
workers are also asked to provide basic demographic information and to complete a brief task
inventory for their specific occupation. Workers may complete the paper questionnaire and
return it by mail, or they may choose to complete the questionnaire online at the project Web
site. Questionnaires are available in Spanish for selected O*NET-SOC occupations. Data for two
domains, Abilities and Skills, are provided by trained analysts because of the more abstract
nature of the questions.9
As described in Section A.1.2, in addition to Establishment Method data collection, the
OE Method is used for selected occupations, such as those with few employees scattered among
many industries or those for which no employment data exist from which to sample, including
new and emerging occupations. With the OE Method, occupation experts are identified and
asked to complete all three domain questionnaires, the demographic items, and the task inventory
for the specific occupation being surveyed.10
A.1.4 Steps in the Data Collection Process
The O*NET Data Collection Program involves the following steps, broadly summarized
here and detailed later in separate sections of this Supporting Statement.

9

For the list of questionnaires, number of items and scales, and data sources, see Exhibit 2.
For more details on these data collection approaches, see Section B.2.

10

9

Justification

OMB Supporting Statement

Sample Design

The O*NET Program sampling approaches are designed to create and update the O*NET
database in a highly cost-efficient and timely manner while maximizing the reliability of the
information in it. The primary method for collecting this information is the Establishment
Method, a survey of workers employed in a national probability sample of establishments. This
method essentially uses a stratified two-stage design: (1) businesses (the primary stage) are
selected with probability proportional to the expected number of employed workers in the
specific occupations being surveyed, and (2) a sample of workers (the secondary stage) is
selected in the occupations within the sampled businesses.
For selected occupations that are difficult to complete, a special frame is sometimes used
to supplement the Establishment Method of data collection when additional observations are
required to complete data collection and a suitable supplemental frame exists, such as a
professional or trade association membership list. To be selected for O*NET data collection, an
association must (1) represent the O*NET-SOC occupation in terms of the nature of the work
performed by its members, (2) contain a high percentage of the total occupational employment,
and (3) be willing to provide a list of its members in a form usable as an O*NET sampling frame.
The sample selection procedures vary across associations, depending on the type of information
available on association members. In general, association lists are sampled with a single-stage,
stratified simple random sampling approach. Stratification by geographic location and
occupation subspecialty is considered if it is appropriate for the occupation. Approximately 75%
of occupations are completed by the Establishment Method.11
The OE Method is considered for use when the Establishment Method would likely be
problematic because of occupations with very low rates of employment, new and emerging
occupations lacking industry employment data, or occupations whose incumbents are in remote
locations that are difficult to access. The OE Method can be used only if the occupation is well
represented by one or more professional or trade associations that are willing and able to identify
experts in the target occupation. For this method, stratified samples of experts are selected from
lists of potential respondents. These potential experts are questioned to determine whether they
meet the specified criteria to serve as an occupation expert for their respective occupation.
Approximately 25% of the O*NET-SOC occupations are completed by the OE Method.12
Data Collection

Data collection operations are conducted at the contractor’s Operations Center in Raleigh,
North Carolina, and its Survey Support Department in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.
11
12

For additional information about sampling with the Establishment Method, see Section B.1.2.
For additional information about sampling with the OE Method, see Section B.1.3.

10

OMB Supporting Statement

Justification

For the Establishment Method, the Operations Center’s Business Liaisons (BLs) contact sample
business establishments, secure the participation of a point of contact (POC), and work with the
POC to carry out data collection in the target occupations. The data are provided by randomly
selected employees in the occupations of interest. All within-establishment data collection is
coordinated by the POC; the BLs do not contact employees directly. After the POC agrees to
participate, informational materials and questionnaires are mailed to the POC, who distributes
the questionnaires to the sampled employees. Completed questionnaires are returned directly to
the survey contractor for processing. Respondents also have the option of completing the survey
online. Only when using a special frame do the BLs contact job incumbents directly. BLs also
contact occupation experts (the OE Method) directly and attempt to secure their participation; no
POC is involved.
Survey support staff mail materials to POCs, job incumbents, and occupation experts, and
they receive and process completed questionnaires returned by respondents. Both the telephone
operations of the BLs and the mailing and questionnaire-receipt operations of the survey support
staff are supported by a Case Management System (CMS). Data-entry software supports the
keying and verification of incoming survey data.
With the Establishment Method, each sampled worker is randomly assigned and mailed
only one of the three domain questionnaires. For the OE Method, identified experts are asked to
complete all three domain questionnaires. All respondents are also asked to provide basic
demographic information and to complete a brief task inventory for their specific occupation.
Respondents can either complete and return the paper questionnaires by mail, or complete the
questionnaires online at the project Web site.13
Data Cleaning; Identification and Evaluation of Anomalous Cases

Data cleaning procedures eliminate completely blank questionnaires and insert consistent
analysis codes for legitimate skips, blank items, and invalid responses. Anomalous cases are
identified so respondents may be removed whose responses either suggest that they are not
working in the occupation of interest, or are highly inconsistent with those of the others
responding for the occupation. Unusable cases are identified according to prescribed eligibility
criteria, such as percentage of items completed. Cases with certain questionable characteristics
are flagged for further analysis. These flagged cases include cases with response patterns
deviating from those of other cases in the occupation and cases with write-in job titles that do not
appear to match the occupation. Responses judged invalid by expert reviewers are excluded from
the analysis file.14
13
14

For details about the data collection procedures, see Section B.2.
For a description of both processes, see Section A.16.1.

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Weighting and Estimation

Estimates generated from O*NET survey data are computed with sampling weights that
compensate for the unequal probabilities of selecting establishments, occupations within
establishments, and employees within each selected occupation. In addition, these base weights
are adjusted to further compensate for multiple subwaves of sampling, sample adjustment,
population under- and overcoverage caused by frame imperfections, and nonresponse at both the
establishment and the employee levels.
These weight adjustments can lead to weights that are very large or very small compared
with the weights for other sample units. Such weight variability may increase the standard error
estimates. When the variation in the weights is large, it is desirable to trim the weights to reduce
the variation. For the O*NET estimates, the weighting process involves a weight trimming
procedure in which extremely large or small weights are truncated to fall within a specified
range. Although trimming weights can introduce bias in the estimates, the variance reduction it
achieves usually offsets the potential bias, resulting in estimates with smaller net mean squared
errors.
Based on a pooled sample of all completed waves, final estimates are produced.
Estimates are computed by summing the weighted observations and dividing by the sum of the
weights. Standard errors are estimated with the first-order Taylor series approximation of
deviations of estimates from their expected values. These design-based variance estimates are
computed with SUDAAN® software (RTI International, 2004). These estimates properly account
for the combined effects of clustering, stratification, and unequal weighting—all of which are
present in the O*NET data. In addition, estimates with questionable precision are flagged
“recommended for suppression” in the O*NET database.15
Analysis

Nonresponse is analyzed at multiple levels. Establishment nonresponse in the O*NET
Data Collection Program can occur at the verification, screening, recruiting, or sampling stages
of selection. Employee-level nonresponse occurs when a selected employee fails to complete and
return a questionnaire. Because these same characteristics of establishments and employees were
used to adjust the analysis weights, compensation is made to further reduce the size and impact
of any nonresponse bias. In addition, item-level nonresponse is assessed, and item response rates
are high—generally higher than 90% for Likert scale items, with most exceeding 95%.
For each O*NET-SOC occupation, the degree of interrater reliability (the covariation
among ratings) and the level of interrater agreement (the absolute difference among ratings) is
15

For more information on the calculation of weights and variance estimates, see Section B.1.1. For information on
the suppression of estimates, see Section A.16.1.

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calculated annually. The results of the analyses are used to examine the potential sources of
variability across respondents in a specific occupation. As part of a continuous improvement
process, these results also inform an evaluation of the O*NET-SOC occupational taxonomy,
Content Model descriptors, and scales.16
A.1.5 Summary of Response Rate Experience to Date
Establishment Method

Data collection for the O*NET Data Collection Program began in June 2001 with
Wave 1.1. Since then (as of September 30, 2007), 76 waves have been completed, and more than
95,000 establishments and 128,000 employees have responded to the survey request. This results
in a 75% establishment response rate and a 64% employee response rate. Although it is difficult
to make response rate comparisons between the O*NET Data Collection Program and other
establishment surveys, these rates compare favorably with those of other establishment surveys.
Some of the design characteristics that make the O*NET Program unique are as follows:

16

•

Voluntary rather than mandatory participation. Experiments conducted by the U.S.
Bureau of the Census suggest that simply informing respondents that their response is
mandatory adds about 20 percentage points to overall response (Tulp, Hoy, Kusch, &
Cole, 1991; Worden & Hoy, 1992). Because the survey is voluntary, O*NET
response rates would be expected to be 10 to 20 percentage points lower than those
for the average federally mandated survey.

•

No direct, personal contact with the survey respondents by the survey organization
conducting the data collection. The O*NET Program requirement of respondent
anonymity means that participation at the employee level relies exclusively on the
interactions between the POC and the employee. The survey organization is not
allowed to speak to the employee to respond to questions, motivate responses, or follow
up on noncompliance. In their review of establishment mail survey response rates,
Paxson, Dillman, and Tarnai (1995) found that establishment surveys featuring
anonymous mailings typically have lower response rates (by as many as 30 percentage
points) than surveys featuring direct, personal contact with the respondents.

•

Participation required at three stages of response—establishment level, point of
contact level, and employee level. The typical establishment survey requires
participation at only one or two levels: the establishment level and, in some cases, the
POC level. By contrast, for the O*NET Program three often distinct entities must
agree to participate: the establishment administration, the POC identified in the
screening interview, and the employee who is asked to complete the questionnaire.
Because very few surveys incorporate such a design, survey methods literature is
essentially devoid of examples on which to base a reasonable response rate
expectation for the O*NET Data Collection Program. However, it is possible to
compare O*NET response rates at each stage with other establishment surveys that

For a description of analysis processes, see Sections A.16.1 and A.16.2.

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incorporate these stages either separately or in combination. For example, the O*NET
establishment-level response rate can be compared with other mail establishment
surveys having only one response stage at the establishment level. In addition, the
O*NET employee-level response rate can be compared with the response rate of other
establishments’ self-conducted employee surveys.
A high level of nonresponse is a threat to the accuracy of the estimates. For this reason,
the O*NET data collection protocol (described in Sections B.2 and B.3) was designed to achieve
the highest response rates possible within respondent burden and survey cost constraints. Paxson
et al. (1995) analyzed the response rates for 46 surveys conducted by both governmental and
nongovernmental organizations. Among the surveys in their study, 26 were conducted by the
Social and Economic Sciences Research Center (SESRC) at Washington State University, and
20 were conducted by the U.S. Bureau of the Census. The SESRC, directed by Dr. Donald
Dillman, is well known for its development of the Total Design Method (TDM) approach to mail
surveys (Dillman, 1978, 2000) and its high response rates in implementing this method.
Furthermore, the 20 U.S. Census Bureau surveys include 12 well-established, ongoing
mandatory surveys. The average response rate for all 46 surveys is 63%, but, if only voluntary
surveys are considered, the average response rate drops to 55%. These results suggest that, for
this type of survey, the O*NET establishment-level response rate of 75% exceeds expectations.
Comparisons of the O*NET employee response rate can be made with surveys that
directly sample employees within an establishment. Because federally sponsored surveys of
employees within organizations are rare, the literature on their response rates is sparse. Most
surveys of this type are employee satisfaction surveys. For example, one well-documented
government-sponsored survey of employees is the Public Service Employee Survey,
administered to more than 190,000 employees of the federal Public Service of Canada and
conducted by Statistics Canada in 1999. A questionnaire was delivered to each employee by a
government agent who personally requested that the employee complete the questionnaire and
return it by mail. Multiple follow-ups of nonrespondents were made by e-mail and interoffice
mail to maximize the response rate. No incentive was used, however; because all sample
members were also employees of the organization conducting the survey and could fill out the
survey on government time, the use of an incentive was thought to be unnecessary. The final
overall response rate for the survey was 55%.
The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) developed the Organizational Assessment
Survey (OAS) and has encouraged all federal agencies to survey their employees in order to
evaluate organizational performance, benchmark best practices, and align performance with
important and measurable outcomes. The experience OPM has had in implementing these
surveys in numerous federal agencies provides some evidence of response rates for employee
surveys conducted by the U.S. federal government. The OAS design closely resembles the

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Canadian Public Service Employee Survey design. The surveys are self-administered and are
conducted by each agency for its own employees. Furthermore, like the Public Service Employee
Survey, the OAS request to participate is personalized and made directly to the employee by his
or her employer. The features of the design offer a significant advantage over the O*NET survey
design, as previously noted.
Although the results of the OAS surveys are not publicly available, an official at OPM
was able to provide some general information regarding OAS response rates (C. Simons,
personal communication, March 21, 2002). According to OPM, response rates for OAS surveys
vary considerably by agency, from 30% to 80%. However, the average response across all
agencies is approximately 57%. This result is similar to the Canadian experience. It is further
supported by Roth and BeVier (1998), who conducted a meta-analysis of 173 surveys in the field
of human resource management and organization behavior. They found that surveys
implementing many of the response-rate-enhancing features of the O*NET survey had response
rates in the range of 23% to 78%, with a median of 51%. These results suggest that the O*NET
employee response rate of 64% exceeds expectations for mail surveys of employees within their
organizations.
Although results from the survey methods literature and from other federal surveys in the
United States and in Canada suggest that a 75% establishment response rate and a 64% employee
response rate exceed expectations for federal surveys that use similar data collection approaches,
methods for further improving response rates will continue to be explored, and response rates are
fully expected to continue to increase as the O*NET Data Collection Program progresses.17
Occupation Expert Method

The OE Method is a much smaller but still important component of the O*NET Data
Collection Program protocol. As of September 30, 2007, 82 occupations have been completed
with this data collection method, and almost 2,400 occupation experts have participated, for an
overall OE response rate of 82%. This response rate is higher than the employee response rate
for the Establishment Method and may be due to factors such as personalized direct contact,
greater total incentive, and generally higher education levels of the eligible population. Some
factors may counteract these positive effects, including greater respondent burden and task
complexity, as well as potentially less available time for occupations than for the average
employee.

17

For the enhancements that have been implemented (since the last OMB Supporting Statement was submitted in
September 2005) to maximize response rates and further reduce the impact of potential nonresponse bias in
estimates produced from the O*NET data collection effort, see Section B.3.

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A.1.6 Statutory and Regulatory Information
Although the O*NET name is not referenced specifically in statute, it is cited at least
seven times in the Code of Federal Regulations. Furthermore, O*NET information is the
foundation, the common language, for carrying out the responsibilities related to the statutory
and regulatory sections discussed in this section.
Section 309 of the Workforce Investment Act, Pub. L. 105-220 (Employment and
Training Administration [ETA], DOL, 2000) requires the Secretary of Labor to oversee the
“development, maintenance, and continuous improvement of a nationwide employment statistics
system,” which shall include, among other components, “skill trends by occupation and
industry.” The O*NET Program is the primary response vehicle for collecting skills information
across all occupations. Updating the entire O*NET database is a critical component of the
nationwide labor market information system to support employer, workforce, and education
information needs.
The Workforce Investment Act (WIA) contains numerous references identifying the need
for information on the skill requirements of jobs; for example, section 154 requires local
determinations of the “skills and education that are necessary to obtain the employment
opportunities” in the local area, and section 134 requires provision of “information on job skills
necessary” for obtaining jobs listed for the local area.
The WIA also contains references to identifying and assessing the skills of individuals;
for example, section 134 provides for assessment services to identify “the skill levels and service
needs of adults and dislocated workers.” Section 129 allows funds to be used to provide youth
with an assessment “which shall include a review of basic skills, occupational skills, prior work
experience, employability, interests, aptitudes (including interests and aptitudes for
nontraditional jobs), supportive service needs, and development needs of such participant. . . .”
In section 136, the “attainment of basic skills and, as appropriate, work readiness or occupational
skills” may be included as performance indicators for youth programs. The O*NET Career
Exploration Tools, including the O*NET Interest Profiler and O*NET Work Importance
Locator, are such assessment tools, designed specifically to relate a person’s interests and work
values to the information on education and skill requirements for occupations in the O*NET
database.
Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 as amended specifies that persons with
disabilities shall have access to and use of the same information that persons without disabilities
have. To comply with this section, the O*NET Data Collection Program designed its online
application, O*NET OnLine, to ensure that the data and information are accessible to the widest
possible audience, including persons with disabilities. O*NET OnLine also provides links to

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several accommodation and disability resources on the Internet. Furthermore, the O*NET
Program Web site, the DOL’s ETA O*NET Web site, and O*NET OnLine have all been “Bobby
Approved,” indicating that the Center for Applied Special Technology has deemed them
accessible to persons with disabilities.
The Secretary of Labor’s Strategic Plan for Fiscal Years 2006–2011 includes O*NET
within Strategic Goal 2—A Competitive Workforce: “Meet the competitive labor demands of the
worldwide economy by enhancing the effectiveness and efficiency of the workforce
development and regulatory systems that assist workers and employers in meeting the challenges
of global competition.” Specifically, within Strategic Goal 2, O*NET OnLine is a component of
Performance Goal 2E, which states in part,
Current, comprehensive, relevant, accessible information on occupations and labor
markets is critical for planning and delivering demand-driven workforce services. The
Department contributes to the State and national workforce information system by
creating and broadly disseminating such information, particularly on high-growth
industries and occupations, via several types of products collectively referred to as
National Electronic Tools. Customers include employers, job seekers, educators,
economic developers, State and local Workforce Investment Boards, and participants in
the One-Stop delivery system who find this service useful for business, education,
economic development and individual career decisions. Specifically, these National
Electronic Tools, which include America’s Career Information Network, America’s
Service Locator, Career Voyages, and O*NET OnLine, deliver strong workforce and
economic information and career guidance resources and models for two main purposes:
1) to support individuals in making education and training decisions and investments, and
2) to support business and community needs for a prepared and globally competitive
workforce.
Providing the most current information on the O*NET skills―the purpose of the
proposed data collection effort―is key to supporting the needs of customers through the wide
variety of public- and private-sector products that depend in part on the availability of O*NET
information. O*NET supplies the common language on skills, knowledge, abilities, and other
work requirements and characteristics.
Finally, the predecessor to the O*NET database, the DOT, is cited either directly or
indirectly in a number of places as a source of occupational information in support of federal
programs. The DOT is cited in the Code of Federal Regulations (C.F.R.) in at least 28 places.
These citations are generally related to determining disability, administering DOL employment
and training programs, or administering immigration, civil rights, and labor standards law. DOL
officials responsible for the O*NET Program have been and continue working with DOT users in
the federal government, some of whom have made the transition either in regulatory changes or
in practices and procedures. Some of those making such transitions include State Department

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officials responsible for visas, the U.S. Bureau of Apprenticeship Training, Office of Foreign
Labor Certification, and others. Copies of the pertinent sections of the WIA, the Perkins Act, and
the specific C.F.R. citations appear in Appendix C.
A.1.7 Federal Register Notice
The Federal Register notice asking for public comment before submission of this request
to OMB is presented in Appendix D. No comments were received from the public.

A.2

Uses, Products, and Services Based on the O*NET Program

The O*NET Program provides essential tools and services for numerous critical federal
and state workforce investment functions. These tools also serve job seekers, businesses, and
educational institutions across the country. The common language used in O*NET occupational
and skill descriptions facilitates communication among the various user groups. This facilitation
contributes to our nation’s talent development and promotes U.S. competitiveness in a global
21st-century economy.
Users of the O*NET database can access and use the information in various ways. The
data are available to the public free of charge through the O*NET OnLine Web application, or
the database may be downloaded for use by developers who provide applications targeted to
specific communities or audiences. The O*NET database is now the foundation for many
programs serving the American workforce, providing information to build skills gap analyses
and competency profiles, and to facilitate cross-functional team building. These examples are
just a few of the ways the O*NET Program supports the activities critical to maintaining a
mobile workforce responsive to changing regional and national economic needs.
A.2.1 The O*NET Database, O*NET OnLine, O*NET Code Connector, O*NET
Knowledge Site, and O*NET Career Tools
The O*NET Database

With the June 2007 version of the database, 780 occupations have been updated through
the O*NET Data Collection Program. The O*NET database currently provides
•

detailed occupational and skill information for more than 800 occupations;

•

information on standardized descriptors of skills, abilities, interests, knowledge, work
values, education, training, work context, and work styles; and

•

occupational coding based on the 2000 SOC.

Since September 2005 there have been four database updates as listed in Exhibit 3.

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OMB Supporting Statement
Exhibit 3.

Justification
Database Updates

Update

Number of Occupations Updated

December 2005

100

June 2006

100

December 2006

100

June 2007

100

Future updates of the O*NET database will include identification of and information
about in-demand and new and emerging occupations.
O*NET OnLine

The O*NET database is provided free of charge to the public through O*NET OnLine, a
Web-based application at http://online.onetcenter.org. O*NET OnLine offers users multiple
ways to search for O*NET occupations and related data. O*NET OnLine includes
•

regularly updated occupational information;

•

tiered search algorithms that maximize successful results of searches by keyword
(title), occupational code, or partial code;

•

a Crosswalk search function that enables users to easily identify O*NET equivalents
of other occupational systems, such as the Military Occupational Classification or the
Classification of Instructional Programs;

•

the ability to Browse by O*NET Descriptor (this search enables users to make crossoccupational comparisons by viewing an occupation’s rank order based on a selected
knowledge, skill, ability, work activity, interest, or work value variable);

•

a sample of reported job titles for each occupational report, providing the user with a
broader understanding of the O*NET-SOC;

•

report display options (aside from the default Summary Report, users can choose to
view a comprehensive Details Report or to build a Custom Report); and

•

inclusion of Wages and Employment Trends information (derived from BLS data)
and links to Web sites of professional associations, giving the user access to
additional information on related specialties, industries, and education and training
resources.

O*NET Code Connector

The Code Connector (http://www.onetcodeconnector.org/) was developed to assist
workforce professionals needing to code jobs. One-Stop Career Centers, other government
workforce agencies, and college career services offices are the most prevalent users of the Code
Connector. The Code Connector uses the O*NET database to help users determine the correct
occupational code for their job orders. To access an occupation, the user may type in a keyword
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or select an occupational group from the home page. On subsequent pages the user is able to
refine his or her search to select a specific occupation. The final report contains information to
help determine whether the selected occupational code is the best match for the particular job
order. This information includes the O*NET-SOC description, Tasks, Related Occupations,
Occupation Family, and Detailed Work Activities.
O*NET Knowledge Site and O*NET Academy

Awareness-building and training support for the O*NET system can be found on the Web
at http://www.onetknowledgesite.com/ and www.onetacademy.com. The O*NET Knowledge
Site provides various user communities with access to O*NET-based collaborative tools. It
serves as a forum for users and developers to share O*NET knowledge and gain new insights on
user needs and real-world applications of O*NET data. Through the O*NET Academy, O*NET
users gain electronic access to live Webinars, self-paced training courses and “how to” tutorials
on using the O*NET system and on best practices for its application on the job. To date, more
than 5,000 participants have taken advantage of live O*NET Webinars, while many others have
accessed the archived recordings of Webinars. Combined, the O*NET Knowledge and Academy
Sites have more than 40,000 registered users, including educators, employers, WIB members,
national association representatives, students, and job seekers.
O*NET Career Exploration Tools

The Career Exploration Tools are based on a “whole person” concept and are designed
for career counseling, career planning, and career exploration. They include the Ability Profiler,
the Interest Profiler, and the Work Importance Locator. They also include electronic versions of
the interest and work importance assessments—the Computerized Interest Profiler and the Work
Importance Profiler. These electronic versions can be downloaded onto a computer system and
used at no cost by schools, One-Stop Centers, and others. Users exploring careers may use the
Ability Profiler to discover what they do well, the Interest Profiler to identify the types of work
they may like to perform, and the Work Importance Locator to determine which occupations will
likely be satisfying, according to the their values and needs. The tools enable users to discover
important information about themselves and use the information to explore the world of work.
Workers may use these tools as aids in exploring career options, in exploring career transitions,
and in preparing for career change. The assessments also are designed for use by students
exploring the school-to-work transition.
A.2.2 O*NET Web Site Statistics
Use of O*NET products has increased dramatically over the past few years. O*NET
OnLine currently averages 775,000 visits per month, up from the 180,000 visits per month 3
years ago. An August 2007 comparison of career information delivery Web sites showed that

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Justification

O*NET OnLine ranks number one in use among its peer sites, including America’s
CareerInfoNet and CareerOneStop. The O*NET Resource Center (http://www.onetcenter.org)
averages 78,000 visits per month—double the average number of visitors 3 years ago. The
O*NET Code Connector Web site averages 63,000 visits per month, another large increase from
the average of 29,000 just 3 years ago. In addition, use of career information systems, Web site
linkages, user certifications, and O*NET product downloads is widespread. By design, the
primary dissemination strategy of the O*NET Program is for the private sector to build O*NETbased products that are audience-specific or tailored for particular user needs.
Career Information Systems

Private and governmental online career information systems using O*NET data and
career tools reach millions of customers annually. For example, Bridges
(http://www.bridges.com/us/home.html), a private provider of career information services built
O*NET data into its system and is used each year by more than one million graduating high
school students in the United States and Canada. IntoCareers (http://www.intocareers.com/
products.htm) is another career information delivery system (CIDS), which serves more than
7,000 schools and state agencies in the United States. The content components of IntoCareers
include data on 480 O*NET-based occupations. State CIDSs also provide widespread access to
O*NET-driven career exploration. Many state CIDSs report between 100,000 and 200,000
annual users and more than 100,000 individual career portfolios. The O*NET Program is
designed to be accessible to multiple users, in keeping with the directives from the APDOT
committee. The O*NET Program encourages these and other service providers and product
developers to create applications that deliver O*NET information to the public.
Internet Web Site Linkages

According to an exploratory search conducted in September 2007,
•

more than 5,309 sites link to O*NET OnLine,

•

more than 400 sites link to the O*NET Code Connector, and

•

more than 1,100 sites link to the O*NET Resource Center.

