NigeriaPolls

Research

Methodology

How we sample, field and weight every NigeriaPolls poll. We publish this so you can audit every result we report.

In one sentence

We use a stratified random panel of phone-verified Nigerian adults