There are many different types of organizations linked to the O*NET Web sites,
including the following:
•

libraries and career centers based in higher education;

•

higher education institutions’ schools of business, labor and industrial relations,
psychology, education, and counseling;

•

government agencies (primarily state labor-related agencies, some federal and local);

•

public libraries (especially those offering career and job search assistance programs);
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•

career counselors, coaches, and recruiters (mostly private-sector vendors);

•

career exploration or job search assistance (both private and public sectors);

•

public school systems, educational associations, and secondary schools (often
recommending the O*NET database as a resource for faculty, parents, and high
school juniors and seniors);

•

human resources management;

•

law firms specializing in immigration law;

•

vocational rehabilitation, or occupational medicine and health; and

•

international sites in Turkey, Canada, the United Kingdom, Holland, Japan,
Bangladesh, and elsewhere.

User Certifications

When individuals or organizations download the O*NET database or intend to use all,
any one, or any part of one of the O*NET Career Exploration Tools to develop value-added
products, they are asked to voluntarily register their use by completing a certification form. As of
September 30, 2007, the certification database holds 2,179 entries. Because registration is
voluntary, this number likely reflects only a portion of those actually using O*NET products for
their own applications. An overview of those user groups that have submitted certification forms
for their use of O*NET products appears as Exhibit 4.
Exhibit 4.

Main Organization Types Submitting O*NET Certifications
Organization Type

Percent

Educational services

18

Government; public administration

12

Computer systems design; programming services

8

Employment services

8

Vocational rehabilitation services

6

Temporary help services; employment placement agencies; human resource and executive
search consulting

5

Information and Internet publishing; broadcasting; software publishers

5

Health care

3

Individual and family services

2

Professional, scientific, and technical Services; legal services

2

Military

1

Other

30

Total

100

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Justification

O*NET Product Downloads

From January 2002 to September 2007, downloads of O*NET products totaled 298,800
(Exhibit 5).The use of O*NET products and tools continues to increase. The O*NET Program,
through continuous improvement efforts based on user needs and advancing technology, works
to efficiently develop products that meet customer demands in both the public and private
sectors.
Exhibit 5.

O*NET Product Downloads

Product
Database

Number of Downloads
59,232

Career Exploration Tools
Ability Profiler

85,794

Interest Profiler

88,054

Work Importance Locator

47,554

Computerized Interest Profiler, Work Importance Profiler Software

55,689

Total Career Exploration Tools

277,091

Other (e.g., Toolkit for Business)

44,706

Total O*NET Products

343,506

A.2.3 Examples of O*NET Data and Products in Use
The O*NET Program provides comprehensive, up-to-date occupational information that
is used directly by the public through access to the O*NET Web sites, as well as indirectly
through value-added products delivered by both governmental and private developers. Discussed
under the following general categories of product developers and service providers are examples
of how O*NET-based products benefit the public:
•

government organizations and workforce investment systems,

•

assessment and career information delivery systems,

•

business and staffing agencies,

•

educational and research institutions,

•

private companies and commercial products,

•

U.S. armed forces,

•

community and faith-based organizations, and

•

international users.

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Government Organizations and Workforce Investment Systems

Federal and state agencies are using O*NET products to achieve their goals of service to
employers and the public. Business development specialists, WIBs, career counselors, and others
rely on the common language of O*NET products to build connections required for a strong
workforce. Discussed here are examples of O*NET products used by One-Stop Career Centers,
by state department of labor Web sites, in state responses to mass layoffs, and in a special
program sponsored by the National Institutes of Health.
The state of Maine used O*NET information to help dislocated workers make informed
decisions about employment opportunities after a layoff. Based on a comparison of knowledge,
skills, and abilities, the jobs the workers were leaving were first linked to O*NET occupations in
order to identify likely opportunities requiring similar skills. O*NET information was
supplemented with state-level wage information, job openings, and information about retraining
possibilities so workers could choose reemployment opportunities best suited to them.
California Labor Market Information (LMI) has used O*NET information as part of the
state’s rapid response to mass layoffs. LMI’s guide for workforce development professionals
assists dislocated workers in reevaluating their skills and relating those skills to other
occupations, particularly in high-demand fields and among new and emerging jobs. The guide
outlines a step-by-step process enabling a dislocated worker to build an occupational profile with
Skills Search and Detailed Reports in O*NET OnLine, together with multiple LMI data sources.
From the Detailed Reports pages, an applicant copies and pastes Tasks statements, Detailed
Work Activities and other descriptors used to enhance resumes. Skills Search is used to compare
the applicant’s job skills to similar skills in new careers.
To address the pressing need for talented and skilled computer 3-D graphic artists and
traditional animators, California’s Employment Development Department conducted an industry
study with the endorsement of the California Skillsnet Consortium. O*NET’s survey data
collection instruments and other materials were used in the study. Relying on O*NET data,
human resources personnel modified local training and education initiatives to help close the gap
between industry needs and local workers’ skills. Training programs defined the skills and
requirements for the evolving occupations of computer 3-D graphic artists and traditional
animators. State and local leaders forged important partnerships with local establishments,
educators, WIBs, community-based organizations, and other stakeholders to meet industry
demands and develop needed talent.
The Lancaster County Workforce Investment Board in Pennsylvania uses O*NET
information in research and service delivery activities designed to support economic
development efforts in the county. Using an industry clusters model, The Lancaster WIB

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cooperates closely with the economic development community. After the industry clusters are
defined, the primary occupations are profiled, and a Skills Map is developed. Information for all
occupations and the various career ladders in the cluster are analyzed to identify common skills
and attributes, as well as those unique to a particular occupation or career ladder. The resulting
Skills Map is a helpful way to involve the educational community in addressing skills gaps,
taking a systemic approach to the identification of industry’s skill needs. O*NET data are a key
part of the Skills Map used to develop the profiles, providing extensive information about skills
and knowledge requirements of occupations in each cluster.
Wisconsin’s Department of Workforce Development (DWD) works with a network of 78
local Job Centers (the equivalent of One-Stops) across the state. Each has a resource area and a
mission to provide high-quality career information to job seekers and other customers. In many
of the centers, local staff wanted or needed to become more knowledgeable about the career
development needs of diverse clients and the array of resources available to assist them. To help
staff improve their career development skills and services, DWD’s Division of Workforce
Solutions developed a 3-day, competency-based training curriculum that includes an introduction
to O*NET information. Students use O*NET OnLine, the O*NET Work Importance Locator,
and the O*NET Interest Profiler. Staff have discovered that these O*NET tools provide a good
foundation for approaching the career exploration process.
The Connecticut Department of Labor used O*NET data to respond to the Workforce
Investment Act requirements that states assess (1) current and future job opportunities in the
state, (2) the skills necessary to obtain these jobs, and (3) the skills necessary to meet the
economic development needs of the state. To meet these requirements, it collected and analyzed
labor market information and published an extensive report. O*NET Skills and skill descriptions
were used in the report sections describing skills necessary for Connecticut’s high-demand
occupations and industry sectors important for state economic development.
The Workforce Oklahoma Career Connection Center One-Stop partner agencies are using
the O*NET Program in a broad effort to identify and meet specific employer needs in a timely,
effective, and cost-efficient way. The center uses a survey of employer needs in customizing a
service mix to meet these specific needs. O*NET information is built into this survey to help
employers clearly define their employment needs by job title and skill bundles. For one such
employer, center staff developed a series of job descriptions for skilled welders. These job
descriptions were used as a basis for an in-house certified training program for welders.
Designed by the State Department of Labor, the New York CareerZone Web site is an
O*NET delivery system that has revolutionized the way New Yorkers access career information.
The NYCareerZone system is now a statewide resource for teachers, counselors, and career

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center staff. The system engages students and job seekers in career exploration and helps them
develop their skills in career planning. Users build electronic portfolios linked to state learning
objectives and O*NET-SOC occupational information. NYCareerZone developers incorporated
the O*NET Interest Profiler and Skills Search capabilities into the portfolios to help students
identify their interests and relate these interests to appropriate career possibilities. Using job
profiles drawn from the O*NET database, students can explore specific occupations. The profiles
include state-specific wage and outlook information related to the O*NET-SOC occupations and
include a link to a state college database.
California’s Labor Market Information Division (LMID) gathers, analyzes, and produces
occupational information to inform people about California’s economy and to aid in labor-related
decisions. In response to layoffs at Pillowtex (a large household textile manufacturer that closed
plants employing 6,000 workers across eight states), California’s LMID created an instruction kit
that incorporates parts of O*NET OnLine. Including the O*NET Find Occupations and Skills
Search capabilities, this toolkit enables use of O*NET data and other resources to make
dislocated workers aware of their current skills, and it suggests occupations that match these
skills.
Assessment and Career Information Delivery Systems

Organizations are routinely relying on O*NET products as the basis for their assessment
and career information delivery systems. Community colleges, university career centers, and
many higher education Web sites also have integrated O*NET products into their career services
to students. From nonprofit organizations to high-powered consulting firms, specific examples
discussed here indicate the range of organizations using O*NET products.
Adaptiqs provides customized survey and assessment applications that capitalize on the
technology of artificial intelligence for efficient, accurate administration. Adaptiqs has developed
a job match system using O*NET data and questionnaires in conjunction with a Bayesian
network model. The goal of this recent project was to create an adaptive instrument using
responses to O*NET Knowledge, Skills, Abilities, and Work Context Questionnaires to identify
the most relevant job types for job candidates.
Assessment Associates International (formerly Human Resource Consultants) has
developed the Work Behavior Inventory (WBI), an assessment to measure Work Styles in
employees. Work Styles are personal characteristics that can affect how well someone does a
job. The WBI assesses Work Styles as defined in the O*NET system and provides the user with
information that can be used to

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•

focus and guide leadership development efforts,

•

pinpoint specific strengths that may help with career advancement,

•

identify areas for training and skill enhancement,

•

identify work environments that may support success for the individual, and

•

help guide career choice and transition decisions.

Keys2Work, a private, nonprofit organization, offers a community-based assessment and
career development system that helps students, job seekers, employers, and providers of
education and training. Using work-related skills assessments and online tools powered with
O*NET data, the system demonstrates the relevance of school subjects to future careers and
earnings, thereby contributing to talent development in schools. Using ACT’s WorkKeys®,
students assess important work-related skills and match them to occupations. Keys2Work links
these occupations to O*NET data, expanding students’ perspectives, allowing them to explore a
wider range of occupations and obtain extensive information about them. Students can learn
about common tasks and work activities; other knowledge, skill, and educational requirements;
and interest profiles of workers. O*NET data provide the connection to related information on
wages and employment outlook. Using O*NET data, Keys2Work shows students that what they
earn in the future depends directly on the skills they acquire in school.
Profiles International (PI) is one of several assessment companies that incorporates
O*NET data in customized workforce development tools for public- and private-sector use. PI’s
products are designed to help businesses improve their hiring practices, reduce turnover rates and
costs, and enhance workforce harmony and performance. O*NET information is used
extensively with the company’s clients, including a number of public workforce agencies. In PI’s
system, job seekers begin with an assessment of their “soft skills,” such as job behavioral traits,
thinking style, and occupational interests. Their results are matched to O*NET occupations and
presented in a Career Compatibility Report. The report lists occupations that may be a good fit,
explains how to use O*NET OnLine to obtain more information about the occupations, and
explains the results of the assessment. PI sets up for its clients private Web sites on which
managers can post their job openings and screen for suitable applicants. In addition, the site
describes O*NET OnLine and how to use O*NET information in drafting position descriptions
and in other human resource activities. This resource is especially helpful to small and mid-size
companies without large human resource departments or formal position descriptions.
The SkillsNET Foundation provides open-resource solutions for human-capital
management; WIB regional skill systems; and other large-scale knowledge, skills, and abilities
as well as competence framework systems. The SkillsNET Foundation has used the O*NET
Content Model in the development of SkillObject Designer®, a Web-based job analysis tool.

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Included in this product are O*NET data on knowledge, skills, and abilities; generalized work
activities; and tools. SkillsNET Designer is a resource for large, complex organizations,
requiring inputs from incumbents, subject matter experts, supervisors, and strategic decision
makers.
Health and medical science career exploration with LifeWorks™ is accomplished
through an interactive career development Web site operated by the National Institutes of
Health’s Office of Science Education. Driven by O*NET data, the LifeWorks search engine, or
Career Finder, offers an array of information on more than 100 health and medical science
careers. Staff designed the Web site for middle school and high school students, parents,
mentors, teachers, and guidance counselors. As a first step, students scan a list of O*NET Job
Families and select the ones that most interest them. Second, they identify the kinds of jobs that
suit their interests, using the O*NET interest categories. Third, they select skills they have or
want to acquire. The Career Finder then generates a customized list of health-related careers,
with brief descriptions, matching the students’ selections. By clicking on a title, students can
view job-specific information on the summary page. If they like, they can access details about
the occupation, including employment outlook, salary, suggested high school courses, related
careers, and more.
Higher education institutions are one of the most prevalent types of user of O*NET
products for assessment and career information systems. A Web search shows O*NET products
at work in most state educational systems. A few examples include AlabamaMentor.org, Arizona
State University CRESMET, CaliforniaColleges.edu, Cascadia Community College
(Washington), University of Central Florida, CTMentor.org (Connecticut), IllinoisMentor,
Middle Tennessee State University, MississippiMentor, Normandale Community College
(Minnesota), PennsylvaniaMentor, TexasMentor, and Texas State University. Web links to these
and other online sites offering career services based on O*NET products can be found in
Appendix E.
Business and Staffing Agencies

Some of the best-known staffing services are using the O*NET database in their
applications. Brick-and-mortar locations, as well as Web sites such as Monster.com, recognize
that O*NET data are key to their mission of connecting job opportunities to job seekers and
thereby enhancing workforce mobility in response to changing economic needs.
The HR-XML Consortium has used the O*NET database in developing specifications
that allow organizations to capture occupational information and use it efficiently in their
established human resource processes, such as building competency models, conducting job
analyses, and developing performance appraisal systems. These firms include Adecco, Aetna,

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CareerBuilder, Cisco Systems, IBM, Kelly Services, Manpower, MetLife, Microsoft, and
Monster.com, as well as many other technologically innovative companies. The O*NET
Program is the featured content provider in an HR-XML schema explaining to member
organizations and to the public how to capture and exchange skills, abilities, and related human
resources information.
Manpower, a worldwide provider of high-value staffing services with nearly 1,100
offices in North America and 4,400 offices in 73 countries, provides jobs to more than 2 million
persons every year and services more than 400,000 customers worldwide. The O*NET
occupational and skills taxonomy helps Manpower match the right person to the right job. The
O*NET system also offers a systematic structure that enhances Manpower’s analysis of the
employment marketplace and its tracking of staffing trends. By incorporating O*NET structure
into its procedures, Manpower has benefited by being able to
•

identify accurately the types of placements each field office makes;

•

locate field offices where the highest need exists;

•

more accurately consolidate information for various types of analysis, including
marketing analysis; and

•

begin the process of having Manpower offices in other countries map their
occupations to O*NET, enabling Manpower to consolidate information for global
reporting more efficiently.

Educational and Research Institutions

With the help of the occupational information contained in the O*NET database, colleges
are developing educational curricula, and research organizations are conducting a broad array of
research projects. Presented here are a few examples.
The Association of College and Research Libraries, a division of the American Library
Association, provided the following information on the O*NET Web sites in their C&RL News
(http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlpubs/crlnews/internetreviews/200402/onet.cfm):
Job seekers, students, workers, employment professionals, counselors, and others
interested in exploring occupations and careers will find this site a great place to start. . . .
O*NET Online is a well-designed search engine for exploring the database. . . .
Beyond O*NET Online, this site is chock-full of information on the Consortium, other
easily accessible O*NET products, career assessment guides and tools, research and
technical reports, data collection methods, planned products and ways to contribute to the
process. . . .
O*NET Online alone, however, is worth the stop for students searching for relevant
careers at any point in their academic journey. Through it they can explore occupations,

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match skills, find out about salary and trends, or just see what is out there. Researchers,
employment specialists, and others can dig deeper and discover a wealth of information
about the world of work likely available nowhere else. (Valentine, 2004, February)
CareerJournal.com, the Wall Street Journal Executive Career Site, conducted a study
designed to identify the “best careers,” those occupations for which workers report a high degree
of satisfaction. CareerJournal contracted the polling firm Harris Interactive to survey workers
about their jobs, whether they were satisfied, and what job qualities contributed to their
satisfaction. Four factors emerged for jobs held by highly satisfied workers: intellectual
stimulation, strong job security, high level of control and freedom of action, and extensive direct
contact with customers or clients. After identifying the common factors reported by highly
satisfied workers, CareerJournal used occupational data in the O*NET database, looking for
O*NET occupations with high ratings related to three of the four contributing factors. (Job
security was evaluated with BLS employment projections.) CareerJournal identified eight
occupations providing the most satisfying work experience:
•

curriculum and instructional coordinators,

•

high school special education teachers,

•

hospital and clinic managers,

•

management consultants and analysts,

•

medical researchers,

•

physical therapists,

•

sales, marketing, and advertising managers, and

•

social workers, counselors, and related managers.

The National Academies of Sciences is evaluating O*NET information as a tool for
making important human-capital decisions. As part of its research on changing worker
requirements, the National Academies of Sciences commissioned a paper by the Human
Resources Research Organization to investigate the feasibility of O*NET information to assess
changing worker skill requirements (Tsacoumis, 2007, May). The paper describes the key
elements of the O*NET system, and provides examples of the many ways O*NET has been used
by the education, public, and business communities to improve workforce decisions. The paper
concludes that O*NET is a rich and important data source that can be used in many different
ways to assess changing skills necessary for workers to be successful in today's workplace.
Lehigh Carbon Community College in Pennsylvania has a federal demonstration grant to
coordinate and develop curricula in three areas in nanotechnology at the postsecondary level and
in two areas at the secondary level. Working primarily with Lehigh Career and Technical
Institute, project staff find O*NET OnLine a handy, practical tool for faculty at both institutions.
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It offers an ideal starting point for occupational research essential to creating programs that
respond to contemporary business and industry needs and that contribute to talent development.
O*NET OnLine provides detailed descriptions of occupations, including Semiconductor
Processors, which is related to nanofabrication. Researchers used the tasks, activities, and other
elements for this occupation as a basis for further research and discussions with industry experts
and representatives. In addition, it was a good starting point for developing task statements that
teachers could turn into performance objectives for courses. Moreover, project staff could
identify and obtain detailed descriptions of other occupations related to those that they already
target and that could become part of the new training. The use of O*NET OnLine is also
recommended for reviewing existing secondary and postsecondary programs.
Temple University’s Center for Professional Development in Career and Technical
Education in Pennsylvania supports professional growth and learning among all levels of
educators who work with career-bound students. The center offers certification and degree
programs for secondary career and technical education teachers, curriculum supervisors,
cooperative education coordinators, and career and technical school directors in the 17 counties
of eastern Pennsylvania. Center faculty and staff incorporate O*NET OnLine in their courses on
program planning and evaluation, curriculum development, and cooperative education. They also
use it as an aid in structuring occupational competency assessment committee reviews. With its
wealth of data on occupations, O*NET OnLine provides a reliable and readily accessible
resource for planning and evaluating programs and developing curricula in career and technical
education.
Rotman Research Institute is using O*NET data for a National Institutes of Health study
on occupation attributes and dementia. The O*NET database has proved to be an invaluable
resource, providing comparable variables across a wide range of occupations. The database
provides a basis for the assessment of the characteristics of patients' occupations and for the
subsequent task of relating these characteristics to cognitive style and brain degeneration in
various forms of dementia.
The John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development is located at the Edward J.
Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey.
The center teaches the use of O*NET information in its Working Ahead: The National
Workforce and Career Development Curriculum. This credentialed 120-hour curriculum teaches
career counseling and guidance to front-line staff in workforce development, community
organizations, and community colleges. Working with a network of state departments of
education and state career resource networks, the Heldrich Center is developing a training guide
and student manual so that counselors and education staff can learn to use the O*NET database
as a career exploration tool for middle school, high school, and college-level students

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(http://www.aacc.nche.edu/Content/NavigationMenu/NewsandEvents/Workforce_Development_
Institute/AACC_Working_Ahead.PDF).
Private Companies and Commercial Products

Private companies are relying on O*NET information for in-house purposes such as job
description writing and employee development, as well as for product development. Presented
here are a few examples of how companies are benefiting from O*NET’s broad range of detailed
occupational data and tools.
The corporation Business and Legal Reports uses O*NET data in the Job Description
Manager module of its HR.BLR.com Web site (http://hr.blr.com/tour.aspx?view=jdm). O*NET
descriptors included in the Job Description Manager are occupation title, position summary,
tasks, skills, attributes, and experience and education.
Piedmont Natural Gas is using O*NET tools to help reduce turnover among entry-level
employees. It has used O*NET Career Exploration Tools and occupational data to create a
formal system to better match entry-level job applicants’ talents, abilities, and preferences with
the duties and working conditions of the jobs for which they are applying. Part of the project
included conducting a job analysis on each job family. In addition to employee surveys,
interviews, focus groups, observations, and job-specific training materials, Detailed Reports from
the O*NET OnLine Web site provided information about the necessary knowledge, skills and
abilities for the targeted positions.
iNQUATE Corporation has incorporated O*NET data into its human-capital software
application. With a patent pending, iNQUATE is an integrated seven-module application that
accommodates the development and communication of corporate goals and objectives,
automates the performance management process, and engages managers in the best use of human
capital while these managers analyze costs associated with maintaining a workforce. iNQUATE
integrates with onsite databases or information available from external providers through Web
services. All of iNQUATE’s seven modules work together to simplify the process and eliminate
duplication of information and effort (http://www.inquate.com/).
The U.S. Armed Forces

The U.S. military has recognized the value of O*NET data and career tools in its various
transition programs, recruiting activities, and human systems development projects. Presented
here are a few examples of the range of O*NET products being put to work in the armed forces.
The Army is currently evaluating the O*NET system as a tool for military job analysis
and classification. The Human Resources Research Organization, one of the O*NET’s partners,
is working on a pilot test, using O*NET questionnaires and the O*NET database to describe and

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classify positions in the Army. The Army believes that the success of this project will allow it to
map required competencies and performance criteria and to evaluate and enhance personnel
development practices.
The U.S. Department of Defense’s Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery
(ASVAB) Career Exploration Program offers tools to help high school and postsecondary
students learn about career exploration and planning. Developers of the ASVAB Program
wanted to change its philosophy to emphasize wider career exploration and decision making
among its participants. Completely redesigned, the program now uses O*NET data to broaden
occupational choices for nearly a million ASVAB participants at more than 14,000 of America’s
high schools annually. Students are encouraged to explore a variety of career possibilities suited
to their interests and learn to make decisions based on information about themselves and about
careers, instead of exploring just a few occupations that match their current abilities.
The North Carolina Military Foundation teamed with the North Carolina Military
Business Center to create a database and interactive Web site that enables businesses to link their
needs to the competencies of troops exiting the military. One of the challenges faced by the
troops and business leaders alike is identifying the knowledge, skills, and abilities shared by
military and civilian jobs. Using a keyword related to a job opening, employers are able to search
to find related military occupations and information on how many military personnel in these
occupations are returning annually to civilian jobs. The user can view additional information
about these occupations, including a list of related civilian job titles. Further exploration is
available through a link to the related occupations in O*NET OnLine. This Web site helps
employers and transitioning military personnel come together through the common language of
O*NET.
Military Personnel in Transition at Offutt Air Force Base in Omaha, Nebraska, provides a
comprehensive 5-day Transition Assistance Program (TAP) for personnel leaving military
service. As part of this program, the Nebraska Workforce Development Labor Market
Information Center presents information on career exploration, employment searches, and
training opportunities in the civilian job market. O*NET OnLine is prominently demonstrated as
a tool to help TAP participants relate their skills and military experience to appropriate
occupations and learn about a wider range of career possibilities as they transition to civilian life
and employment. Military personnel can thus tap into the entire range of O*NET occupational
information to explore career possibilities in the civilian sector. O*NET OnLine is a key element
of the TAP for military personnel in transition.
HireVetsfirst.gov uses O*NET OnLine as a military skills translator to help veterans
returning from active military duty reenter the workforce. Using their military occupational

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classification in O*NET OnLine’s crosswalk function, they can identify equivalent civilian
occupations. They can see typical tasks, skills, knowledge, and abilities; learn wage levels and
employment outlooks both nationally and in their own localities; and search for actual job
openings in areas of their choosing.
Community and Faith-Based Organizations

Community and faith-based organizations can easily provide career services to their
clients with O*NET products, which are in the public domain. The online database of
occupational information, as well as the free downloads of computerized Career Exploration
Tools, is helping to broaden the career outlook for special populations.
The American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) uses O*NET data to help the visually
impaired expand their employment possibilities. CareerConnect™ is a free employment planning
resource for persons who are blind or visually impaired. Sponsored by the AFB, it helps them
learn about the range and diversity of occupations available in the labor market. It also provides
mentors and information about assistive technology that can help them do the work. This
practical, user-friendly resource incorporates O*NET data to supply essential information for
career exploration and to expand the universe of jobs for persons with visual impairments.
Catholic Community Services in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, offers a free Senior
Employment Program for workers aged 55 years or older in the city and 17 other civil parishes,
mostly rural. With more than 25 years of experience, the agency is now a mandated partner in
Louisiana’s Workforce Investment Act initiatives. The program uses the O*NET Career
Exploration Tools to help retirees and other older adults find jobs. The O*NET Interest Profiler
is a key tool in the process that helps open clients’ minds to what the workplace offers them and
what they can offer the workplace.
The Boys and Girls Clubs of America developed a career preparation program to help
teens make sound educational decisions, explore a variety of careers, and develop skills for
success in the workplace. A system, CareerLaunch™, supports this program. This expanded
career preparation Web site incorporates O*NET data, enabling teens to find O*NET career
profiles related to their interests.
At Edgewood Terrace in northeast Washington, DC, the Community Preservation and
Development Corporation (CPDC) is helping unemployed and underemployed adults build
career plans, develop job skills, and find employment. In one component of the CPDC career and
skills enhancement program, staff use O*NET OnLine, among other resources, to help
participants identify potential career goals. Participants leave the class with a long-term career
plan fashioned as a résumé builder. Some go on to specialized training programs in information

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technology, others seek employment or further education in other fields, but all have an action
plan, with next steps toward a better future.
The Traumatic Brain Injury Program at the Tennessee Rehabilitation Center relies on
O*NET OnLine to help clients identify jobs they want to do and can do well. Team members
refer to detailed reports of the skills, knowledge, abilities, and other characteristics of
occupations as they tailor their services to the individual’s interests and goals. Employers benefit
from the program’s Job Placement Specialist’s assistance in finding competent workers, those
workers well matched to the employers’ particular needs.
International Users

The international interest in O*NET products has been phenomenal. Governments,
researchers, human resources consultants, and career guidance programs in more than 20
countries have requested permission to make use of the O*NET database, questionnaires, and
career tools. Each year, the O*NET Web sites log thousands of visitors from virtually every
geographic region in the world.
O*NET Customer Service has received inquiries from Romania, Japan, Nigeria, the
Netherlands, Singapore, Hong Kong, and many other countries requesting information,
assistance, and permission to use O*NET products. China and Mexico are developing national
occupational information systems based on O*NET data and O*NET questionnaires. Australia
uses the O*NET database of information to provide content to their own Australian Standard
Classification of Occupations.
In addition to international interest in the O*NET database, career guidance professionals
in foreign countries are adapting the O*NET Career Exploration Tools for their own use. The
Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA), a government agency
attached to the Philippine Department of Labor and Employment, has employed the O*NET
Ability Profiler in its aptitude assessments of hundreds of thousands of high school students. In
addition, TESDA is distributing the O*NET Computerized Interest Profiler to regional,
provincial, and district offices, as well as to their training institutions, as part of their e-Profiling
program, targeting out-of-school youth, career shifters, course shifters, and unemployed adults.
This example is only one of how the O*NET Career Tools are being used by governments and
private developers of career assessments around the world.
A.2.4 Examples of the O*NET Program in Published Literature
Presented here are some examples of references to the O*NET Program in publications.
For a thorough list of research articles, books, book chapters, technical reports, and presentations
referencing the O*NET Program, see Appendix E.

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Job Seeker’s Online Goldmine: A Step-by-Step Guidebook to Government and No-Cost
Web Tools, by Janet E. Wall, Ed.D., is a comprehensive resource of step-by-step directions for
dozens of excellent job-seeking, career transition, and career exploration tools. It includes
references to the O*NET Program and O*NET online tools and products throughout its 222
pages. It was published by JIST Works in 2006 (Wall, 2006).
O*NET data were used to rank occupations for their potential offshorability, as described
in a working paper by Alan S. Blinder of Princeton University. O*NET data on tasks,
knowledge, skills, abilities, work activities, work context, interests, work styles, and work values
were used to assign an index number to each occupation, indicating in rank order how easy or
difficult it would be to move the occupation offshore. This initial paper assesses the potential
movement of specific jobs offshore and may inform public policy (Blinder, 2007).
The Career Pathways Handbook (2006) provides a comprehensive tool for guidance
counselors and individuals by incorporating information from the O*NET database. Written by
Jim Cassio (http://www.cassio.com), it includes the latest U.S. employment statistics, as well as
O*NET information including occupation titles and definitions, common job tasks, key skills and
abilities, and related occupations (Cassio, 2006). Cassio’s organization, the Workforce
Information Group (http://www.work-info.com) provides workforce and labor market
information research, publishing, and systems development, using O*NET as a resource.
The O*NET Program is featured in a chapter of Unfocused Kids—Helping Students to
Focus on their Education and Career Plans (Schmelter-Davis, 2004). Author Harvey SchmelterDavis has demonstrated the value of O*NET information in dozens of workshops for counselors,
career development specialists, teachers, and students. At Rutgers University he developed a
training package to introduce O*NET resources to educators. In his chapter Schmelter-Davis
explains the O*NET system from a counselor’s perspective and suggests how to use it in career
counseling and teaching. He describes how others are using O*NET resources to help younger
persons focus on their strengths and interests and relate them to career opportunities. In a
handbook written for practitioners, Job and Work Analysis: Methods, Research, and Applications
for Human Resource Management (2007), authors Michael T. Brannick, Edward L. Levine, and
Frederick P. Morgeson describe the O*NET Program as a hybrid model including descriptors of
both the work and the worker, as compared with other systems focused on either the worker or
the work itself. The authors tout the O*NET Content Model as comprising virtually any
information about a job that a user could want. The various job analysis systems available are
discussed in light of various job analyses objectives, with consideration for real-world
constraints, such as time and money (Brannick, Levine, & Morgeson, 2007).

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“The Big ‘O’ in Your Job Search: O*NET,” by Jane M. Lommel, Ph.D., is the title of a
“NetWorking” article that appeared on Gary Johnson’s Brave New Work World Web site
(http://www.newwork.com). This article provides an extensive overview of the entire O*NET
system, including descriptions of the skills and competency information available at
http://online.onetcenter.org. The article highlights ways different workforce professionals,
counselors, and employers use O*NET to accomplish their goals (Lommel, 2004). Additional
Web sites, such as http://www.careerclusters.org/16clusters.htm, developed by the National
Association of State Directors of Career Technical Education Consortium, are linked to this
article. At the career clusters Web site, O*NET concepts are related to 16 major clusters into
which almost all occupations can be categorized. Other O*NET Program–related sites linked to
the “Big ‘O’” article offer online training and information (http://www.onetacademy.com) and
access to the O*NET Career Exploration Tools (http://onetknowledgesite.com/jobseekers.cfm).
O*NET data are frequently used for scientific research. For example, one recent study
was conducted to determine the validity of O*NET descriptors for predicting mean literacy
scores. This article, Linking O*NET Descriptors to Occupational Literacy Requirements Using
Job Component Validation (LaPolice, Carter, & Johnson, in press), will be published in the
summer 2008 issue of Personnel Psychology. Results showed that literacy was highly
predictable from O*NET descriptors: the authors were able to predict estimates of literacy scores
for all O*NET-SOC occupations.
A.2.5 Looking to the Future with Competency Models
DOL has identified industry and occupational competency models as a resource that is
key to businesses and industries articulating their workforce needs. The O*NET Content Model
and database provide a valuable resource for the development of reliable and valid competency
models. In turn, these models form the basis on which curriculum developers and training
providers develop objectives and outcomes to ensure that workers have the right skills. The ETA
acts as a broker of information in the area of competency models and skill standards
development by promoting, supporting, and disseminating information
(http://www.careeronestop.org/competencymodel/). The information gathered through the
O*NET Data Collection Program continues to provide the workforce investment system partners
with tools necessary for investment in human-capital development.
To date, three high-growth industry competency models have been developed, and more
are in progress. For some industries the information available from industry sources is neither
comprehensive nor readily available to developers. In these cases, model developers can access
occupational information in the O*NET database to identify the critical work requirements,
worker skills, and knowledge for occupations in the industry. The O*NET data are an essential

37

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OMB Supporting Statement

source of information, reducing the time and effort required to develop industry competency
models. When industry information is available or competency models have been developed, a
comparison with the O*NET data validates information from industry sources.
The University of Central Michigan has used O*NET Content Model domains to identify
the competencies for a leadership competency model for students. The model consists of five
dimensions, each with multiple competencies drawn from the O*NET Content Model and an
existing management taxonomy of work activities. Work requirements and worker
characteristics were reviewed to identify skills, knowledge, abilities, work styles, generalized
work activities, work context, and organizational context relevant for each dimension. Although
the resulting model was intended for students and was distributed to members of the campus
community, it was also distributed to interested employers because of likely relevance to a
variety of organizations.
The Tennessee Valley Authority used O*NET information as presented in the Career
Pathways tool, which was designed by Economic Modeling Specialists, Incorporated, to evaluate
workforce competencies in northeastern Mississippi. By showing Toyota that competencies of
workers in the declining furniture industry in northeastern Mississippi were 98% compatible with
the needs of the auto industry, O*NET data helped bring a Toyota plant to northeastern
Mississippi.
A.2.6 Workforce Innovation in Regional Economic Development
WIBs at both the state and the local levels are a critical component of the Workforce
Innovation in Regional Economic Development (WIRED) regions. They work together with
civic, investment, academic, entrepreneurial, and philanthropic leaders to provide leadership by
aligning and leveraging their respective activities, goods, and resources.
The Central Western Maine WIRED initiative includes a plan to build a smoother
interface with O*NET assessments. This objective is stated in the draft plan submitted to the
Maine Jobs Council, WIA Title I Strategic Plan Modification for Central Western Maine Local
Workforce Investment Board, Local Workforce Investment Area III.
Michigan’s West Coast WIRED Initiative uses the Career Readiness Certificate, based on
WorkKeys® and O*NET Job Zone information, as a means of linking worker readiness to jobs
available in the local economy (ACT, 2006). WorkKeys, an online assessment linked to O*NET
occupations, measures foundational skills of Reading for Information, Applied Mathematics, and
Locating Information. It assigns a score and grants a Career Readiness Certificate. The certificate
is then related to jobs available in the local economy.

38

OMB Supporting Statement

Justification

The Career Readiness Certificate is being used in several states as a part of state,
regional, and local workforce development initiatives, including North Carolina, Virginia,
Indiana, Kentucky, and New Mexico. Many others are in the process of implementing a Career
Readiness Certificate program. (See http://www.crcconsortium.org/state-news.htm.)

A.3

Uses of Information Technology

The O*NET Data Collection Program employs the latest in information technology
systems and procedures to enhance the quality of the data, minimize the burden on the
responding establishments and job incumbents, and reduce the overall cost of the data collection
effort.
A.3.1 Web Questionnaires
Electronic versions of the O*NET questionnaires are available via the Internet to sampled
job incumbents and occupation experts. Many of the benefits of the paper questionnaires are
replicated in the electronic questionnaires. Specifically, users are able to start and stop multiple
times without losing data. They can return to their partially completed questionnaire at any time
during the survey period and resume where they stopped. A respondent may also review and edit
previous answers as necessary. In addition, an on-screen progress meter keeps respondents
informed of their movement through the questionnaire.
Advances in Web technologies and security, as well as the prevalence of establishments’
and employees’ access to Web browsers, have made Internet-based data collection both feasible
and practical. Internet use continues to accelerate, and the use of the Web questionnaire has
increased with it. For 2004, 15.8% of employee respondents used the Web questionnaire, a
substantial increase over the 3.7% who responded via the Web during the 1999 pretest. In 2007
the number of job incumbent respondents choosing the Web version increased to 20.3%; for
occupation experts, the Web usage rate was 24.0%. The paper questionnaire cover and
informational materials mailed to respondents continue to highlight the option of completing the
survey on the Web.
The paper and Web versions of the questionnaires were designed to be optimal for their
respective modes of administration. The questionnaire design literature suggests that this
approach is essential to reduce mode effects. That is, if each questionnaire is designed to
minimize measurement error in its particular mode of interview, mode effects are also
minimized. For example, in the paper version, multiple questions appear on a single page of the
questionnaire. However, in the Web version, only one question appears per screen (although the
respondent can navigate at will through the instrument). The literature on Web survey design see
(see, e.g., Fuchs, 2002) suggests that one question per screen for Web surveys reduces
measurement error and therefore the effects of administration mode. This change was the only
39

Justification

OMB Supporting Statement

important one necessary for the Web version, because both instruments are self-administered. In
fact, to ensure comparability between the paper and Web responses, the formats and wordings of
the questions and response categories for the two versions remain identical.
A.3.2 Project Web Site
An O*NET data collection Web page application has been developed to support and
assist with the O*NET Data Collection Program (http://onet.rti.org). This site is divided into two
major sections: the public and restricted-access sections. The restricted-access section is further
subdivided into two areas: the online questionnaires area and the project management area.
The goal for the public section is to support the establishment-recruiting process. This
section is accessible to the public, without restrictions. The public section includes O*NET
background information, endorsement letters, frequently asked questions, copies of the
questionnaires, and links to other O*NET Program–related Web sites. The purpose of this
section is to provide establishments, sampled workers, and occupation experts with readily
accessible information about the data collection effort and uses of the data.
The restricted-access section contains “sensitive” information available only to certain
groups, such as survey respondents, project managers, and data-entry staff. This section is
controlled by a user ID and password authentication scheme. The Web server includes a secure
socket layer (SSL) certificate to allow encrypted transmission of all information over the
Internet. This same technology is used by e-commerce Web sites to secure credit card numbers.
In addition, no “cookies” are used. (A cookie is data given to a user’s Web browser so that the
browser will return the data to the server or Web site during subsequent requests.) Some Internet
users distrust Web sites that deposit cookies on users’ computers and may even configure their
computers to prohibit cookies, so the “cookie-less” techniques are to ensure that the site will
perform as expected, whether or not a user has disabled cookies.
The online questionnaire area of the restricted-access section provides sample members
an alternative to pencil-and-paper self-interviewing. Only persons who have been selected to
participate in the survey have access to this area. Unique user IDs and passwords are assigned to
each job incumbent and occupation expert by a central office computer system at the time they
are selected into the sample; names and other personally identifiable information are not
obtained. The ID and password are provided with other survey materials to the sample member.
Before allowing access to the online questionnaire area, the Web site confirms the validity of the
ID and password and verifies that a completed survey form has not already been received.
Having entered this portion of the site, respondents are
•

40

informed that participation in the survey is voluntary,

OMB Supporting Statement

Justification

•

assured that their survey responses will remain confidential,

•

limited to seeing only the questionnaire they have been asked to complete,

•

permitted to stop at any point and continue responding later,

•

permitted to skip questions they choose not to answer, and

•

permitted to review and change previous responses.

On the last page of the survey, respondents confirm that they have completed the
questionnaire; then they exit the questionnaire area of the site and are thanked for their
participation. Their user ID is automatically deactivated at this time. Any further attempts to log
in will not be possible, because the system recognizes these users as having completed the
survey.
The database containing the survey data are not accessible via the Internet; it resides on a
server inside the contractor’s firewall. The Web data collection application encrypts and
transmits data from the respondent’s computer into the survey database. Only authorized project
staff, operating from inside the firewall, have access to the survey database.
The project management area of the restricted-access section contains data collection
management reports and information. Access accounts for this area are created for managers of
the O*NET Data Collection Program. This portion of the Web site serves as an intranet for the
O*NET Program, facilitating communication among contractor staff, program staff at the
National Center for O*NET Development, and DOL. Production reports are posted nightly and
include summaries of the progress of establishment recruiting, questionnaire shipment and
receipt, and overall data collection status. Additional applications include a secure, centralized
data file repository used by statisticians, analysts, and others to share results of specialized,
nonroutine analyses and reports. The project management area of the Web site reduces the cost
of the data collection effort by centralizing and streamlining features used by the project team.
A.3.3 The Case Management System and Data Collection Utilities
The O*NET CMS is a Web-based control system that supports and monitors the data
collection activities of the BLs, the mailing of informational materials and questionnaires, and
the receipt of completed paper and Web questionnaires. Enhancements have been made to the
CMS that allow greater flexibility and effectiveness in the communications between the BLs and
the POCs in sample establishments. For example, visual cues (icons) in the CMS allow the BLs
to prioritize and customize their approach for certain types of establishments that require special
procedures. Another enhancement is the ability to do ad hoc package modifications, such as the
inclusion of special endorsement letters, based on O*NET-SOC occupations. Because the
packages for specific O*NET-SOC occupations are customized, the POCs receive targeted

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OMB Supporting Statement

materials that help communicate the data collection mission. In addition, tools have been
developed to help operations management load-balance the number of cases assigned across the
team of BLs. Another feature permits shipping of questionnaires to more than one POC in an
establishment, for use with multisite organizations. These and other enhancements have
improved the study’s effectiveness and efficiency.
In an effort to help manage supplies (envelopes, brochures, questionnaires, etc.)
associated with data collection, an inventory tracking system, integrated with the CMS, has been
developed and deployed. As the BLs place orders for informational materials and questionnaires
to be shipped to survey participants, the inventory system updates reports to show the expected
remaining inventory. As stocks run low, the staff are alerted to replenish supplies. The system
provides a means to reconcile physical and expected inventory. As a result, the system has
improved the efficiency of ordering, storing, and shipping data collection materials.
Questionnaires are prepared for each respondent by an automated order-fulfillment
system. The system detects the questionnaire domain type and occupation assigned to the
respondent, and it prints a complete package, including the individually customized and labeled
questionnaire, ready to pack and ship.
The CMS automatically assigns questionnaire domain types sequentially as new
respondents are added to the sample. Depending on how many of each type are actually returned
by respondents, it is possible to receive enough responses of a particular questionnaire type for
an occupation before receiving the total desired number of questionnaires of all types. The
system continually monitors the number of returned questionnaires by type and overrides the
sequential assignment of questionnaires as appropriate so that only the questionnaire types that
are still required are sent. This feature enhances efficiency by eliminating the shipping of
questionnaires that are no longer necessary to complete the data for an occupation. Moreover, by
continually focusing resources only on the remaining questionnaire types required, it reduces the
total time required to complete any occupation.
A.3.4 Additional Uses of the Internet for Data Collection
The O*NET Program uses the Internet to gather additional occupational information,
such as lay titles and tools and technology. This use expands the O*NET database, providing
easily maintained current information about tools and technology and enhancing users’ ability to
find occupations relevant to their training and expertise by giving them a wider range of search
terms. This enhancement is accomplished without additional burden to the public and at less cost
than other means of data collection.
“Web scraping” is employed to gather tools and technology linked to in-demand
occupations in high growth industries, with particular emphasis on identifying rapidly changing
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OMB Supporting Statement

Justification

information technologies, such as database user interface and query software and analytical or
scientific software. Tools and technologies linked to specific occupations are found on job
posting, career education, professional association, and other Web sites. Occupational analysts
link the tools and technologies to the United Nations Standard Products and Services Code®, an
online classification system for tools and services. Before the information is published in O*NET
OnLine, rigorous reviews are performed to ensure the quality and usefulness of the data.
Information collected from the Web in this way represents a significant enhancement to the data
available to O*NET users.
O*NET lay titles are collected from unmatched search terms submitted to America’s
Career InfoNet (ACINet), a DOL-sponsored online resource for job seekers that helps
individuals explore career opportunities and make informed choices about employment and
education. O*NET lay titles, as well as tools and technology, are also collected from the ACINet
Job Description Writer, an online tool offered by ACINet to help employers and human resource
specialists write job descriptions. Search terms, such as Sports Medicine Specialist and
Nanotechnologist, that do not result in occupational matches in ACINet are captured
electronically. These terms, together with job titles collected through the Job Description Writer,
are reviewed by O*NET occupational analysts for potential inclusion in the O*NET Lay Title
database. Lay titles greatly enhance the keyword search functions for O*NET OnLine,
America’s Career InfoNet, and O*NET Code Connector, a Web application to assist workforce
professionals in matching job titles to O*NET-SOC codes.
Use of Internet web sites further enhances the O*NET database, provides greater search
capabilities to users, and reduces burden. It also allows for rapid update of the data through user
input and at minimal cost.

A.4

Efforts to Identify Duplication

To avoid duplication and reduce cost, several portions of the O*NET Content Model are
provided from existing data sources. Specifically, as discussed in Section A.1, the domain of
Workforce Characteristics—including information on industries, job opportunities, and pay—is
obtained through links to existing labor market information databases. Information about
occupational licensing, certifications, national industrial skill standards, and related instructional
programs is provided from existing sources, such as the Manufacturing Skills Standards Council,
the National Retail Federation, and several Web sites, including http://www.careertools.org/
certification and http://www.acinet.org/acinet/lois_start.asp.
The exhaustive reviews of existing labor market and occupational information, conducted
by the Advisory Panel for the Dictionary of Occupational Titles and DOL’s DOT review staff, as
well as subsequent current research, identified no other comprehensive, valid, and reliable

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OMB Supporting Statement

sources that could be used for the data items included in the O*NET database. The development
of the O*NET Program has also involved staff and advisors with many years of experience in
labor market and occupational information who are familiar with existing data sources. In fact, as
discussed in Section A.2, many existing systems that provide detailed occupational information
are actually using information based on O*NET data or the predecessor DOT.
The few existing sources with similar measures are too limited to be used in the O*NET
database. Some existing sources are valid and reliable—for example, information from the
Office of Personnel Management and the U.S. Department of Defense—but are not
comprehensive, because they represent only those jobs in federal civilian employment or the
military. Some private sources of job analysis information exist; however, they are based on job
analyses conducted on an as-needed basis rather than on a representative sample of employers
and workers. They are therefore limited in their coverage and not representative of the entire
workforce. Furthermore, these analyses are not comparable because they do not use the
prescribed O*NET common language to describe occupational requirements; it is not practical to
combine them, because they include dissimilar components. Finally, these private data sources
are not available to the general public.

A.5

Efforts to Minimize Burden on Small Establishments

All sizes of establishments are represented in the O*NET estimates for most occupations.
For some occupations, the targeting strategy used in selecting an efficient sample may lead us to
omit some small establishments from the sampling frame, but this omission occurs for few
occupations. The omission is allowed when it is clear that sampling small establishments will
greatly reduce the efficiency of the data collection or when it is clear that incumbents from small
establishments are not working in the mainstream of the occupation.
Given that establishments of all sizes should be represented in the samples for most
occupations, specific design provisions have been undertaken to avoid overly burdening small
establishments. For example, Exhibit 6 shows the distribution of establishments by number of
employees on the Dun and Bradstreet (D&B) list used as the sampling frame for O*NET data.
The exhibit also shows the expected distribution of the O*NET sample of establishments by
number of employees. O*NET sampling selects small establishments at a much lower rate than
that at which they occur in the population: although 80.5% of establishments employ fewer than
25 employees, the O*NET sample will consist of only 39.7% of such small establishments. On
the other hand, large establishments (with 250 or more employees) will make up 25.8% of the
O*NET sample but make up only 0.4% of all establishments. Thus, the O*NET sample relies
more heavily on large establishments in order to reduce the burden on small establishments with

44

OMB Supporting Statement
Exhibit 6.

Distribution of Frame and Sample Establishments by Employment Size

Total Number of Frame
Establishmentsa

Frame Distribution
(Percent)

Actual Distribution of
O*NET Sampled
Establishmentsb
(Percent)

1–4

9,053,605

60.3

23.9

5–9

1,760,339

11.7

6.5

10–24

1,275,844

8.5

9.3

25–49

482,385

3.2

14.2

50–99

264,782

1.7

10.2

100–249

140,541

0.9

6.6

250–499

33,539

0.2

14.7

500–999

12,607

0.1

6.4

6,943

0.1

4.4

532

0.0

0.3

1,976,604

13.2

3.4

15,007,721

100.0

100.0

Number of Employees

1,000–4,999
5,000+
Unknown
Total
a
b

Justification

Data based on October 2007 Dun and Bradstreet (D&B) frame of establishments.
Data based on distribution of prior O*NET samples that used the D&B frame. Future O*NET samples will be
similarly designed.

few employees. The disproportionate sampling of large and small establishments is properly
accounted for in the analysis weighting, resulting in statistically consistent estimates.
In addition, data collection procedures place lower burden on small establishments than
on large establishments. When a small establishment is selected, it likely employs fewer of the
targeted occupations and has fewer employees working in the occupations. Thus, a POC at a
small establishment generally spends less time preparing sampling lists and distributing
questionnaires than a POC at a large establishment, which is more likely to employ several of the
targeted occupations, with a large number of employees working in the occupations.

A.6

Consequences of Collecting the Information Less Frequently

The O*NET database is the most comprehensive source of occupational information in
the United States. No other similar, comprehensive, reliable, and valid source exists. If O*NET
data are not collected, U.S. citizens, industry, business establishments, military, government and
educational institutions, and the workforce investment system will have few options that meet
their needs for occupational information. O*NET data are used to develop industry competency
models and occupational competency profiles. O*NET data also include information on
transferable skills and are used for skills gap analysis, facilitating a mobile workforce responsive
to changing economic needs.

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OMB Supporting Statement

The use of O*NET data by industry, employers, software developers, job seekers,
students, educators, and workforce development specialists supports a well-functioning U.S.
labor market and workforce investment system—both essential to U.S. competitiveness in a
global 21st-century economy. O*NET-SOC occupations conform to the SOC, permitting
O*NET data to be linked to and analyzed with sources of information on current occupational
employment and trends, wages, and demographic data. Its electronic format is freely accessible,
either through O*NET OnLine (http://online.onetcenter.org), or as a download from the O*NET
Resource Center (http://www.onetcenter.org).
The initial 3.1 version of the O*NET database was populated with information derived
from the DOT. So far, updated data have been published for 780 O*NET-SOC occupations.
Additional data releases are planned through 2012 to update selected high-growth occupations
and release new data on new and emerging occupations. The consequences of discontinuing data
collection would be that the millions of users who rely on O*NET data for business and career
decisions, for educational programming, and for work in human resources or workforce
development would instead be using portions of information that are out of date and incomplete.
If data were collected less frequently, the currency of some data would become questionable,
especially for occupations that are changing as a result of new technologies. The focus of data
collection on high-growth and new and emerging occupations reflects the need to provide current
information in a demand-driven economy that is rapidly changing.
A 3-year extension of the O*NET Data Collection Program is being requested for the
period spanning calendar years 2009 through 2011. This extension will provide for the updating
of selected high-growth occupations and for data collection activities for new and emerging
occupations. A dynamic and progressive U.S. economy requires continuous improvement to the
data on which so many decisions are based. Millions of people are currently using O*NET
information and the numbers continue to expand as public agencies and private developers
integrate O*NET data into their systems and products. The O*NET database provides valid,
reliable, and current occupational information crucial to a strong U.S. workforce. O*NET
database updates are scheduled to occur once a year to incorporate newly collected information
on recently surveyed occupations. A schedule for data analysis is provided in Section A.16;
schedules for data collection and analysis are subject to annual appropriations.

A.7

Special Circumstances

The study will be conducted in a manner consistent with the guidelines in 5 C.F.R.
§ 1320.9. There are no special circumstances that might require deviation from the guidelines.

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A.8

Justification

Consultation Outside the Agency

The Federal Register notice initiating the 60-day public comment period was published
on May 16, 2008. A copy of the notice appears in Appendix D. No comments were received
from the public.
The OMB clearance package was reviewed by two expert consultants, Drs. John P.
Campbell and Michael A. Campion. Dr. Campbell is professor of psychology and industrial
relations at the University of Minnesota, and Dr. Campion is professor of management at Purdue
University. Both are industrial/organizational psychologists who are widely published in their
field and who are intimately familiar with the O*NET data collection process and the types and
uses of the data collected. Revisions responsive to their comments have been incorporated, as
appropriate, in the clearance package.
The data collection contractor, RTI International, has several mechanisms in place to
obtain ongoing feedback from study participants. The BLs have multiple telephone contacts with
POCs and occupation experts; they are careful to document in their call notes significant
comments or suggestions they receive. Letters and brochures sent to POCs and occupation
experts offer a toll-free number they can call with questions or comments. In addition, the project
Web site, https://onet.rti.org/, which both study participants and the general public can access,
has a “contact us” tab that offers both a toll-free number and an e-mail link. Furthermore, the
online Web questionnaire provides respondents an opportunity to submit comments with their
questionnaire responses. All feedback received from these sources is promptly reviewed by
project management staff and has resulted in several modifications to the data collection
protocol.

A.9

Payments or Gifts to Respondents

Since the origins of the survey, incentives have been offered to POCs, establishments,
and employees to encourage their participation in the O*NET Data Collection Program.
Although the current procedures are designed to minimize respondent burden, the effort for the
company and the POC participation is not insignificant.
A.9.1 Incentives for the Point of Contact and the Employer
The POC’s responsibilities include the following:
•

reading the introductory package to become familiar with the purpose of the O*NET
Data Collection Program and the role of a POC;

•

seeking permission within the company, as necessary, to participate in the O*NET
Data Collection Program;

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OMB Supporting Statement

•

making a roster of all employees at the location who work in as many as five different
occupations;

•

participating in a sampling process that selects as many as 20 employees from these
occupations and maintaining this sample roster for future reference;

•

distributing questionnaires to the sampled persons within the company and addressing
their questions and concerns about the survey; and

•

distributing follow-up materials to employees, including thank you–reminder cards,
replacement questionnaires, and e-mailed requests for cooperation.

Because POCs are the only link with the O*NET respondents, they must be fully
committed to the data collection process. The POC is the O*NET Program’s representative
within the establishment who communicates the importance of the O*NET Program.
The employer is also critical because he or she is being asked to
•

support the O*NET Data Collection Program by agreeing to the company’s
participation in data collection,

•

provide support and encouragement to the POC to carry out his or her responsibilities,

•

allow the POC to provide information regarding the number of persons employed in
the establishment in the occupations of interest, and

•

support the participation of the sampled employees.

Incentives for both POCs and employers are essential to encourage the highest response
rates possible. POCs receive a clock and a framed Certificate of Appreciation from DOL. The
clock is battery operated, has the O*NET logo on its face, and is suitable for display on a desk or
shelf. The Certificate of Appreciation is printed in color on card stock, bears the DOL and
O*NET logos, displays the POC’s name, and is signed by a high-ranking DOL official. It has a
solid oak frame and Plexiglas cover and is suitable for displaying on an office wall. The total
cost of both gifts is approximately $10, although their perceived value likely far exceeds this
amount.
The employer receives the O*NET Toolkit for Business. The Toolkit is an O*NET
Program information packet, including a guide for writing job descriptions, that managers can
use for human resource planning. These materials are attractively organized in colored, glossy
folders.
The continuation of these incentives is planned for both the POC and the employer
because these incentives seem to work quite well and are the products of considerable thought
and experimentation. For example, in the early years of O*NET data collection, the POC
received a mouse pad with built-in calculator in place of the Certificate of Appreciation. The
mouse pad was not well received by the POC, and its perceived value, with the clock, was

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Justification

judged to be inadequate for all the POC’s efforts. Although not formally tested, the perceived
value of the Certificate of Appreciation has significantly exceeded its actual cost, and it has been
very well received by the POCs.
In addition, an experiment was conducted from 2002 to 2004 to evaluate an additional
incentive of $20 to the POC. Essentially, the incentive had no effect on POC cooperation rates or
employee response rates while it significantly increased data collection costs. The experimental
findings suggested that the current POC and employer incentives are adequate for maximizing
response rates at a reduced cost (Biemer, Ellis, Pitts, & Robbins, 2006).18
A.9.2 Incentives for the Employee
In keeping with what has been done since 2001, each employee is offered a prepaid
incentive of $10 to ensure that a high percentage of the job incumbents respond by completing
the questionnaire.
Monetary incentives have the greatest potential impact when the respondent has to exert
some special effort, such as taking a test or filling out a multi-item questionnaire. The incentive
encourages respondents in a task requiring higher levels of involvement and commitment than
the typical one-time, face-to-face interview. Although the O*NET questionnaires are not tests,
the cognitive demands they place on respondents resemble test-taking demands in that the
respondents must assess the requirements of their job. The monetary incentive is instrumental in
impressing upon the respondent the importance of this rating task. Respondents who perceive the
rating task as important will likely make thoughtful, carefully considered assessments rather than
hasty ones, thus improving the reliability of the data.
In addition, the monetary incentive is important because respondents are encouraged to
complete the questionnaire, which takes about 30 minutes, on their own time rather than on the
job. This encouragement not only minimizes the burden on employers, but also improves the
quality of the data because, otherwise, busy workers might be underrepresented in the data,
which would bias the estimates for job performance.
The monetary incentive may at least partially offset its inherent cost through efficiencies
created in the data collection process as a result of higher response rates. For the job incumbent
respondents especially—though they are not viewed as a difficult-to-reach population in the
usual sense—considerable effort and resources are expended to identify and reach them through
the sampling process. They represent a worker in a specific occupation in a specific
establishment in a specific industry. The expense of reaching that particular respondent justifies
the cost of a monetary payment to ensure a high rate of response. With regard to the size of the
18

For a more detailed discussion of the Biemer et al. (2006) results, see Section B.4.

49

Justification

OMB Supporting Statement

employee incentive, payment amounts were evaluated in the pretest to determine the optimal
means to maximize the response rate. On the basis of these data, a $10 cash incentive has been
used since the initial wave of data collection and will continue to be used in future waves.
A.9.3 Incentives for Occupation Experts
Occupation experts provide data for approximately 25% of the O*NET-SOC
occupations. Each occupation expert is offered a $40 monetary incentive to complete three
domain questionnaires, or about $13.33 per questionnaire. This incentive is slightly higher than
the $10 offered to Establishment Method respondents for completing one domain questionnaire.
This increased incentive is necessary to gain cooperation from what is often a rare group of
experts for an occupation. Moreover, it seems commensurate with the effort involved in
responding to multiple questionnaires, given that the average occupation expert’s salary is higher
than the average employee’s salary.

A.10 Assurance of Confidentiality
The contractor for the data collection task, RTI International, has extensive experience in
protecting and maintaining the confidentiality of respondent data collected from surveys. To
ensure confidentiality, RTI has drawn from its experience in designing the data collection
procedures incorporated in this program.
Survey data are collected from job incumbents (Establishment Method) and from
occupation experts (OE Method). Informational materials mailed to potential respondents
contain essential program information and assurances of confidentiality that enable the person to
make an informed decision about his or her voluntary participation in the data collection effort.
Examples of informational materials provided to survey participants appear in Appendix F.
Employees sampled at establishments are asked to complete their questionnaires on their
personal time, not company time. This stipulation enables the employee to select a comfortable
and private setting, if desired, in which to complete the questionnaire. All respondents have a
choice of completing paper questionnaires or completing the questionnaires online at the project
Web site. Paper questionnaires are mailed directly to RTI in a business-reply envelope provided
by RTI. The individual responses are processed according to a study ID number. All O*NET
Data Collection Program staff are required to sign a confidentiality pledge that assures each
respondent that the confidentiality of responses to the questionnaire will be maintained. Only
authorized staff have access to the completed instruments and data files. The completed and
processed questionnaires are stored in a secure document-control area until federal authorization
has been granted to destroy them. All computer files, including those associated with the control
system, are password protected.

50

OMB Supporting Statement

Justification

The Internet-based system that allows respondents to provide their survey responses
electronically has restricted access, including a user ID and password authentication scheme for
respondents. The Web server includes an SSL certificate to allow encrypted transmission of all
information over the Internet, the same technology used by e-commerce sites. The database
containing the survey data are not accessible via the Internet; it resides on a server inside the RTI
firewall. Only O*NET Data Collection Program staff have access to the master survey database.
The O*NET questionnaires (see Appendix A) collect very little personal information
about the respondent, and what is collected contains no identifiers, such as personal name or
place of employment. No individual-level data are published, nor are they accessible or provided
to anyone except the O*NET Data Collection Program staff. Published results are made available
only in aggregate, as one set of estimates for an entire occupation. Furthermore, no demographic
data (e.g., sex, race) are released, even in aggregate form. Finally, estimates are not produced for
any subpopulations within an occupation, such as geographic region or sociodemographic group,
which otherwise may have allowed the identification of an individual.
Before publishing the O*NET tables on the public Web site, the O*NET Program team
thoroughly examines the tables for any risk of disclosure of confidential information. In
particular, each table is analyzed to identify any “sensitive” cells (i.e., cells that may reveal too
much information about an individual employee). Willenborg and Waal (1996) have recommend
using an (n,k)-dominance rule that a cell be regarded as sensitive if the sum of the largest n
contributions account for more than k% of the total cell value. Willenborg and Waal further
recommend n = 5 and k = 80. Because every sampled employee contributes only one response,
these recommendations translate into a minimum cell size of 5/.80, or about 7. In fact, the
minimum cell size for the O*NET tables is 10 respondents; any sensitive cells with fewer than
10 are suppressed. In addition, the (n,k)-dominance rule assumes a complete census. As
Willenborg and Waal note, when applied to tables based on samples and where the cell entries
are weighted averages, the (5,0.80) rule affords even greater disclosure control. This extra
control ensures that these O*NET tabular data pose no disclosure risks to any individual
respondent.

A.11 Questions of a Sensitive Nature
Only one question in the O*NET questionnaires may be considered to be of a sensitive
nature. In the Background section, the survey asks respondents if they consider themselves to
have a disability, using the disability questions developed for the 2000 Census of Population.
Completion rates for this item indicate that the great majority of participants (96%) elect to
complete the question.

51

Justification

OMB Supporting Statement

The O*NET sampling strategy is to randomly select participants at the individual level.
The disability question, together with the demographic questions, provides descriptive
information about the sample of respondents. In addition, these data may allow for some broad
comparisons with the characteristics of the general population working in the occupation, using
information from the 2000 Census.
Respondents to the O*NET survey are informed that responding to all questions, which
includes disability status and the other demographic characteristics, is voluntary. They complete
the survey on their own time, in a private setting if they choose. No identifying information, such
as the respondent’s name or place of employment, is recorded on the questionnaire.

A.12 Estimates of Annualized Hour Burden
As described in Section A.1.2, there are two protocols for O*NET data collection—the
Establishment Method and the OE Method. An estimated 75% of occupations are completed by
Establishment Method. The OE Method is used for occupations as necessary to improve
sampling efficiency and avoid excessive use of burden, as when it is difficult to locate industries
or establishments with occupation incumbents, employment is low, or employment data are not
available, as is the case for many new and emerging occupations.
The Establishment Method uses a two-stage sample, with establishments selected at the
first stage and employees selected at the second stage. Thus, there are burden hours associated
with both establishments and employees. For each participating establishment, a POC is
identified to coordinate data collection activities in the establishment. In Exhibit 7, the first and
second columns of the Establishment Activity section present the number of responses and
assumed average burden per response for the POC’s activities; these averages were obtained
from previous years of O*NET data collection experience. When the total establishment burden
was estimated, the estimated number of establishments that will complete each activity was
multiplied by the average burden and summed across the activities.
The Employee Activity section of Exhibit 7 is based on the fact that selected employees
under the Establishment Method will complete one domain questionnaire requiring an average of
30 minutes of effort, while occupation experts complete all three domain questionnaires,
requiring an average of 90 minutes of effort.

52

OMB Supporting Statement
Exhibit 7.
Number of
Responses
per Sample
Unit
Establishment Activity
Verification calls to initial
contact at establishment
Screening call to POC
Initial recruitment call to
POC
POC Creation of occupation
lists for Sampling
Call to POC to sample
workers
POC’s distribution of
questionnaire packets
Follow-up calls to POC
a
Total, establishment
Employee Activity
Establishment Method
employee respondents
Occupation Expert Method
respondents
b
Total, employee
Total Respondents
Private sector
Federal government
State/local/tribal
governments
Subtotal, establishment
respondents
Individuals/households
c,d
Total, all respondents
Total Burden Hours
Private sector
Federal government
State/local/tribal
governments
Subtotal, establishment
burden hours
Individuals/households
e
Total, all burden hours
Respondent Type
f
Establishments
g
Employees
Total

Justification
Estimate of Hour and Cost Burden by Year
Average
Burden per
Response
(Minutes)

2009
Sampling
Units

2010

Burden
Hours

Sampling
Units

2011

Burden
Hours

Sampling
Units

Burden
Hours

1
1

2
3

16,083
13,349

536
667

14,667
12,173

489
609

13,833
11,482

461
574

1

12

7,743

1,549

7,061

1,412

6,659

1,332

1

20

4,336

1,445

3,954

1,318

3,729

1,243

1

10

4,336

723

3,954

659

3,729

622

1
4
NA

15
2
NA

4,076
4,076
NA

1,019
543
6,482

3,717
3,717
NA

929
496
5,912

3,505
3,505
NA

876
467
5,575

1

30

16,321

8,161

16,525

8,262

14,430

7,215

3
NA

30
NA

500
NA

750
8,911

500
NA

750
9,012

500
NA

750
7,965

NA
NA

NA
NA

12,548
534

NA
NA

11,443
487

NA
NA

10,793
459

NA
NA

NA

NA

267

NA

243

NA

230

NA

NA
NA
NA

NA
NA
NA

13,349
16,821
30,170

NA
NA
NA

12,173
17,025
29,198

NA
NA
NA

11,482
14,930
26,412

NA
NA
NA

NA
NA

NA
NA

NA
NA

6,093
259

NA
NA

5,557
236

NA
NA

5,241
224

NA

NA

NA

130

NA

118

NA

111

NA
NA
NA

NA
NA
NA

NA
NA
NA

6,482
8,911
15,393

NA
NA
NA

NA
NA
NA

5,576
7,965
13,541

2009
$304,654
$175,814
$480,468

5,911
9,012
14,923
Cost Burden
2010
$277,864
$177,807
$455,624

2011
$262,025
$157,149
$419,174

Note: NA = not applicable.
a
Includes total burden time for all establishments (private sector, federal government, and state/local/tribal governments).
b
Includes total burden time for individuals/households.
c
The total number of respondents across all three years = 85,780.
d
The total number of respondents was derived by summing the number of POCs (row name is “Screening call to POCs”),
Establishment employees (row name is “Establishment Method employee respondents”), and occupation experts (row name is
“Occupation Expert Method respondents”).
e
The total number of burden hours across all three years = 43,857.
f
Assumed hourly rates: $47.00 for 2009–2011.
g
Assumed hourly rates: $19.73 for 2009–2011.

53

Justification

OMB Supporting Statement

Exhibit 7 also displays the estimated number of sampling units and the estimated burden
hours. As shown in Exhibit 9 in Section A.16, we assume that 75 occupations will be completed
under the Establishment Method and 25 will be completed under the OE Method each year. For
2009, establishments are estimated to expend 6,482 burden hours, and employees are estimated
to expend 8,911 burden hours, for a total of 15,393 burden hours. In 2010, establishments are
estimated to expend 5,912 burden hours, and employees are estimated to expend 9,012 burden
hours, for a total of 14,924 burden hours. In 2011, 5,575 burden hours are estimated for
establishments, and 7,965 burden hours are estimated for employees, for a total of 13,540 burden
hours. The slight decline in total burden hours across the 3-year period of 2009 to 2011 (15,393;
14,923; 13,541) results from initiating data collection for most occupations during 2009, which
causes many of these occupations to complete data collection during the final 2 years.
The Total Respondents section of Exhibit 7 shows the estimated annual number of
respondents by category and overall. The respondent totals include the number of POCs (the row
name is “Screening call to POC”), the number of Establishment Method employee respondents,
and the number of Occupation Expert Method respondents. The category totals are based on
prior sampling experience. The total number of respondents across all 3 years is 85,780.
The Total Burden Hours section of Exhibit 7 shows the annual number of burden hours
by category and overall. The burden hour totals include both establishment burden and employee
burden. The category totals are based on the estimated number of respondents for each category,
the number of responses, and the average burden per response. The total number of burden hours
across all 3 years is 43,857. This 3-year total reflects a slight reduction in burden compared with
the previous 3-year period of 2006 to 2008, during which 48,737 burden hours were requested
(Employment and Training Administration, 2005).
O*NET Establishment Method data collection has been designed to minimize the burden
on the selected establishments:

54

•

Establishments are asked about no more than 10 occupations each, with questioning
terminated once 5, or sometimes fewer, occupations are identified at an
establishment.

•

Establishments are asked to complete rosters of employees only for the five or fewer
occupations identified.

•

Establishments are selected no more than once within a 12-month period.

•

No more than 20 employees are selected from an establishment across all of its
selected occupations.

•

If an occupation proves difficult to complete under the Establishment Method, the
dual-frame approach may be used to supplement it. For occupations that are difficult
to sample, the alternative OE Method may be used.

OMB Supporting Statement

Justification

A.13 Annual Reporting Burden Cost
Exhibit 7 displays the estimated annualized cost to respondents for burden hours by year.
The cost burden was estimated with use of average wage rates obtained from the June 2007
Employer Costs for Employee Compensation Summary issued by BLS on September 20, 2007.
The average wage per hour for private industry and state and local government was $19.38,
which was inflated to a December 2007 hourly wage rate of $19.73 based on the Employment
Cost Index. This is the wage rate used for estimating the employee cost burden. Given that the
POC will often be a human resources manager, the June 2007 wage rate of $46.17 for the
Management, Professional and Related category was inflated to a $47.00 hourly wage rate for
December 2007 for estimating the establishment cost burden.
The exhibit shows that the combined establishment and employee total cost burden is
$480,468 for 2009, $455,624 for 2010, and $419,174 for 2011. As with the burden hours, the
slight decline in total cost burden across years results from initiation of data collection for most
occupations during 2009, which causes many of these occupations to complete data collection
during the final 2 years.
There are no respondent costs for capital or start-up or for operations, maintenance, and
purchase of services. There are no costs to the employers, POCs, or sampled employees other
than the time it takes them to participate in the survey.

A.14 Estimates of Annualized Cost to Government
The estimated annual cost to the government for the O*NET Data Collection Program for
2009 to 2011 is approximately $4.6 million. This estimate includes all direct and indirect costs of
conducting the sampling, data collection, and analysis activities of the O*NET Data Collection
Program.

A.15 Reasons for Program Changes or Adjustments Reported in
Sections A.13 and A.14
Exhibit 8 compares the projected burden hours for calendar years 2009 to 2011 with the
average annual burden as estimated for FY2006 to FY2008 in the OMB Supporting Statement
dated September 2, 2005. The projected total annual burden hours for years 2009 to 2011 range
from 13,541 to 15,393. These annual projections are slightly less than the average annual burden
of 16,246 hours requested for the previous 3-year period (2006 to 2008). In addition, as indicated
in Exhibit 7, the total burden hours for the 2009 to 2011 period, 43,857, reflects a slight
reduction in burden compared with the 2006 to 2008 period, for which a total of 48,737 hours
were requested (Employment and Training Administration, 2005). Over the years of conducting
the O*NET Data Collection Program, experience gained in selecting efficient samples of

55

Justification

OMB Supporting Statement

establishments has led to reduced burden hours. Continuous improvement efforts include
refinements in occupational clustering, industry identification, and the design of data collection
waves, as well as the ability to capitalize on previous sampling experience and history for some
of the occupations. The Skills domain is now rated by analysts, leading to a reduction in the
number of survey types from 4 to 3, thus reducing the employee sample size by 25%.
Calculations also reflect a decreased time needed to complete surveys. However, despite the fact
that the Supporting Statement for the 2005 ICR correctly requested 48,737 burden hours, ROCIS
incorrectly reflected 24,621 instead, which were the burden hours for the single year of 2006 and
did not correspond to the number of respondents figure in ROCIS, which was the total across all
3 years: 2006 through 2008. Thus, the previous NOA continued the error by approving 24,621
hours for this collection. The current Supporting Statement correctly requests 43,857 hours, a
real reduction of 4,880 hours, rather than the apparent, but erroneous, added burden.
Exhibit 8 compares the estimated costs to respondents for 2009 to 2011 with the average
annual cost estimated for FY2006 to FY2008. The annual costs have increased slightly since
FY2006 to FY2008, primarily because of inflation.

A.16 Time Schedule, Publication, and Analysis Plans
The major components of the O*NET Data Collection Program include sampling, data
collection operations, and analysis. Exhibit 9 provides the expected schedule for annual data
analysis cycles and data publications for the next several years.
A.16.1 Data Analysis Tasks Conducted for Each Cycle
Described here is the approach used for data cleaning and editing, as well as the analyses
that are performed annually.
Data Cleaning

Paper questionnaires are manually and machine edited so that completely blank
questionnaires are dropped; responses to items that should have been skipped are blanked out;
multiple responses are blanked out; and codes indicating missing data, multiple responses, and
legitimate skips are inserted. Codes for legitimate skips and missing responses are also inserted
in the records for questionnaires obtained through the Web. In addition, an electronic check is
conducted to detect duplicate questionnaires from the same respondent.

56

OMB Supporting Statement
Exhibit 8.

Justification

Hour and Cost Burden for FY2006–FY2008 Compared with Estimated Hour
and Cost Burden for 2009–2011
Annual Average
FY2006–FY2008a
Sampling Burden
Units
Hours

2009
Sampling Burden
Units
Hours

2010
Sampling Burden
Units
Hours

2011
Sampling Burden
Units
Hours

Establishment Activity
Verification calls to initial
contact at establishment

18,667

622

16,083

536

14,667

489

13,833

461

Screening call to POC

15,493

775

13,349

667

12,173

609

11,482

574

Initial recruitment call to
POC

8,986

1,797

7,743

1,549

7,061

1,412

6,659

1,332

POC creates occupation
lists for sampling

5,032

1,677

4,336

1,445

3,954

1,318

3,729

1,243

Call to POC to sample
workers

5,032

839

4,336

723

3,954

659

3,729

622

POC distributes
Questionnaire Packets

4,730

1,182

4,076

1,019

3,717

929

3,505

876

Follow-up calls to POC

4,730

631

4,076

543

3,717

496

3,505

467

NA

7,523

NA

6,482

NA

5,912

NA

5,575

8,161

16,525

8,262

14,430

7,215

Total establishment a
Employee Activity
Establishment Method
employee respondents

14,591

7,296

16,321

Occupation Expert
Method respondents

713

1,427

500

750

500

750

500

750

Total, employee

NA

8,723

NA

8,911

NA

9,012

NA

7,965

Total, Establishments
and Employees
Total

16,246

15,393

14,924

13,541

2010
$277,817

2011
$262,025

Cost Burden
Annual Average
FY2006–FY2008a
$255,590

Respondent Type
Establishmentsb

2009
$304,654

Employeesc

$159,980

$175,814

$177,807

$157,149

Total

$415,570

$480,468

$455,624

$419,174

a

From the OMB Supporting Statement dated September 2, 2005.
Assumed hourly rates: $33.97 for 2006–2008 and $47.00 for 2009–2011.
c
Assumed hourly rates: $18.34 for 2006–2008 and $19.73 for 2009–2011.
b

Exhibit 9.

Data Analysis and Publication Schedule

Analysis
Cycle

Analysis
Cycle Start
Date

Analysis
Cycle End
Date

Estimated
Establishment
Method O*NETSOC Occupations

Estimated
Occupation Expert
Method O*NETSOC Occupations

Estimated
O*NET-SOC
Occupations
Published

Publication
Date

10

Jul-08

Jun-09

75

25

100

Jun-09

11

Jul-09

Jun-10

75

25

100

Jun-10

12

Jul-10

Jun-11

75

25

100

Jun-11

13

Jul-11

Jun-12

75

25

100

Jun-12

57

Justification

OMB Supporting Statement

Identification and Evaluation of Anomalous Cases

Analyses of the ratings are based on the assumption that raters were qualified, willing,
and able to engage in the rating tasks. This task is accomplished by requiring each case to first
pass through a series of machine edits using prescribed eligibility criteria, including having at
least one task rated important and having at least 50% of the domain questionnaire items
completed. Cases not meeting these criteria are excluded from the analysis file. Cases with
certain questionable characteristics are flagged in this editing process, and analysts review these
cases to determine their completion status. Flagged for review are all cases for which the
respondent (1) indicated in the “global match” item that the target O*NET-SOC occupation
description did not at all describe his or her own job, and (2) rated fewer than one third of the
tasks as important. Analysts review the self-reported job titles of these cases to determine if they
are at all likely to belong in the O*NET-SOC occupation. If a case does not belong, it is removed
from further analysis. If, in the judgment of the analysts, there is a reasonable chance that the
case belongs in the O*NET-SOC occupation, it is sent to the next stage of review.
Finally, cases that pass the machine edits and the analyst review are subjected to a
deviance analysis designed to identify cases that are outliers relative to other cases in their
occupation. The deviance analysis involves two procedures: (1) a statistical procedure to
quantitatively identify potential outliers and (2) an analyst review of these potential outliers to
make the final decision for each case. Cases that do not pass the analyst review are deemed
deviant within their occupation and are removed from the data set. On average, these activities
eliminate about 10% of all returned questionnaires. The cases passing all data cleaning criteria
are used to create the estimates for publication.
Computation of Sampling Statistics

Basic sampling weights are applied to the data to make inferences to the population of
incumbents for each occupation.19 These weights are computed as the inverses of the overall
selection frequencies and the selection probabilities for each selected establishment and each
individual participant. The analysis weights for the eligible sample units are adjusted to
compensate for unit nonresponse for both establishments and employees, multiple subwaves of
sampling, and sample adjustments. In addition, when the variation in the weights is large, the
weights are trimmed to reduce the variation. In order to maximize comparability of O*NET
estimates to estimates from other federal sources, the final sample weights are also ratio-adjusted
to occupation estimates obtained from the OES survey.

19

For details about the weighting and estimation procedures, see Section B.1.1.

58

OMB Supporting Statement

Justification

Sampling errors are computed. The analysis weights used in the sampling error
computations, as noted, have been adjusted for nonresponse and are consistent with the complex
sampling design.
Calculation of Descriptor Values and Reliability

For each occupation, the sample size, mean, standard deviation, and standard error of the
ratings for each descriptor are calculated, together with the 95% confidence interval around the
mean. Estimates with questionable precision are flagged and recommended for suppression if
any of the following conditions is true:20
•

The sample size (i.e., number of respondents who answered the question) is less than
10.

•

The variance is zero and the sample size is less than 15.

•

The relative standard error (RSE) is greater than 50%.21

In addition, estimates of sensitive data items with a cell count (i.e., the number of
respondents who selected a specific response option) of less than 10 are suppressed to ensure that
O*NET data pose no disclosure risk to any individual respondent.22 On average, approximately
4% of the estimates are flagged or suppressed.
Interrater Reliability and Agreement

Interrater reliability and agreement are assessed with three different analyses. The first
two measure reliability in terms of the covariation among ratings, while the third analysis reflects
rater agreement. The intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) for each item across all
occupations are computed. These results allow one to compare respondent rating variance within
an occupation with respondent rating variance across occupations. In addition to the ICCs, the
mean interrater correlations (Pearson’s r) are calculated for all pairs of raters within each
occupation. Finally, to assess the absolute difference among ratings of each item within each
occupation, an average deviation index is calculated for each item within each occupation. For
any given item and occupation, the average deviation index measures the average extent to
which each individual rating deviates from the item mean. Some differences in ratings within
occupations are expected because O*NET-SOC occupations comprise a range of different jobs in
most cases.

20

O*NET suppression criteria are based on substantive expert recommendations (Peterson, Mumford, Levin, Green,
& Waksberg, 1997) and on other large government surveys (see Klein, Proctor, Boudreault, & Tuczyn, 2002).
21
RSE = the standard error of the mean divided by the mean.
22
A sensitive data item is one that represents a value of a survey variable that an individual would not like to be
revealed and provides an unacceptable risk that an individual in the cell could be identified.

59

Justification

OMB Supporting Statement

Each of the reliability analyses conducted (rater, standard errors) are influenced by the
number of respondents. The O*NET data collection methods include a sufficient number of
respondents in each occupation to ensure reliability (Peterson, Mumford, Levin et al., 1997).
A.16.2 Creation of the Occupation Database
The O*NET database is scheduled to be updated annually. Each update will include data
for those occupations collected and analyzed during the previous 12-month period.
Consequently, a database update includes occupations from multiple data collection waves,
depending on the number of prior waves for which analysis was completed that year. For each
occupation collected, the newly calculated means data replace existing analyst-based or
incumbent-based data in the database. Provided to users are metadata regarding when the data
were collected and any other pertinent information that will assist the users in interpreting the
data.
The O*NET database is designated with a version number denoting each update (e.g.,
from O*NET 4.0 to O*NET 5.0). The database is developed and administered with the MySQL
database management system. Once the MySQL database is updated, it is used to generate the
database for public release as a series of flat text files. It is accessible to the public on the
O*NET Program Web site at http://www.onetcenter.org/.

A.17 Display of Expiration Date
The expiration date will be displayed on the cover of the survey questionnaires.

A.18 Exceptions to Certification Statement
There are no exceptions.

60

B. Collection of Information Employing
Statistical Methods
B.1

Sampling Universe, Sampling Methods, and Expected Response
Rates

A multiple-method data collection approach for creating and updating the O*NET
database has been developed to maximize the information for each occupation while minimizing
data collection costs. The primary source of information for the database is a survey of
establishments and sampled workers from within selected establishments, which is referred to as
the Establishment Method of data collection. With its two-stage sample design, employees are
sampled in their workplace, the establishments being selected in the primary stage and
employees being selected in the secondary stage.
Although the Establishment Method provides the best approach for most occupations, a
special frame (e.g., a professional association membership list) is sometimes used to supplement
the Establishment Method in a dual-frame approach when additional observations are required.
When this supplementation to the Establishment Method is used, a dual-frame adjustment is
made to the sampling weights to account for the coverage overlap between the two sources of
collected data.
A second method entails recruitment of appropriate occupation experts, who can supply
the information required for an occupation (Occupation Expert Method, or OE Method). An
occupation expert is someone who has worked in the occupation for at least one year and has 5
years of experience, as either an incumbent, trainer, or supervisor. Additionally, an occupation
expert must have had experience with the occupation within the most recent 6 months. The OE
Method is used for occupations as necessary to improve sampling efficiency and avoid excessive
use of burden, as when it is difficult to locate industries or establishments with occupation
incumbents, employment is low, or employment data are not available, as is the case for many
new and emerging occupations.
B.1.1 Establishment Method
Establishment Method Sampling Universe

The central goal of the O*NET Data Collection Program is to provide data for each of the
O*NET-SOC occupations prevalent to varying degrees in different industries in the United

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States. Estimates from this program are designed to assist users in distinguishing among
occupations and are not necessarily designed to capture all of the subtle differences between jobs
in different industries. Nonetheless, the O*NET sampling universe for each occupation is
generally a subset of all employees in the occupation who are working in the United States. This
subset, or target population for the occupation, is defined by two criteria: (1) its workers
represent a majority of job incumbents in the occupation, and (2) data among this set of
establishments can be gathered with reasonable efficiency.
Previous O*NET experience has shown that trying to build a sampling frame that covers
100% of an occupation is inefficient and poses undue burden on some establishments. For
example, the occupation-by-industry matrix data suggested that a very small number of
bricklayers could be found in establishments in the hospital industry; however, asking a point of
contact (POC) in a hospital about bricklayers led to some difficulties. In addition to the
questioning’s being unduly burdensome, often the Business Liaison (BL) lost credibility when a
POC was asked about occupations not likely associated with his or her establishment, as with
bricklayers in hospitals. Moreover, the establishment POC may give some false negative
responses because the POC simply does not know whether some rare occupations exist in his or
her establishment. This situation would be particularly likely for larger establishments. To
address these concerns, the target population is defined so that it includes establishments in
industries and size categories in which the occupation is most prevalent.
When less than complete population coverage is allowed, it is possible that some bias
may be introduced into the study estimates if the covered and noncovered population members
would give substantially different responses to the survey questions. To evaluate this potential
bias in the O*NET estimates, a sensitivity study was conducted. The study considered 18
randomly selected occupations for which at least 80% population coverage had been achieved.
The linkages of these 18 occupations to industries were then reconsidered, and reduced sets of
industries were determined that covered only 50% of workers in each occupation. Estimates for a
selected set of outcomes were then computed from the reduced data set, which simulated
estimates at the 50% level of population coverage. When the original data with at least 80%
coverage was compared with the reduced data with 50% coverage, no systematic differences in
the estimates were observed. The great majority of the differences between the two sets of
estimates were very small and symmetrically distributed around zero. The observed pattern could
be explained by random sampling error alone and provided no evidence of bias due to reduced
frame coverage. The study concluded that no systematic bias is introduced with the use of a
population coverage minimum of 50% for each occupation as compared with a minimum
coverage of 80%. On the basis of these results, O*NET Establishment Method data collection
now maintains a population coverage of at least 50% for each occupation.

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Statistical Methods

Sampling Waves

To help identify industries in which particular occupations are employed, the O*NET
sampling method uses employment statistics published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS) and supplemented by empirical information learned during O*NET data collection.
Groups of approximately 50 occupations each, called primary waves, are formed so that the
occupations in a primary wave are employed in a similar set of industries. For example,
carpenters and plumbers are both employed by establishments in construction-related industries.
Thus, when establishments are selected from the industries associated with a primary wave of
occupations, a selected establishment is much more likely to employ one or more of the
occupations in the wave than it would have been to employ one or more occupations not grouped
this way. This method minimizes the number of establishments that must be contacted for
selection of the required number of employees for an occupation. For example, when
construction trades, such as those of carpenters and plumbers, are grouped together in a primary
wave of occupations, it is much more likely that an establishment selected from constructionrelated industries will employ at least one of the 50 related occupations in the wave than would
be the case if sampling had been from a broader set of industries associated with a group of
unrelated occupations.
Each primary wave of occupations is scheduled to be fielded in three subwaves of
establishment samples. The subwaves are identified as X.1, X.2, and X.3, where X represents the
set of primary occupations and where the accompanying number represents the order in which
the subwaves of establishment samples occur. For example, Subwave 3.1 denotes the first
sample of establishments for the occupation set known as Wave 3, and 3.3 denotes the third
sample of establishments for the occupation set. Any occupation that requires additional
respondents is included in the next subwave. The first subwave of establishments uses the
Occupational Employment Statistics (OES) data to indicate those industries most likely to
employ the occupations. It is designed to include a wide range of industries and to cover at least
50% of the target population. As each subwave establishment sample is selected, the experience
gained from the previous subwaves is used to more effectively target the sample to industries in
which the occupations have been demonstrated to be found.
If, after being fielded in its X.3 subwave, an occupation lacks a sufficient number of
completed respondents, then it is fielded in a completion wave. Completion waves combine the
difficult-to-complete occupations from several waves and are designed to target industries with a
high probability of employing the occupations. In a completion wave, only industries that the
O*NET team’s experience suggests might contain the occupation of interest are sampled. The
goal of a completion wave is to ensure that the number of establishments selected for each
occupation is sufficient to complete all occupations in the wave. Statistically, a completion wave

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is no different from the X.1, X.2, and X.3 subwave sampling process, with the same sampling,
weighting, and estimation methods being used to conduct the completion wave. Essentially, a
completion wave adds a fourth subwave of sampling for some difficult-to-complete occupations.
Packaging together some of these occupations in a combined wave maintains operational
efficiency.
Sampling steps are carried out for the primary occupations associated with a wave. The
primary occupations are those occupations selected for a wave as a result of the clustering of
occupations likely to be employed in the same industries. Once the sets of industries to be
targeted in a wave are identified, additional secondary occupations likely to be found in these
industries are added to the wave and allocated to the selected establishments. To improve
efficiency, if a selected establishment employs fewer than the maximum number of allowed
primary occupations, secondary occupations are included for that establishment.
This method yields two major benefits. First, by prescribing sampling from industries that
have been determined by empirical data to employ the occupation of interest, it maximizes the
efficiency of the sample. Second, it minimizes the oversampling of any one occupation. Because
the establishment sample size for a particular set of occupations is spread over three subwaves, if
an occupation is found more easily than expected, the sample for future subwaves can be used to
find other occupations in the wave rather than on this particular occupation.
In order to minimize both the cost of conducting the O*NET Data Collection Program
and the burden placed on the establishments, the number of employees selected into the sample
and the number of returned questionnaires are monitored carefully on a daily basis. Once it
becomes clear that at least 15 of the goal of 20 completed respondents will be available for each
of the three domain questionnaires for an occupation, consideration is given to terminating
further sampling of employees for that occupation. This step is taken because of the difficulty of
estimating the rate at which employees will be encountered during employee sampling. In some
cases, employees from an occupation are much easier to locate than anticipated, and the desired
number of responding employees is quickly exceeded; continuing to sample employees for such
an occupation would use resources inefficiently and burden the establishments unnecessarily.
The method used to control employee sample selection is called Model-Aided Sampling
(MAS). With this method, target numbers of sampled employees are defined, before data
collection begins for each occupation, by Census region, business size, and industry division.
MAS ensures that the resulting sample of employees is distributed across the target cells
approximately in proportion to the population distribution across the target cells. MAS sample
size targets are based on information from the OES survey conducted by BLS and from
establishment information provided by Dun and Bradstreet (D&B). Once data collection begins,

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Statistical Methods

progress toward the targets is monitored closely for each occupation on a daily basis. Once a
cell’s MAS target is achieved, the selection of employees in that cell is stopped. This cessation
allows future data collection subwaves to focus on the cells that have not yet reached the MAS
targets.
The use of MAS to enhance the efficiency of the O*NET sample is considered one of the
most important sample design innovations in the history of the program. This approach has
dramatically reduced data collection costs, with minimal effects on the accuracy of the
estimators. Development of the MAS methodology began in early 2004 and continued through
the end of 2006. As part of this research effort, various sample cutoff or stopping rules were
investigated by means of Monte Carlo simulation. A cutoff rule determines the point at which
efforts to interview certain types of establishments and employees are discontinued because the
prespecified cell sample size criteria have been satisfied. These studies showed that, under a
fairly wide range of cutoff rules, MAS does not bias the O*NET estimates or their standard
errors. At the same time, MAS dramatically reduces the number of establishment contacts
required in order to satisfy the random sample allocation for an occupation. This finding has
resulted in substantial reductions in respondent burden, data collection costs, and time required
to complete an occupation (Berzofsky, Welch, Williams, & Biemer, 2006). For further details of
this MAS work, see Appendix G.
Sampling Steps for the Primary Occupations Associated with a Wave

As mentioned, the Establishment Method involves multiple sample selection steps.
Establishments are selected during the first steps of selection and employees are selected during
the later steps. This sample selection process is diagrammed in Exhibit 10 and is further detailed
in text.
Step 1: Create establishment sampling frame. Two major sources of information are
used to create the establishment sampling frame. First, a list covering nearly 12 million
establishments in the United States is constructed from the D&B list of U.S. establishment
locations. Use of the D&B frame is based on an evaluation that showed it to be the least costly
data source that had the essential establishment-level information, including industry type and
location-specific employment. The frame is updated quarterly to ensure that the most current and
accurate establishment information possible is used for selecting the sample for each subwave.
Additional information from the OES survey, conducted by BLS, is merged with the D&B list of
establishments. The OES provides current industry employment estimates by occupation, using
North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) industry codes, whereas the D&B list
uses Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) codes. To complete the merge, the OES data are
translated to SIC codes by means of a translation matrix available from BLS. SIC industry codes

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Exhibit 10.

Summary of Sample Selection Process

Step 1: Create Establishment Sampling Frame.

Step 2: Determine Industries to Target for Each
Occupation in Subwave.

Step 3: Select Initial Sample of Establishments from
Frame.

Step 4: Select Final Set of Establishments for Subwave.

Step 5: Assign Occupations to Selected Establishments.

Step 6: Specify Employee Sample Selection Algorithm
for Each Occupation/Establishment.

Step 7: Specify Occupation-Specific Algorithm for
Random Assignment of Questionnaire Types of Sampled
Employees.

Step 8: Randomly Assign Selected Establishments to
Business Liaisons for Data Collection.

are used for the rest of the sampling steps, when the D&B list is used. NAICS industry codes are
used again, however, during subsequent analyses of the data.
From the combined file a matrix is created for each occupation; the matrix lists the
industries in which the occupation is found and, for each industry, the number of employees and
associated establishments by Census region and by each of four size categories.23

23

The establishment size category has four levels based on the number of employees working at an establishment.
These levels are unknown number of employees (none), 1–9 employees, 24–249 employees, and 250 or more
employees.

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Statistical Methods

Step 2: Determine industries to target for each occupation in subwave. Using the matrix
developed in Step 1, the industry–region–employee-size categories for each occupation are
classified into one of four concentration groups: high, medium, low, or none. This classification
helps to target industries in which an occupation is likely to be found. For example, if it is
believed that establishments in a particular industry or industries have a good chance of
containing a particular occupation, then the industry is classified as high. Similarly, industries
with a low chance of having an occupation are classified as low. To increase efficiency in the
sampling process, the sample is designed to oversample the high industries and undersample the
low industries for each occupation. None denotes those industries that were not expected to
contain any employees in the occupation of interest or that had a negligible proportion of the
employees.
Step 3: Select initial sample of establishments from frame. First, for each industry, the
number of establishments to be selected is determined. However, because only limited access to
some D&B list data fields is possible before sample selection of establishments, a stratified
simple random sample of establishments is first selected from the list, with a sample size larger
than the number that will ultimately be contacted. For this large simple random sample of
establishments, the O*NET team has access to the full D&B establishment information that will
be used in Step 4 of selection. Within each stratum, the selection probability for the ith selected
establishment is
p1i = n1 / N 1 ,

(1)

where n1 and N 1 are the number of establishments selected and number of establishments in the
population, respectively. The associated sampling weight for this step is
w1i = 1 / p1i .

(2)

Step 4: Select final set of establishments for subwave. A subsample of establishments is
selected with probability proportionate to a composite size measure (Folsom, Potter, & Williams,
1987) from the simple random sample of establishments selected in Step 3. If a single occupation
were being studied, then common sampling practice would be to select a sample of
establishments with probabilities proportional to the number of employees working in the
occupation at each establishment. Because several occupations are to be sampled from the
selected establishments, a cross-occupation composite size measure is used to lessen the
variation in selection probabilities and in the final analysis weights. The composite size measure
accounts for the estimated number of employees in the occupations of interest within an industry

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group, as well as for the overall sampling rates. The composite size measure for ith establishment
selected in Step 3 is

S i = w1i ∑ j f j M ij

,

(3)

where the summation is over the occupations, (j), f j = m j / M j is the overall sampling fraction for
the jth occupation, mj is the desired national sample size of employees from the jth occupation,
th
M j = ∑ i w1i M ij is the estimated total number of employees in the j occupation on the frame, and

Mij is the estimated number of employees in the jth occupation from the ith establishment.
For each occupation, the sampling rate is generally greatest for those establishments
classified in the high industry group for the occupation and successively lower for each of the
remaining medium, low, and none industry groups. Once the composite size measure is
calculated, all nongovernmental industries are sorted in descending order by industry so that
similar industries are proximate to each other before they are split into four equal groups based
on the composite size measure. These four groups form the nongovernmental industry strata.
Governmental establishments are not classified into separate industries on the D&B frame.
Consequently, all governmental establishments constitute a fifth industry stratum in the design.
In addition, some occupations are highly concentrated in only one or two industries.
These industries are split from the previously defined industry strata groupings to form separate
“special” industry strata. These special strata often prove valuable for particular occupations
because otherwise a small number of establishments would be selected from these industries.
Forming the special strata for occupation-valuable industries with comparatively small size
measures ensures that a minimum number of establishments from the “special” industry strata
are selected into the final sample. Establishments are further stratified by number of employees
in the establishment and by Census region. Establishments with a large number of employees are
oversampled, while establishments with few employees are undersampled. The degree of overor undersampling varies for each subwave.
Chromy’s (1979) probability minimum replacement (PMR) selection procedure is then
used to select a probability-proportional-to-size sample of establishments within each stratum,
with probabilities of selection

p 2i = n 2 S i / S + ,
where n2 is the number of establishments selected from the stratum and S+ is the sum of the
composite size measures for establishments from the stratum. The sampling weight associated
with this step is

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(4)

OMB Supporting Statement

Statistical Methods

w2 i = 1 / p 2 i .

(5)

Step 5: Assign occupations to selected establishments. To limit the burden for a
particular establishment, each establishment selected in Step 4 is assigned a maximum of 10
occupations randomly selected with probability proportional to size. Here the size measure is the
product of the sampling rate for the occupation (fj) and the establishment’s estimated number of
employees within the occupation, Mij. Before selection of a sample of the occupations,
occupations certain to be selected because of their large sizes are included in the sample and
removed from the frame, and the number of times they would have been “hit” (which, by the
probability minimum replacement [PMR] method, can exceed 1) is recorded. Then the remaining
(noncertainty) occupations are sampled and placed in a random order. The certainty occupations
are listed first, followed by the randomly ordered noncertainty units. For each establishment,
both the set of up to 10 occupations and the number of times each occupation was selected
(which could be greater than 1 for certainty occupations) is entered into the Case Management
System (CMS).
As before, we used Chromy’s (1979) PMR selection method to select occupations with
probability proportional to size. To understand how his method is applied here, one may suppose
the ith establishment has Ji occupations associated with it. The size measure for the jth occupation
is defined as
Oij = f j M ij ,

so that
Oi + = ∑ j Oij = ∑ j f j M ij = Si / w1i .

(6)

A sample of 10 occupations for each establishment will be selected with the expected
number of times that the jth occupation is selected being 10Oij / Oi + , which may be greater than 1
for some occupations. For an occupation j where it is greater than 1, the occupation is selected
with certainty and assigned an O*NET point value equal to vij by randomly rounding 10Oij / Oi + to
one of its two adjacent integers. That is,
νij = Int(10Oij / Oi + ) with probability 1-Frac(10Oij / Oi + )

and
νij = Int(10Oij / Oi + ) + 1 with probability Frac(10Oij / Oi + ),

(7)

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where Int and Frac are the integer and fractional parts of a decimal number. This rounding
provides an integer number of selections associated with each selected establishment while
retaining the correct noninteger expected value for the number of selections. The certainty
occupations appear at the top of the list used by BLs to inquire about occupations at the
establishment. From among the remaining occupations, a probability-proportional-to-size sample
is selected. If Ci is the number of certainty-occupation sampling hits from the ith
establishment, Ci = ∑ j νij , summation over the certainty occupations, then the remaining
occupations are selected with probabilities ( 10 − Ci )Oij / ∑ Oij , summation over noncertainty
occupations. The selected occupations are assigned an O*NET point value vij = 1. As noted
previously, the selected noncertainty occupations are then placed in a random order and follow
the certainty occupations on the list of occupations used by the BLs.
When a POC is identified within each establishment, the RTI BL reviews the list of
occupations with the POC, asking the POC to estimate the number of employees at that
establishment in each occupation. Each time the BL receives a response that is greater than zero,
a counter within the CMS is increased by the associated O*NET point value, the randomly
rounded number of times the occupation was selected. If the counter reaches 5 before the BL has
completed the list of occupations, the BL stops. After the maximum 5 occupations are identified,
the POC is asked to roster all individuals in the selected occupations.
To determine the final occupation selection probabilities, one must adjust for the
occupations remaining on the establishment’s sampling list at the point where the BL stopped as
a result of having found the maximum number of occupations to be included in data collection. It
is assumed that the resulting sample of up to 5 occupations is a random sample of the originally
selected occupations for an establishment. This assumption is supported by the random ordering
of the noncertainty occupations. Let ai be the total number of sampling hits among all of the
occupations about which the BL inquired before stopping; then, ai = ∑ j νij , summation over the
occupations inquired about by the BL. The final selection probability for the jth occupation from
the ith establishment is
p3ij =

ai 10Oij a i Oij
.
×
=
10 Oi +
Oi +

(8)

w3ij = 1 / p3ij .

(9)

The associated sampling weight is

This method accomplishes two important goals:

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Statistical Methods

•

It results in an approximate random sample of occupations with known probabilities
of selection.

•

It limits POC and establishment burden. This goal is achieved because the number of
positive POC responses is limited to a maximum of 5. If the company is large and
happens to have employees in all 10 occupations, then stopping after 5 occupations
minimizes the perceived burden on the POC, as opposed to the alternative of asking
for employment estimates for all 10 occupations and then subselecting 5.

Step 6: Specify employee sample selection algorithm for each occupation/
establishment. In this step of selection, the algorithm is specified for randomly selecting
employees from an employee roster provided by the POC. The resulting number of employees
selected from each occupation is proportional to the number of times the occupation was selected
in Step 5, its O*NET point value. However, to further minimize burden on an establishment, the
total number of employees selected within any single establishment never exceeds 20, and the
total number of employees selected in each occupation (within each establishment) never
exceeds 8. If fewer than 20 employees are rostered and fewer than 8 are rostered for each
occupation, then all rostered employees are selected. Otherwise, a random sample of employees
is selected, subject to the constraints just described. If nij and Nij are the number of employees
selected and the number of employees listed, respectively, from the jth occupation at the ith
establishment, then the selection probability for an employee k from the jth occupation is

p 4ijk = nij / N ij

(10)

w4ijk = 1 / p 4ijk .

(11)

and the associated sampling weight is

Step 7: Specify occupation-specific algorithm for random assignment of questionnaire
types to sample employees. In this step, the algorithm is specified for assigning each selected
employee to a domain questionnaire type. The survey is designed to collect data for each
occupation from 20 respondents to each of three different domain questionnaires (Generalized
Work Activities, Work Context, and Knowledge). At this step of selection, all employees
selected in Step 6 are randomly assigned to one of the three questionnaire types. The
questionnaire assignments are made in proportion to the number of employee respondents
required for each questionnaire type in a subwave. In order to implement this algorithm, a queue
is established that lists the order in which questionnaire types are assigned to employees from a
specific occupation. The questionnaire types are listed in random order, with each type occurring
in the queue at a rate proportional to the number of completed questionnaires required from that
type. When an employee is selected, he or she is assigned the questionnaire type at the head of

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the queue. The next listed questionnaire type is then moved to the top of the queue for use with
the next selected employee.
Although employees are randomly assigned to a questionnaire, analysis weights are
computed for each occupation, not separately for each of the three O*NET questionnaires used
within each occupation. Many of the questions are the same across the three questionnaires; the
estimates for these questions are produced from all the respondents for the occupation. Selected
incumbents are assigned randomly, with equal probabilities, to each of the three questionnaires,
with approximately the same number of incumbents responding to each of the questionnaires.
Consequently, bias is not introduced for estimates of means and proportions specific to a single
questionnaire. Producing the analysis weights for the entire occupation effects greater stability
because the entire occupation offers a larger available sample size than each of the three
individual questionnaires offers.
Step 8: Randomly assign selected establishments to Business Liaisons for data
collection. The final step of sample selection randomly assigns selected establishments to a BL.
In order to make this process more efficient and ensure that the BL workloads are equal,
establishments are stratified by industry grouping, and assignments are made within strata. To do
so, the Operations Center manager assigns up to three BLs to each stratum and indicates the
number of establishments to be assigned to each BL. The specified number of establishments is
then assigned to each BL. The only exception to the randomization process occurs when multiple
establishments are sampled from the same company. In this situation, assignments are adjusted
so that the establishments are assigned to the same BL. Although establishments are randomly
assigned to BLs, this step does not enter into the overall selection probabilities or analysis
weights: it is an administrative step to reduce any potential bias associated with the BLs.

The various weighting components associated with many of the Establishment Method
sampling steps are combined to produce the final analysis weights, as will be described in the
subsection on weighting.
Supplemental Frames

If the sample yield for an occupation proves to be far less than expected from the
Establishment Method, the use of a special frame is considered for completing an occupation
when additional Establishment Method subwaves would likely be nonproductive or inefficient.
In this situation, if a suitable supplemental frame can be obtained, then the occupation is
removed from the Establishment Method wave and sampled separately. Supplemental frames
were used for 4% of the 780 O*NET-SOC occupations published to date. A supplemental frame
may be either a listing of establishments highly likely to employ a particular occupation, or a
listing of incumbents working in an occupation. For example, a trade association of business

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Statistical Methods

establishments highly likely to employ an occupation would be appropriate when the occupation
is highly concentrated in a particular type of establishment. In addition, some occupations’
workers tend to be members of associations or are licensed. In such situations, it is often possible
to obtain a frame listing either establishments or incumbents working in the occupation.
When a listing of establishments is obtained, a random sample of the establishments is
selected from the frame. The sample usually will be stratified by geographic location and any
other available establishment information that may be related to type of incumbents working in
the occupation. Simple random samples are usually selected, because often little information is
known about the number of incumbents the establishments employ. Consequently, if n and N are
the number of establishments selected and the number on the frame, respectively, within a
stratum, then the selection probability for the ith selected establishment is
p5i = n / N ,

(12)

w5i = 1 / p5i .

(13)

and the associated weight is

The selected establishments are then included in Step 6 of the sampling process, with the single
target occupation associated with each establishment.
On the other hand, when the supplemental frame lists incumbents working in an
occupation, then a simple random sample of incumbents is selected, usually stratified by
geographic location and, if available, subspecialty of the occupation. If n and N are the number
of incumbents selected and the number on the frame, respectively, within a stratum, then the
selection probability for the kth selected incumbent working in the jth occupation from the ith
establishment is24
p 6ijk = n / N ,

(14)

w6ijk = 1 / p 6i .

(15)

and the associated weight is

The selected incumbents are then directly contacted, and their participation is solicited. Those
who agree to participate are entered into sampling process Step 7, by which a question type is
assigned to each incumbent.
24

Subscripts corresponding to occupation and establishment are added here for ease of notation when the
supplemental samples are combined with the Establishment Method samples in the subsection on weighting.

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The supplemental frame weights are adjusted for nonresponse and combined with the
Establishment Method weights, as will be described in the subsection on weighting.
Employee Sample Size

A key issue in sample design is the level of precision required in the resulting data and
the cost of producing a particular level of precision, in terms of both dollars and respondent
burden. The O*NET sample design has been developed to provide results with a level of
precision that should be adequate to meet the needs of general-purpose users (those seeking
information at the occupational level). Consistent with the procedures used by the O*NET
Program since 2001, an occupation is considered complete and ready for inclusion in the final
O*NET database when a minimum of 15 valid completed questionnaires (after data cleaning) are
obtained for each of the three questionnaire domains.
The current sample size goal is based on the final technical report of Peterson et al.
(1997), which presents means and standard deviations for both 5- and 7-point Likert scales, with
consecutive interger scores, for the descriptors within Skills, Knowledge, Generalized Work
Activities, Abilities, and Work Styles. Statistics were computed separately with the reported data
for each of six occupations. The data in these tables indicate that when 15 responses per
descriptor are obtained, the mean values for virtually all of the 5-point and the 7-point
descriptors have 95% confidence intervals that are no wider than plus or minus one to 1.5 scale
points for all occupations.
Exhibit 11 displays the half-width of 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for means of 5- and
7-point scales, by sample size, from Analysis Cycles 4 through 8 of the O*NET Data Collection
Program. The items are summarized in Exhibit 2 as those with a data source of job incumbents
and are presented as part of the questionnaires in Appendix A. The scales were given consecutive
integer scores, and estimates were produced as described in the “Estimation” subsection of B.1.1.
Across all sample sizes, nearly all of the scale means have 95% CIs that are no wider than plus or
minus 1.5 scale points. For those scale means based on sample sizes of between 15 and 25
respondents, more than 95% of the 5-point scales and more than 75% of the 7-point scales have
95% CIs no wider than plus or minus 1.5 scale points. In addition, 90% of the 7-point scales
have 95% CIs no wider than plus or minus 1.6 scale points.
Furthermore, Mumford, Peterson, and Childs (1997, pp. 3-8) have cited Fleishman and
Mumford (1991) as support that variation of one to 1.5 scale points on a 7-point scale “is typical
of that found for well-developed level scales.” Setting a minimum employee sample size of 15
(with many occupations achieving a larger sample size) therefore will generally satisfy this
requirement. Additionally, Peterson et al. (1997) state that 15 to 30 incumbents typically provide

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OMB Supporting Statement
Exhibit 11.

Statistical Methods
Half-Width of 95% Confidence Intervals

5-Point Scales

7-Point Scales

Percentile

Sample Sizes
of 15 to 25

All Sample Sizes

Sample Sizes
of 15 to 25

All Sample Sizes

95th

+/− 1.2

+/− 1.1

+/− 1.8

+/− 1.7

90th

+/− 1.0

+/− 0.9

+/− 1.6

+/− 1.4

75th

+/− 0.8

+/− 0.7

+/− 1.3

+/− 1.1

50th

+/− 0.6

+/− 0.5

+/− 0.9

+/− 0.8

Note: Data are taken from 220 5-point scales and 109 7-point scales measured on each of 456 occupations.

sufficient interrater reliability for describing occupations, given the types of measures the
O*NET Program uses to describe occupations.
Weighting

After the raw data are edited and cleaned, weights are constructed for each establishment
and employee respondent to reduce estimate bias and variance due to factors such as
nonresponse, undercoverage, and the complex sample design. The weighting process for the
basic Establishment Method is described first. Subsequently, weighting for the supplementalframe samples is described, together with weighting methods for combining the Establishment
Method and supplemental-frame samples.
Estimates generated from O*NET survey data are computed with analysis weights to
reflect the combined effects of the following:
•

probabilities of establishment selection;

•

probabilities of occupation selection;

•

early termination of employee sampling activities for particular occupations, because
of higher-than-expected yields;

•

probabilities of employee selection;

•

multiple-sample adjustments;

•

nonresponse at both the establishment and the employee levels; and

•

under- and overcoverage of the population, caused by frame omissions and
undetected duplications.

The final employee-level analysis weights are computed as the product of a number of
weight factors. These factors reflect the probabilities of selection from the multistage sample
design, as already discussed, as well as appropriate adjustments for nonresponse, early sampling
termination, population proportions, and multiple samples.

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The starting point for each of these stages is the inverse of the probabilities of selection at
each stage (establishment, occupation, and employee)—called the base sampling weight for the
stage. The base sampling weight accounts for the unequal probabilities with which
establishments, occupations, and employees are selected at each stage and are presented in
•

Equation (2), w1i associated with the initial simple random sample of establishments
from the D&B frame;

•

Equation (5), w2i associated with the probability-proportional-to-size sample of
establishments from the initial simple random sample;

•

Equation (8), w3ij associated with the selection of an occupation at an establishment;
and

•

Equation (11), w4ijk associated with the selection of an employee from an occupation
at an establishment.25

The product of these four weights would be the appropriate analysis weight if effects due to such
issues as nonresponse and under- or over-coverage were negligible; however, weight adjustments
likely will improve the accuracy of the estimates. The weight adjustments are implemented in
three weighting steps corresponding to the three main steps of Establishment Method sampling:
•

Weighting Step 1, by which establishment weights are computed to account for the
probabilities of selecting establishments and to account for adjustments for
establishment nonresponse;

•

Weighting Step 2, by which occupation weights are computed to account for the
probabilities of selecting specific occupations from each establishment and to account
for adjustments for the early termination of sampling for some occupations under
MAS; and

•

Weighting Step 3, by which employee analysis weights are computed to account for
the probabilities of selecting employees within each occupation and to account for
adjustments for employee nonresponse and for overlapping frames across the
subwaves.

The weights are calculated separately for each subwave in Weighting Steps 1 and 2, and then
they are combined into an overall analysis weight in Weighting Step 3. The specific methods
used in each of these weighting steps are described here after the unit-nonresponse adjustment
method is described.
25

As noted in conjunction with Establishment Method sampling Step 7, analysis weights are computed for each
occupation, not separately for each of the three O*NET questionnaires used within each occupation. Many of the
questions are the same across the three questionnaires; the estimates for these questions are produced with use of
all the respondents for the occupation. Selected employees are assigned randomly, with equal probabilities, to
each of the three questionnaires, with approximately the same number of employees responding to each of the
questionnaires. Consequently, bias is not introduced for estimates of means and proportions specific to a single
questionnaire. Producing the analysis weights for the entire occupation effects greater stability because the entire
occupation offers a larger available sample size than each of the three individual questionnaires offers.

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OMB Supporting Statement

Statistical Methods

Nonresponse adjustment. The sampling weights are adjusted for nonresponse with use of
a generalized exponential model (GEM). RTI has used the GEM method to create sampling
weight adjustments for the 1999 through 2007 annual National Household Survey on Drug Use
and Health conducted for the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and
for several other surveys conducted by RTI, including the 2000 National Postsecondary Student
Aid Study and the 2000 Beginning Postsecondary Student Longitudinal Study, both sponsored
by the U.S. Department of Education.

The GEM calibration is a generalization of the well-known weighting class approach, the
iterative proportional fitting algorithm that is generally used for poststratification adjustments,
Deville and Särndal’s (1992) logit method, and Folsom and Witt’s (1994) constrained logistic
and exponential modeling approach. The GEM calibration process causes the weighted
distribution of the respondents to match specified distributions simultaneously for all of the
variables included in the model. One advantage of the GEM method over simpler weighting
class or poststratification adjustments is that the adjustment model can use a larger and more
diverse set of control variables because main-effects and lower-order interactions can be used in
the model, rather than complete cross-classifications. For Folsom and Singh’s (2000) description
of the GEM method, see Appendix I.
To summarize, a set of predictor, or adjustment, variables are specified, together with the
control total for each variable to which the weighted sample is expected to match. The GEM
method is designed to determine a weight adjustment factor for each respondent, such that

∑

k

xk wk ak = Tx ,

where the summation is over the respondents, xk is an adjustment variable in the model, wk is the
base sampling (or unadjusted) weight, ak is the adjustment factor, and Tx is the control total for
the variable x. Tx may be either a nonresponse adjustment control total estimated by the sum of
base sampling weights for both respondents and nonrespondents, or an external control total to
adjust for under- or overcoverage of the frame. The adjustment factors, ak, are determined to
match the control totals for all of the variables in the model simultaneously. Furthermore, upper
and lower bounds on the weight adjustment factors can be set to reduce the influence of
observations that otherwise might have received a very large weight adjustment. The upper and
lower bounds also reduce the effect of unequal weighting that may result from uncontrolled
weight adjustments.
Weighting Step 1: Establishment weights. The base sampling weight, wi(1) , for the

selected establishments in a subwave is the product of the weights in Equations (2) and (5):

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wi(1) = w1i × w2i .

(16)

The establishment sampling weights are adjusted for nonresponse, by subwave, with use of the
GEM method with a model that contains different combinations of the following variables:
•

industry division

•

U.S. Census division

•

establishment size

•

headquarters/branch type

•

number of occupations asked about in an establishment

•

urban versus rural location

•

time zone

•

zip code information from the 2000 U.S. Census (quartile distribution of owneroccupied housing)

Variable selection proceeds by first fitting a model containing only main effects and tightening
the upper and lower bounds so that all upper bounds are less than 8 and a minimal increase in the
unequal weighting effect (UWE) is achieved. Two-way interactions among the variables are then
added to the model. Cells that do not contain any respondents or that are collinear with other
cells are removed from the model. If a convergent model cannot be obtained, some covariate
levels are collapsed together; for example, U.S. Census divisions are collapsed to regions. Other
variables or interactions may be removed from the model until a convergent model is obtained
that maintains as many of the covariates and their two-way interactions as possible.
Variable selection and testing are conducted for each sampling subwave to determine the
final model for a subwave. Finally, extremely large weights are trimmed back to smaller values.
Even though the GEM method provides control over the size of the adjustment factors, it is still
possible for large weights to result, though at a rate lower than that from an uncontrolled
adjustment process. The total amount trimmed within a subwave is proportionally reallocated
across the responding establishments to maintain the same estimated total number of
establishments for each subwave. The adjusted establishment weights are denoted as wi(1a ) .
Weighting Step 2: Occupation weights. The base occupation weight, wij( 2 ) , for ith

occupation selected from the jth establishment is
wij( 2 ) = w3ij × wi(1a )

78

,

(17)

OMB Supporting Statement

Statistical Methods

which is the product of w3ij, defined by Equation (8), times the adjusted establishment weight for
the subwave defined in Weighting Step 2. For most occupations, no further nonresponse
adjustments are necessary, because once an establishment agrees to participate, all of its selected
occupations are available. However, MAS is used to terminate incumbent sampling early for
some occupations with higher-than-expected numbers of sampled incumbents. For such
occupations, the rate at which an occupation is encountered is estimated from the establishments
contacted before the early termination; the estimated rate is then used to predict the number of
additional establishments that would have reported employing the occupation. The occupation
weights for the establishments that complete employee sampling are then adjusted to account for
the predicted additional establishments. To understand the adjustment for early termination of
sampling for some occupations, consider the classification of establishments shown in
Exhibit 12.
Exhibit 12.

Classification of Establishments by Occupation Model-Aided Sampling
Status

Group

Description

A

Inquired about occupation, and it is present at establishment

B

Inquired about occupation, but it is not present at establishment

C

Did not inquire about occupation because of early termination of incumbent sampling
for occupation

Groups A and B are those establishments where the presence or absence of an occupation
is known and can be used to estimate the rate at which the jth occupation is present, or the
presence rate, by
pj =

∑

∑

A

wij( 2 )

w ( 2 ) + ∑B wij( 2 )
A ij

,

(18)

where the summations are over the establishments in Group A or Group B. Next, the additional
number of establishments where the jth occupation would have been found if sampling had not
been terminated early is estimated by applying the presence rate to number of establishments in
Group C. Thus, the estimated total number of establishments where the jth occupation would
have been found is given by
T j = ∑ A wij( 2 ) + p j ∑C wij( 2) ,

(19)

where the summations are over the establishments in Group A or Group C. It is tacitly assumed
in Equation (18) that the establishments where occupations are inquired about approximate a
random sample from all three groups listed in Exhibit 12. This assumption is consistent with the

79

Statistical Methods

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random assignment of establishments to the BLs and the nondeterministic order in which
establishments are contacted. The base occupation weights for the establishments in Group A are
then adjusted to sum to Tj for the jth occupation.
To make this adjustment more sensitive, the process for estimating the number of
establishments where the jth occupation would have been found is completed separately by
Census regions, by the business size groups, and by industry divisions—as with the process for
defining the MAS target cells. This process yields three sets of estimated marginal totals
corresponding with the three variables. The GEM method is then used with a model containing
the marginal, or main, effects of Census regions, business size groups, and industry divisions to
adjust the base occupation weights from Equation (17) for those establishments in Group A. The
adjusted weight for the jth occupation from the ith establishment is denoted by wij(2 a ) .
Weighting Step 3: Employee analysis weights. The base weights for the responding
employees in a subwave are
( 3)
wijk
= w4ijk × wij( 2 a ) ,

(20)

which is the product of w4ijk, defined by Equation (11), and the adjusted occupation weight for
the subwave, defined in Weighting Step 2. At this point the responding employees from all
subwaves are combined, and a multiple-frame adjustment is made. The overlap of target
populations among the subwaves for each occupation is determined, and a multiple-frame
adjustment is made, as described by Korn and Graubard (1999, sec. 8.2), using the sample sizes
in the overlaps. For example, if two subwaves overlap for an occupation within a set of
industries, then the adjustment factors for the subwaves are
al = t l (t1 + t 2 ) ,

(21)

where tl is the sample size from the lth subwave in the overlap between the subwaves. Then, the
multiple-frame adjusted employee weights are
*

(3 )
( 3)
wijk
= al × wijk
,

(22)

where the adjustment factor, al, is selected to correspond with the industry overlap portion
associated with the ijkth employee. This adjustment process is completed separately for each
combination of overlapping subwaves.
Next, the employee weights in Equation (22) are further adjusted for nonresponse, using
the GEM method with a model that contains different combinations of the following variables:

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OMB Supporting Statement

Statistical Methods

•

industry division

•

U.S. Census division

•

establishment size

•

headquarters/branch type

•

number of occupations asked about in an establishment

•

urban versus rural location

•

time zone

•

zip code information from the 2000 U.S. Census (quartile distribution of owneroccupied housing)

As before, variable selection and testing are conducted to determine the final model. Indicator
variables for the occupations are included in the final model so that the adjustment maintains the
correct sum of weights for each occupation; at the same time, to improve the adjustment, the data
across occupations are used for the other variables.
At this point, an examination for extreme weights is conducted for each occupation by
domain questionnaire. To prevent a few respondents from being too influential, weight trimming
is performed according to two rules. Weights are deemed too extreme for a particular occupation
by domain group if
•

any weight exceeds the mean weight of the group plus 1.5 standard deviations of the
weights, or

•

a single weight accounts for more than 50% of the weight sum of the group.

Extreme weights are trimmed to smaller values; the total amount trimmed for an occupation by
domain group is proportionally allocated to all respondents in the group.
The employee weights are then ratio-adjusted to match the distribution of workers in an
occupation by industry sector as estimated from BLS’s OES data. Occasionally, this final ratio
adjustment will induce a large unequal weighting effect (UWE).26 A final check is conducted to
determine whether an occupation has a UWE greater than 10.0. If the UWE is greater than 10.0
for an occupation, then this final ratio adjustment is repeated; however, to bring the UWE below
10.0, the distribution of workers for this occupation is allowed to deviate from the OES
( 3a )
estimated distribution. The resulting weights are denoted by wijk
. If a supplemental frame was

not used to complete the sample of an occupation, then these weights are the final employee
26

The UWE measures the increase in the variance of an estimate—an increase due to unequal weighting above the
variance that a sample of the same size would yield if the weights were equal. The UWE is estimated by

n∑i wi2

(∑ w )

2

i

i

.

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Statistical Methods

OMB Supporting Statement

analysis weights used to produce the estimates for the O*NET Data Collection Program. If a
supplemental frame was used for an occupation, then an additional, supplemental-frame
weighting step completes the calculation of the analysis weights.
Supplemental-frame weighting. As noted in the discussion of sampling methods,
locating a sufficient number of respondents under the Establishment Method occasionally
requires sampling from a supplemental frame. This situation usually occurs for rare occupations
or occupations difficult to locate through Establishment Method sampling. When it does occur,
additional weighting steps are necessary to account for the dual frames used to select the
samples. Two situations must be considered: one in which the supplemental frame consists of
establishments likely to employ the occupation of interest, and another in which the
supplemental frame consists of employees likely to be working in the occupation. Described here
are the steps taken in each situation.

First, consider the situation in which a supplemental frame of establishments is used, as
illustrated in Exhibit 13. In this figure the dashed rectangle represents the full frame; the oval, the
supplemental frame. The full frame, denoted by F, is the D&B establishment listing used for the
usual Establishment Method sampling, which includes N establishments. The supplemental
frame, denoted by FS, includes NS establishments.
Exhibit 13.

Overlap of Full and Supplemental Frames
Full Frame (F) with N Establishments

Supplemental Frame (FS)
with NS Establishments

Frame (Fo) with No Establishments

(excluding the supplemental establishments)

For a supplemental-frame sample of establishments, Equation (16) of Weighting Step 1 is
modified to start with a base sampling weight, wi(1s ) , given by

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OMB Supporting Statement

Statistical Methods

wi(1s ) = w5i ,

(23)

where w5i is defined in Equation (13). The supplemental-frame establishment sampling weights
are then adjusted for nonresponse with use of the GEM method and under a model containing the
stratification variables used to select the supplemental-frame sample. To determine the final
model with the GEM software, variable selection and testing are conducted for each
supplemental-frame sample. The nonresponse-adjusted supplemental-frame establishment
weights are denoted as wi(1sa ) .
A supplemental frame is developed to target a small number of related occupations—and
often only one occupation—because of the difficulty of locating them. For a supplemental-frame
sample, occupations are not randomly assigned to establishments from a large set of occupations
as is done for the subwaves in Establishment Method sampling. Consequently, the base sampling
weight for the jth occupation selected from the ith establishment for Weighting Step 2, wij( 2 ) in
Equation (17), is modified to be
wij( 2 s ) = wi(1sa ) ,

(24)

which excludes the weighting factor related to the random assignment of an occupation to an
establishment. The subscript j is added, however, to recognize that a specific occupation is
associated with each selected establishment in the supplemental-frame sample. The
supplemental-frame sample then proceeds through the rest of Weighting Step 2. The adjusted
weight for the jth occupation from the ith establishment is denoted by wij( 2 sa ) .
As part of Weighting Step 3, the base sampling weights for the responding employees in
a supplemental-frame sample are defined as in Equation (20),
(3s )
wijk
= w4ijk × wij( 2 sa ) ,

(25)

which is the product of w4ijk , defined in Equation (11), and the adjusted occupation weight for
the supplemental-frame sample, defined in Weighting Step 2 as wij( 2 sa ) .
Next the occupation’s employee weights from the supplemental-frame sample must be
combined with the same occupation’s weights from the Establishment Method sample. The
employee weights from each of the Establishment Method subwaves are first combined as shown
in Equation (22) into a single set of weights for all employees from an occupation selected by the
Establishment Method. An extra step is added to Weighting Step 3 to combine the Establishment

83

Statistical Methods

OMB Supporting Statement

Method employee weights from Equation (22) with the supplemental-frame employee weights
from Equation (25).
At this point it must be assumed that the establishments listed on the supplemental frame,
FS in Exhibit 13, are equivalent to a random sample of the establishments on the full frame, F.
This assumption is made because of the inability to determine which establishment on the full
D&B-derived frame, F, links to which establishment on the supplemental frame. Under this
assumption, a multiple-frame situation again emerges because data come from two samples: the
Establishment Method sample and the supplemental-frame sample. A multiple-frame adjustment
is made, as described by Korn and Graubard (1999, sec. 8.2), using the sample sizes from the
two samples. Similarly, as was described for Equation (21), let tF be the sample size for an
occupation from the Establishment Method full sample, and let tS be the sample size for the
occupation from the supplemental sample. The multiple-frame adjustment factors are then given
by
a F = t F (t F + t S )

and
a S = t S (t F + t S ) ,

(26)

which correspond with the full frame and the supplemental frames, respectively. Finally, the
weight for the kth employee from the jth occupation in the ith establishment is given by
( 3**)
( 3*)
wijk
= a F wijk

for the full sample and
( 3**)
( 3s )
wijk
= aS wijk

(27)

( 3*)
(3s )
for the supplemental sample, where wijk
and wijk
are defined in Equations (22) and (25),
( 3**)
respectively, and aF and aS correspond with the jth occupation. The weights wijk
are then used in

the adjustment steps after Equation (22) to complete Weighting Step 3, which yields the final
( 3a )
.
analysis weights wijk

Next, consider the situation in which a supplemental frame consists not of establishments
but of employees working in the occupation. In this situation, no actions equivalent to those in
Weighting Steps 1 and 2 exist for the supplemental-frame sample. For Weighting Step 3, the
supplemental-frame sample weighting starts with the base sampling weight
84

OMB Supporting Statement

Statistical Methods
(3s )
wijk
= w6ijk ,

(28)

where w6ijk was defined in Equation (15). These weights are then combined with the
Establishment Method employee weights for an occupation, as was described in connection with
( 3**)
Equations (26) and (27), to yield wijk
. Again, the key assumption is made that the employees

on the supplemental frame are equivalent to a random sample of all employees working in the
occupation who might have been selected through the Establishment Method. This assumption is
necessary because it is not possible to link the employees on the supplemental frame back to the
( 3**)
are then
D&B frame of establishments used for the Establishment Method. The weights wijk

used in the adjustment steps after Equation (22) to complete Weighting Step 3, which yields the
( 3a )
final analysis weights wijk
.

Estimation

The estimates produced for each occupation consist of scale means and percentage
estimates. The number and type of scales are those listed in Exhibit 2, with a data source of job
incumbents. Each of these scales is a 3-, 5-, or 7-point Likert scale. The final estimates are the
means of the scales for each occupation. No subgroups or domain estimates are produced or
released. The standard deviation will be available for each item mean as a measure of response
variation among an occupation’s respondents. Finally, there are several percentage estimates
produced for items concerning work context, education and training, background items, and
occupation tasks. Again, the final estimates are the percentages for each occupation, and no
subgroup or domain estimates are produced or released.
For each item, if respondents do not provide an answer to a particular question, they are
excluded from both the numerator and the denominator of the estimated mean. Because item
nonresponse tends to be very low for this study (see Appendix H), no item imputation is
conducted, and no value for missing items is assumed for estimation.
Variances are estimated with the first-order Taylor series approximation of deviations of
estimates from their expected values. These design-based variance estimates are computed with
SUDAAN software (RTI International, 2004). These estimates properly account for the
combined effects of clustering, stratification, and unequal weighting—all of which are present in
the O*NET data. The variance estimation clusters are the establishments; the stratification is by
industry grouping and establishment size as used in selection of the establishment samples.
These estimated variances are used to estimate both the standard errors associated with the mean
or percentage and the confidence intervals. Standard error estimates and 95% confidence
intervals are included with all estimates of means and proportions.

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Statistical Methods

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The estimate of a mean or a proportion is given by the formula
yˆ =

where w

( 3a )
hik

∑w

( 3a )
hik

y hik

hik

∑w
th

( 3a )
hik

,

(29)

hik

is the final analysis weight for the k respondent from the ith establishment in the hth

stratum, and y hik is the response variable. For a scale mean, the response variable, y hik , is the
scale value reported by the respondent; for a proportion, the response is one for a positive
response and zero for a negative response. The Taylor series linearized values for the estimated
mean or proportion are given by
⎛
⎞
⎜ y hik − yˆ ⎟
( 3a )
.
(30)
z hik = whik ⎜
(3a ) ⎟
⎜ ∑ whik ⎟
⎝ hik
⎠
The variance of yˆ is estimated by
var( yˆ ) = ∑
h

nh
( z hi − z h ) 2 ,
∑
nh − 1 i

(31)

where nh is the number of variance estimation clusters from the hth stratum, z hi = ∑ z hik and
k

z h = ∑ z hi nh .
i

Expected Response Rates

Data collection had been completed for 76 subwaves as of September 30, 2007. These
subwaves consisted of 153,981 sampled establishments and 200,942 selected employees. The
overall response rate was 75% for establishments and 64% for employees. Although these
response rates compare favorably with those of similar studies (see Section A.1.5), methods to
further enhance response rates are continually being evaluated and implemented (see
Section B.3).
B.1.2 Occupation Expert Method

The OE Method is used for occupations as necessary to improve sampling efficiency and
avoid excessive burden, as when it is difficult to locate industries or establishments with
occupation incumbents, employment is low, or employment data are not available, as is the case
for many new and emerging occupations. To determine which sampling method should be used
for an occupation, a comparison is made of the advantages and disadvantages of the
Establishment and OE Methods. For each occupation, information on the predicted establishment
eligibility rate and the predicted establishment and employee response rates is used to quantify
the efficiency of sampling the occupation by means of the Establishment Method. The OE

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OMB Supporting Statement

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Method is used for an occupation when the Establishment Method of data collection is not
feasible and an appropriate source of occupation experts is available, as when a membership list
of a professional or trade association exists and provides good coverage of the occupation. A
random sample is selected from provided lists to prevent investigator bias in the final selection of
occupation experts. Sample sizes are designed to ensure that at least 20 completed questionnaires
are available for analysis after data cleaning. A goal of 20 questionnaires was set as a reasonable
number to enable adequate coverage of experts, occupation subspecialties, and regional
distribution.
Through September 30, 2007, the OE Method was used to collect data for 103
occupations. Of these, 82 were completed and 21 were still in process as of that date. A total of
3,845 occupation experts were sampled, of which 2,903 were found to be eligible. Of these,
2,375 participated, for an overall response rate of 82%.
For the OE method, unweighted estimates of the same means and percentages are
reported as for the Establishment Method, together with the estimated standard deviation of the
mean estimates.

B.2

Procedures for the Collection of Information

Data collection operations are conducted at the contractor’s Operations Center in Raleigh,
North Carolina, and its Survey Support Department in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.
For the Establishment Method, the Operations Center’s BLs contact sample business
establishments, secure the participation of a POC, and work with the POC to carry out data
collection in the target occupations. The data are provided by randomly selected employees
within the occupations of interest. All within-establishment data collection is coordinated by the
POC; the BLs do not contact employees directly. After the POC agrees to participate,
informational materials and questionnaires are mailed to the POC, who distributes the
questionnaires to the sampled employees. Completed questionnaires are returned directly to the
survey contractor for processing. The BLs contact occupation experts (the OE Method) directly,
as well as job incumbents when sampling from a professional membership list in a dual frame
approach; no POC is involved.
Survey Support Department staff mail materials to POCs, job incumbents, and
occupation experts, and receive and process completed questionnaires that are returned by
respondents. Both the telephone operations of the BLs and the mailing and questionnaire-receipt
operations of the support staff are supported by the CMS. Data-entry software supports the
keying and verification of incoming survey data.

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Statistical Methods

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B.2.1 Establishment Method

As described in Section B.1.1, the Establishment method uses a two-stage design
involving a statistical sample of establishments expected to employ workers in the target
occupations, followed by a sample of the workers in the target occupations within the sampled
establishments. The sampled workers are asked to complete the survey questionnaires.
The Establishment Method works well for most occupations. Occasionally, however, the
standard protocol is supplemented with a special frame, such as a professional association
membership list, when additional observations are required to complete data collection for an
occupation. The primary difference with this approach is that the supplemental respondents are
sampled directly from the special frame and contacted directly by the BLs, without involvement
of a sampled establishment or a POC.
O*NET Operations Center

Data collection activities are housed in the O*NET Operations Center, located in Raleigh,
North Carolina, and covering 3,581 square feet. The Operations Center staff includes BLs, Team
Leaders, a Monitoring Coordinator, and the Operations Center Manager, who reports to the Data
Collection Task Leader. Usual operating hours for the Operations Center are Monday through
Friday, 8:45 a.m. to 5:15 p.m., Eastern Time. Operating hours are extended during periods of
unusually high workloads or when necessary to contact a high concentration of Pacific time zone
businesses.
The BLs form the nucleus of the Operations Center staff. The number of BLs fluctuates
somewhat, ranging from 9 to 13, depending on workload. New BLs are recruited and hired at
various intervals in order to compensate for attrition and increases in workload. BL job
candidates are carefully screened and evaluated by Operations Center management, who use a
job description and a set of criteria that include a minimum of 2 years of work experience in a
call center or related work experience in a human resources department.
Case Management System

The O*NET CMS is a Web-based control system that supports and monitors the data
collection activities of the BLs, the mailing of informational materials and questionnaires, and
the receipt of completed paper and Web questionnaires.
Questionnaires and Information Materials

The Establishment data collection protocol calls for each sampled worker to receive one
of three randomly assigned domain questionnaires—Knowledge (which includes Education and
Training as well as Work Styles), Generalized Work Activities, and Work Context. Each domain
questionnaire also includes a Background section that asks a standard set of 11 demographic

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OMB Supporting Statement

Statistical Methods

questions about the respondent. In addition, each worker receives a Task Questionnaire specific
to his or her occupation.
Task Questionnaires are developed initially through the extraction of task information
from multiple sources located on the Internet. This questionnaire includes a definition of the
occupation, a list of tasks, and space for the respondent to write in additional tasks. The
respondent is instructed to indicate whether or not each task is relevant to his or her occupation
and to rate each relevant task’s frequency and importance. In subsequent updating efforts, task
inventories are revised to reflect the new and most current information from respondents,
including write-in tasks.
For all occupations, sampled workers also receive an occupation-specific Association
Membership Questionnaire. The questionnaire provides a list of associations related to the
worker’s occupation and asks the respondent to indicate whether he or she belongs to any of
them. The respondent is also asked to write in any other associations to which he or she belongs.
This information is collected in case it becomes necessary to complete the occupation with use of
the dual-frame approach.
Each sampled employee receives an integrated questionnaire consisting of the randomly
assigned domain questionnaire and the Task and Association Membership Questionnaires
applicable to the employee’s occupation. Questionnaires are custom-printed on demand for each
sampled worker. In addition, workers are encouraged to complete their questionnaire online at
the project’s Web site instead of completing and returning the paper questionnaire.
Spanish versions of the questionnaires are available for occupations with high
proportions of Hispanic workers. The Spanish questionnaires are sent to workers who are
identified as Spanish-speaking by their POC. In addition, an employee who has been sent an
English questionnaire can request a Spanish version by calling the survey contractor with a tollfree number.
Examples of the English questionnaires are included in Appendix A. The Spanish
versions are available on request.
In addition to the questionnaires, the Establishment Method data collection protocol
includes a variety of letters, brochures, and other informational materials mailed to POCs and
sampled workers. Spanish versions of the materials addressed to workers are available for
occupations with high proportions of Hispanic workers. Appendix F contains examples of the
English versions of these materials. The Spanish versions are available on request.

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Data Collection Procedures: Establishment Method

Described here are the steps of the Establishment Method standard data collection
protocol. A summary of this protocol is shown in Exhibit 14.
Exhibit 14.

Establishment Method Data Collection Flowchart

Step
Step 1:
1:
Make Verification Call
to Receptionist

Step
Step 2:
2:
Make Screening Call to the Point of
Contact (POC)

Step 3:

Step
Step 8:
8:
Make 7-Day Follow-up Call
to POC

Step
Step 9:
9:
Send Thank You/
Reminder Postcards

Send Advance Package
Step
Step 10:
10:

Step
Step 4:
4:

Make 21-Day Follow-up Call
to POC

Make Recruiting Call to POC
Step
Step 11:
11:

Step
Step 5:
5:

Make 31-Day Follow-up Call
to POC

Make Sampling Call to POC
Step
Step 12:
12:

Step
Step 6:
6:
Send Questionnaire
Package

Step
Step 7:
7:
Send Toolkit

90

Send Replacement
Questionnaires

Step
Step 13:
13:
Make 45-Day Follow-up Call
to POC

OMB Supporting Statement

Statistical Methods

Step 1: Verification call to the receptionist. The BLs call each sampled business to
determine whether the business is eligible (i.e., whether it is still in operation at the sampled
address). The other component of the verification call is to identify the anticipated POC, who
must be knowledgeable about the types of jobs present in the establishment and to whom the
screening call is placed.
Step 2: Screening call to the point of contact. The BLs next call (or are transferred to)
the anticipated POC to ascertain whether the business has at least one employee in at least one of
the occupations targeted for that establishment. If so, the following POC information is obtained:

•

name and title of the POC,

•

U.S. Postal Service delivery address,

•

telephone number,

•

e-mail address (if available), and

•

fax number.

None of the BLs’ conversations with the POC is scripted in advance. Instead, “talking
points” are provided to guide the BLs’ interactions with POCs. BLs are trained to listen and
interact effectively and in a comfortable style, rather than to read from a prepared script;
therefore, reading off a computer screen is discouraged. The BLs enter all information gathered
during each conversation with a POC into the CMS.
Step 3: Send information package. The information package is sent to the POC after the
completion of the screening call and contains more detailed information about the O*NET
Program. The following information is included in the information package:

•

DOL lead letter;

•

O*NET brochure;

•

“Who, What, and How” brochure;

•

Selected Occupations List, providing title and descriptions of target occupations;

•

list of endorsing professional associations;

•

brochure describing the business-, POC-, and employee-level incentives; and

•

POC incentive (i.e., the O*NET desk clock).

Step 4: Recruiting call to the point of contact. The next call to the POC is made
approximately 7 days after the information package is shipped, in order to give the POC
adequate time to receive, read, and process the information. During the recruiting call, the BL

•

verifies that the information package was received;

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•

confirms that the POC is qualified to serve in the POC role;

•

reviews with the POC the titles and descriptions from the Selected Occupations List
for the target occupations, to determine whether the establishment has any employees
in those occupations;

•

(if one or more target occupations are present) explains the O*NET Program in
greater detail, answers questions, and attempts to secure the POC’s commitment to
participate;

•

for participating establishments explains the need for the POC to prepare a numbered
list of employees’ names for each selected occupation, for use in selecting a sample
of employees; and

•

sets an appointment for the sampling call, allowing sufficient time for the POC to
compile the occupation rosters (in smaller businesses, the sampling call is sometimes
combined with the recruiting call).

Step 5: Sampling call to the point of contact. During this call, the BL obtains from the
POC the number of names on each roster and enters the counts into the CMS, which selects the
sample according to preprogrammed random sampling algorithms. The BL then informs the
POC which employees are selected for each occupation. The POC is asked to note for later
reference the line numbers of the selected employees on his or her list (or lists) when the
questionnaires are distributed. For designated O*NET-SOC occupations with a high percentage
of Hispanic employees, the BL also asks the POC if any of the selected employees should
receive a Spanish version of the questionnaire instead of the English version. The language
preference of each employee is then indicated in the CMS.
Step 6: Send questionnaire package. After completion of the sampling call, the
employee packets are shipped to the POC for subsequent distribution to the sampled employees.
As part of the same mailing, the POC receives a thank you letter and a framed Certificate of
Appreciation from DOL, personalized with the name of the POC and signed by a high-ranking
DOL official. Each questionnaire packet contains a letter from the contractor’s project director,
the assigned questionnaire (including the domain questionnaire and the Task and Association
Questionnaires integrated into a single booklet), a return envelope, an information sheet for
completing the questionnaire, and a $10 cash incentive. A Spanish questionnaire is sent to any
Hispanic employees who the POC indicated during the sampling call should receive this version.
In addition, all employees in these O*NET-SOC occupations are informed through a bilingual
notice included in the mailing that they have a choice between English and Spanish versions, and
they are provided with a toll-free number to call if they would like to receive the alternate
version.
Step 7: Send toolkit. Approximately 3 days after mailing the Questionnaire Package, the
contractor also mails the POC the O*NET Toolkit for Business—a packet of information about

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the O*NET Program, which managers can use for human resource planning and preparation of
job descriptions.
Step 8: 7-day follow-up call to the point of contact. Approximately 7 days after the
shipment of the original questionnaire package to the POC, the BL calls to verify receipt of the
mailing and to review the process for distributing the questionnaires to the selected employees.
The BL also informs the POC of a forthcoming shipment of thank you/reminder postcards and
asks him or her to distribute them to all sampled employees.
Step 9: Send thank you/reminder postcards. After the 7-day follow-up call, the BL
places an order for thank you/reminder postcards to be sent to the POC for distribution to all
sampled employees.
Step 10: 21-day follow-up call to the point of contact. Approximately 21 days after the
shipment of the original questionnaire package, the BL calls to thank the POC for his or her
ongoing participation and to provide an update on any employee questionnaires received to date.
Step 11: 31-day follow-up call to the point of contact. Approximately 31 days after the
shipment of the original questionnaire package to the POC, the BL calls to again thank the POC
for his or her ongoing participation and to provide an update on any employee questionnaires
received to date. At this time, the BL informs the POC of a forthcoming shipment of replacement
questionnaires, which are to be distributed to any employees who have not yet returned the
original questionnaire.
Step 12: Send replacement questionnaires. After the 31-day follow-up call, the BL
places an order for the shipment of replacement questionnaires. These packages are ordered for
any employees who have not yet responded. The replacement questionnaire package is like the
original one, except for a slightly different cover letter and the absence of the $10 cash incentive.
Using roster line information or employee initials provided by the BL during the 31-day followup call, the POC then distributes the appropriate replacement questionnaire package to each
nonresponding employee.
Step 13: 45-day follow-up call to the point of contact. Approximately 45 days after the
shipment of the original questionnaire package to the POC, the BL places one final follow-up
call to the POC to thank the POC for his or her assistance and to provide one final status report
regarding employee questionnaires. If all questionnaires have been received at this point, the BL
thanks the POC for his or her organization’s participation. If questionnaires are still outstanding,

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the BL confirms receipt and distribution of the replacement questionnaire packets. This step is
usually the final one in the data collection protocol.27
Mailout Operations, Questionnaire Receipt, and Processing

Orders for mailings of questionnaires and informational materials to support data
collection are placed by the BLs and processed by data preparation staff. The CMS supports and
monitors the entire process, including placing the order, printing on-demand questionnaires and
other order-specific materials, shipping the order, and interacting with the U.S. Postal Service to
track delivery of the order. Staff members follow written procedures in fulfilling orders,
including prescribed quality control checks. They are also responsible for maintaining an
adequate inventory of mailing materials and for inventory control.
Completed questionnaires returned by mail are delivered to the contractor, where they are
opened and batched and the barcodes are scanned to update the CMS for receipt. The batches are
then delivered to data-entry staff, where the survey data are keyed and 100% key verified. The
questionnaire batches are then stored in a secure storage area. Data from the paper questionnaires
are merged with the Web questionnaire data and readied for data cleaning routines.
Establishment Method Data Collection Results

Establishment data collection, which began in June 2001, is still under way. As of
September 30, 2007, the contractor had completed data collection for 76 waves. The data
collection results for these waves are summarized in Exhibit 15.
Exhibit 15.

Establishment Method Data Collection Results

Sampled establishments

153,981

Eligible establishments

127,083

Participating establishments

95,058

Establishment response rate

75%

Sampled employees

200,942

Participating employees

128,401

Employee response rate

64%

B.2.2 Occupation Expert Method

The Occupation Expert (OE) Method is an alternate method of collecting information on
occupational characteristics and worker attributes that is used to improve sampling efficiency
27

If no employee questionnaires have been received at the time of the last scheduled follow-up call, the case is
referred to a Team Leader, who reviews the history notes for the case to try to determine if the POC actually
distributed the questionnaires; if necessary and appropriate, the Team Leader will make an additional follow-up
call to the POC.

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Statistical Methods

and avoid excessive use of burden for problematic occupations. This situation occurs when
occupations have low employment scattered among many industries or when employment data
do not yet exist (e.g., for new and emerging occupations).With this method, persons considered
experts in the target occupation, rather than job incumbents, are surveyed. Occupation experts
are sampled from lists provided by source organizations (usually, professional associations) and
are contacted directly by the BLs, without involvement of a sampled establishment or a POC.
Unlike the standard Establishment Method, under which workers complete only one
questionnaire, the OE Method requires that occupation experts complete all three domain
questionnaires, as well as a Background Questionnaire and a Task Questionnaire. Because of the
increased burden, occupation experts receive a $40 cash incentive instead of the $10 incentive
offered to Establishment Method respondents.
The same facility used for Establishment Method data collection—the Operations Center
in Raleigh, North Carolina—is also used for the OE Method work and uses a CMS, a Web-based
control system that supports and monitors the data collection activities of the BLs, the mailing of
informational materials and questionnaires, and the receipt of completed paper questionnaires.
Questionnaires and Information Materials

With the exception of a few additional items in the Background Questionnaire, the OE
Method questionnaires are the same as those used for Establishment Method data collection.
Occupation experts are asked to complete all three domain questionnaires (as well as a
Background Questionnaire and Task Questionnaire), whereas Establishment Method respondents
complete only one domain questionnaire (as well as Background, Task, and Association
Questionnaires bound together with the domain questionnaire). Paper questionnaires are bundled
prior to shipping, with the order of the domain questionnaires randomized at the respondent
level. As with the Establishment Method, occupation experts are given the option of completing
their questionnaires online at the project Web site.
OE Method information materials resemble the Establishment Method materials but are
modified to reflect how the OE Method differs from the Establishment Method (direct contact
with the respondent, identification through a named source organization, reference to only one
occupation, multiple questionnaires, and a higher incentive).
Examples of OE Method questionnaires are presented in Appendix A; information
materials are presented in Appendix F.
Data Collection Procedures

The steps in the OE Method data collection protocol closely follow those for
establishments. The primary differences are the absence of the verification and sampling calls.

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Verification calls are inapplicable because a specific individual is contacted instead of an
establishment. Sampling calls are inapplicable because the individual is not sampled from a
larger group of employees. All other steps follow the Establishment Method protocol. The OE
Method data collection protocol is shown in Exhibit 16.
Exhibit 16.

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Occupation Expert Method Data Collection Flowchart

OMB Supporting Statement

Statistical Methods

Mailout Operations, Questionnaire Receipt, and Processing

OE Method mailing operations and questionnaire receipt and processing follow the same
procedures as those described for the Establishment Method in Section B.2.1.
Occupation Expert Method Data Collection Results

Data collection was undertaken for a total of 103 occupations through September 30,
2007. Of these, 82 were completed, and 21 were still in process as of that date. The data
collection results for the completed waves are summarized in Exhibit 17.
Exhibit 17.

Occupation Expert Method Data Collection Results

Sampled occupation experts

3,845

Eligible occupation experts

2,903

Participating occupation experts

2,375

Occupation expert response rate

82%

B.3

Methods to Maximize Response Rates

The O*NET Data Collection Program is committed to achieving the highest possible
response rates through continuous improvement. Accordingly, the data collection procedures are
continually evaluated in light of the experience gained in the data collection process. The
previous OMB Supporting Statement dated September 2, 2005, listed a number of enhancements
that had been made since the submission of the OMB Supporting Statement dated July 11, 2002.
Continuing this approach, this section summarizes the principal enhancements to maximize
response rates introduced since the 2005 Supporting Statement:28

28

•

Supervisory review by the Operations Center Team Leaders was expanded to include
all cases in which the POC had agreed to participate and workers were sampled but
no questionnaires were completed by the time of the last scheduled follow-up call.
The goal was to provide supervisor review and intercession, as appropriate, for de
facto refusals, as well as for explicit refusals.

•

The CMS and protocol were modified to enable BLs to make greater use of e-mail
and fax communications with POCs, to supplement and facilitate the standard
communication protocol.

•

The training program for new BLs was enhanced to include an expanded module for
answering POC questions and overcoming objections.

•

Several small modifications were made to the OE Method data collection protocol to
help encourage increased use of the Web questionnaire option by occupation experts.
These adjustments included the addition of BL “talking points” to the CMS to remind

For the full description of the data collection procedures, see Section B.2.

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occupation experts of the Web option, an e-mail reminder to the occupation expert,
revisions to informational materials, and a reminder on the project Web site.
•

The project Web site (http://onet.rti.org) was expanded to include additional
frequently asked questions and to provide a separate set for each type of survey
participant (POCs, job incumbents, and occupation experts).

•

A number of enhancements were made to the monitoring system used to monitor the
BLs’ telephone interactions with survey participants. These improvements enabled
Team Leaders to provide better feedback and coaching to the BLs, resulting in
enhanced overall performance.

•

Skills-enhancement training programs were developed and implemented to help the
BLs identify the best-qualified POC at a sampled establishment and address other
problematic situations, such as instance when they are referred to a company’s
corporate headquarters or to an outside vendor that manages human resource matters
for the sampled company.

•

The CMS was modified to allow the BLs to distinguish between an initiated and a
completed Web questionnaire. (Previously, initiated questionnaires appeared in the
CMS as though they were completed.) This enhancement allows the BLs to give the
POC more complete information about the status of data collection at the
establishment, leading to better-informed follow-up activities.

•

The Establishment Method protocol was modified to allow some flexibility regarding
the requirement that POCs have a copy of the Selected Occupations List in front of
them at the time of the recruiting call. (The Selected Occupations List is sent to the
POC as part of the information package and provides a brief description of the
occupations of interest for the establishment.) Although their having the Selected
Occupations List in front of them is still the default requirement, experience indicated
that it is likely impractical for some occupations, especially those for which the POC
is often contacted away from an office setting (e.g., Rock Splitters, Quarry or Farm
Labor Contractors). In these situations, the requirement that the POC have the
Selected Occupations List physically in hand may be waived if the BL is confident
that the POC has a clear understanding of the occupations of interest.

These and other enhancements have had a positive effect on the O*NET Program’s
ability to secure the participation of both establishments and employees. For example, the
establishment response rate for data collection waves completed through September 30, 2007,
was 75%, compared with 64% for the initial data collection wave completed during 2001–2002.
Improvement in the employee response rate was less dramatic, increasing from 63% in the initial
2001–2002 wave to 64% for waves completed through September 30, 2007. However, the
employee response rate has increased to 75% for waves completed during January–May 2008,
reflecting several protocol enhancements implemented during 2007. The O*NET Program will
continue to explore ways to enhance response rates still further through its continuous
improvement program.

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B.4

Statistical Methods

Tests of Procedures

Continuous improvement of survey quality and efficiency has been a constant focus of
the O*NET Data Collection Program. The survey design specified in this document has evolved
over years of testing and evaluating alternative procedures. The O*NET Program team believes
it reflects the best combination of design parameters and features for maximizing data quality
while reducing data collection costs. Summarized here are some of the tests of procedures that
have been conducted for the O*NET Data Collection Program.
B.4.1 1999 Pretest Experiments

The initial design of the O*NET Program was based on rigorous testing and evaluation of
alternative design protocols. Tests of seven different cash incentive plans were carried out
between June 1999 and January 2000 on a sample of about 2,500 eligible businesses and 3,800
employees. In addition, the use of stamped return envelopes and various options for contents of
the Toolkit for Business incentive were tested. These tests found that the best design appeared to
be the combination of the $10 prepaid incentive to employees, various material incentives to the
POC, and the use of first-class stamped return envelopes. These experiments also determined
that a videotape describing the O*NET database should not be included in the Toolkit for
Business. A report documenting the pretest activity and results was included in the 2002 O*NET
OMB submission and can be found at http://www.onetcenter.org/ombclearance.html.
B.4.2 Wave 1.1 Experiment

A split-sample, randomized assignment experiment was conducted in Wave 1.1 to
compare the benefits of using business-reply envelopes with the benefits of using envelopes with
first-class stamps. Preliminary results from the 1999 O*NET pretest provided mixed results
regarding the benefits of using real stamps on the return envelopes. Effects on response rates
were insignificant; however, there was some anecdotal evidence from the BLs that the first-class
stamps yielded shorter response times than the business-reply envelopes. The Wave 1.1
experiment was undertaken to explore this issue further. The results of the experiment supported
the pretest finding that the use of first-class stamps had no effect on either response rates or
response time. As a result, the use of stamps was discontinued in favor of the less expensive
business-reply envelopes.
B.4.3 Point-of-Contact Incentive Experiment

The POC incentive experiment considered the effects on establishment and employee
response rates of offering the POC a $20 incentive in addition to the other incentives that the
POC receives for O*NET participation (i.e., the desk clock and framed Certificate of
Appreciation). About 80% of the approximately 10,500 establishments and 30,000 employees

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involved in the experiment were assigned to the treatment group, and the remaining 20% were
assigned to the control group. With this large sample size, statistical power of the experiment
was very high.
The results provided no evidence that the incentive had any effect on establishment
cooperation rates: the POC appeared equally as likely to initially agree to participate with the
$20 incentive as without it. Nor was there evidence of any benefit for employee response rates.
Given these results and the considerable cost of providing monetary incentives to the POC, in
December 2004 it was decided that the $20 POC incentive should be discontinued for all newly
recruited POCs. Detailed results can be found in Biemer, Ellis, Robbins and Pitts (2006).
B.4.4 Experiments in Weight Trimming

A substantial component of the sampling error for O*NET estimates is due to the survey
weights. Known as the unequal weighting effect (UWE), it can be quite large because of the
disproportionate sampling methods that must be employed to achieve data collection efficiency.
The UWE can be reduced through weight trimming but only at the risk of increasing selection
bias. Alternative methods for weight trimming were investigated from 2005 to 2007. This
investigation involved assessing the effect of successively aggressive weight-trimming plans for
a wide range of estimates and population domains. The weight-trimming analysis was
comprehensive, including:
•

Comparison of UWEs

•

Graphical and tabular displays of current weight estimates versus aggressivelytrimmed weight estimates

•

Evaluation of weights on suppression of estimates

•

Evaluation of statistical differences between current weight estimates and
aggressively trimmed weight estimates

•

Evaluation of substantive differences between current weight estimates and
aggressively trimmed weight estimates.

The method and results of the evaluation are described in an internal report (Penne &
Williams, 2007, July 30). The evaluation resulted in the implementation of a more aggressive
weight-trimming plan that provides an optimal balance of sampling variance and bias.
B.4.5 Experiments in Model-Aided Sampling

The use of MAS to enhance the efficiency of the O*NET sample is considered one of the
most important sample design innovations in the history of the program. This approach
dramatically reduced data collection costs with minimal effects on the accuracy of the estimators.
Work on the development of the MAS methodology began in early 2004 and continued through

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the end of 2007. As part of this research effort, various sample cutoff or stopping rules were
investigated by means of Monte Carlo simulation. A cutoff rule determines the point at which
efforts to interview certain types of establishments and employees are discontinued because the
prespecified quota cell criteria have been satisfied. These studies showed that, under a fairly
wide range of cutoff rules, MAS does not bias the O*NET estimates or their standard errors.
Furthermore, MAS substantially reduced the number of establishment contacts required in order
to satisfy the random sample allocation for an occupation. This innovation resulted in substantial
reductions in respondent burden, data collection costs, and time required to complete an
occupation (Berzofsky et al., 2006). Details of MAS work are given in Appendix G.
B.4.6 Alternative Measures of Uncertainty

The standard error of an estimate is a measure of statistical precision that is inversely
proportional to the sample size. However, for many O*NET data users, the interrater agreement
for an average scale rating is very important for their applications. Therefore, beginning in 2005,
alternative measures of uncertainty of scale estimates were investigated to supplement the
current use of standard errors. Three alternatives—the standard deviation, kappa, and weighted
kappa—were analyzed and contrasted, using actual O*NET data as well as simulation.29 This
work led to the decision to make available the standard deviation as a second measure of
uncertainty.
B.4.7 Suppression of Estimates with Poor Precision

Before the O*NET data are published, a set of suppression rules is applied to identify
estimates that may have extremely poor precision due to very large variances or inadequate
sample sizes. Estimates that fail these rules are flagged to caution data users that the estimates
are unreliable and should be interpreted as such. Ideally, estimates that are sufficiently reliable
are not flagged (i.e., suppressed). An optimal set of suppression rules balances the need to
provide as much data as possible to the data users with the need to duly warn users about
29

To define kappa and the weight kappa, consider the cross-classification of ratings from two raters, A and B. For a
standard 5-point Likert scale, the expected proportion of entries in cell

(k , k ′) of the AB table is nk nk ′ / n 2 for

k , k ′ = 1, . . . 5, where nk is the number of raters in the sample that select category k. The kappa statistic is defined
as

κ=

Pe − P0
,
1 − P0

where Pe is the agreement rate (sum of the diagonal elements of the AB table) and P0 is the expected agreement
rate, assuming completely random ratings (i.e., all categories are equally likely). The weighted kappa is similar,
except the agreement rates, Pe and P0 , include some fraction, fd, of disagreements, where d is the distance of a
disagreement from the diagonal (see Johnson, Jones, Butler, & Main, 1981). In the O*NET application, the fd
weights proposed by Cicchetti and Allison (1971) were used, which have also been implemented in SAS Proc
Freq.

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estimates that are extremely unreliable. In 2004 and 2005 alternative methods for suppression
were investigated. The study also evaluated the current methodology for estimating the standard
errors of the estimates—the generalized variance function (GVF) method. Using Monte Carlo
simulation techniques, as well as actual O*NET data, the study found that the GVF method
produced standard error estimates that were severely positively biased. As a result, many
estimates that were sufficiently reliable were erroneously suppressed because their standard
errors were overstated. Use of the GVF method was discontinued in favor of a direct method of
variance estimation. Consequently, estimates published before this change were republished
under the direct method of variance estimation. No other changes in the method of estimate
suppression were required.
B.4.8 Dual-Frame Sampling for Hard-to-Find Occupations

Some occupations are rare and dispersed across many SICs, making them difficult to
find. Identifying an employee in one of these occupations can require calling scores of
establishments over many weeks of data collection. To address this inefficiency, a dual-frame
approach for sampling employees in hard-to-find occupations was tested. As the term implies,
the dual-frame sampling approach involves two sampling frames: (1) the usual SIC frame, which
has very good coverage of all occupations, regardless of their size, and (2) a smaller, more
targeted frame (such as a professional association list), which may have much lower coverage of
all employees in the occupation but contains a very high concentration of them, making them
more efficient to sample and contact than a multitude of establishments in many industries.
Using these two frames in combination provides the benefits of good population coverage with
reduced data collection costs and reduced establishment burden. The testing and evaluation of
the dual-frame sampling option was introduced in 2004 for selecting college teachers. This test
showed the dual-frame approach to be an effective method of efficiently completing difficult-tofind occupations. Details regarding weighting and estimation for the approach were further
developed and refined and, eventually, it was expanded for use in other hard-to-find occupations
when suitable second frames of employees in the occupations are available.
B.4.9 Alternative Levels of Population Coverage

In constructing a sampling frame for an occupation, the sampling statistician has a
choice: include all possible establishments where the occupation could be found, or only those
where the probability of finding the target occupation is high. The former strategy will generate a
sampling frame having 100% coverage of the population but with many nonpopulation units.
The latter approach will reduce the number of nonpopulation units (and the sampling and data
collection costs) but at a lower rate of population coverage and, thus, with greater potential
coverage bias. The optimal level of frame coverage is one that maximizes data collection
efficiency while maintaining an acceptable level of coverage bias. In 2004 experiments were
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conducted to determine the optimum coverage level. Frames were constructed having a range of
coverage levels (from 50% to 100%), and sampling from each of these frames was simulated
with existing data. Both the estimates and their standard errors and the associated costs of
completing the occupations were compared across the frames for many occupations. These
studies clearly indicated that frame coverage could be safely reduced to as low as 50% with
essentially no risk of coverage bias and that data collection costs could be substantially reduced.
These results led to the adoption of a minimum coverage rate of 50% for all occupation sampling
frames.
B.4.10 Analysis of Unit and Item Nonresponse

Nonresponse in the O*NET Data Collection Program can occur from the establishment
POC at the screening/verification, recruiting, or sampling stages of selection. Within-unit
nonresponse occurs at the employee level when a selected employee fails to complete and return
a questionnaire. In addition, employees who return their questionnaires may inadvertently or
intentionally skip one or more question items on the questionnaire. This type of missing data is
known as item nonresponse. The effects of all three types of nonresponse on the estimates have
been continually investigated since 2003 and reported to OMB; the nonresponse analysis for
Analysis Cycles 4–8 appears as Appendix H.30 Such analyses have shown that nonresponse
errors, whether unit, within unit, or item, are not an important source of error in the O*NET
Program, because the lost data appear to be missing at random.
B.4.11 Additional Tests of Procedures

This list of the O*NET tests of procedures is far from complete; many other, smaller tests
and evaluations have been conducted for the O*NET Program in the name of continuous quality
improvement. Still, the list indicates the breadth and depth of the investigations and highlights
some of the major results and design innovations. Work continues on quality improvement to
this day because optimum quality for an ongoing survey of a dynamic, ever-changing population
is a quest, not a destination.

B.5

Statistical Consultants

The DOL/ETA official responsible for the O*NET Data Collection Program is Pam
Frugoli (202-693-3643). Through a DOL grant, the National Center for O*NET Development in
Raleigh, North Carolina, is responsible for managing O*NET-related projects and contracts and
for providing technical support and customer service to users of the O*NET data and related
products. Under contract to the Center, RTI International is responsible for providing sampling,
30

The OMB Supporting Statement dated September 2, 2005 (Appendix G), included nonresponse analyses for
Analysis Cycles 1–3.

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OMB Supporting Statement

data collection, data processing, and data analysis services. Additional analyses are provided by
HumRRO, Inc., in Alexandria, Virginia, and North Carolina State University in Raleigh, North
Carolina. The statistical consultants listed in Exhibit 18 reviewed this OMB Supporting
Statement.
Exhibit 18.
Name

Statistical Consultants
Organization

Telephone Number

University of Minnesota

612-625-9351

Purdue University

765-494-5909

U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

202-691-7380

Nonfederal Statisticians and Researchers
John Campbell
Michael Campion
Federal Government
Daniell Toth

Data Collection/Analysis Contractor (RTI International)
Paul Biemer

RTI International

919-541-6026

Rick Williams

RTI International

919-541-6075

Michael Penne

RTI International

919-541-5988

Marcus Berzofsky

RTI International

919-316-3752

The primary authors of Section B.1 of the Supporting Statement are Drs. Rick Williams
and Paul Biemer. Dr. Williams is a senior research statistician and Dr. Biemer is a Distinguished
Statistical Fellow at RTI International.
Draft versions of the Supporting Statement were reviewed by BLS, in accordance with
DOL protocol and using DOL’s presubmission checklist for OMB packages. ETA received one
set of six questions about the draft version dated March 17, 2008, and a second set of six
questions on the revised draft dated May 30, 2008. ETA’s responses to these questions appear in
Appendix J and indicate revisions made to the text of the Supporting Statement as a result of
BLS’s review. ETA was notified July 30, 2008, of BLS’s approval of the OMB package.

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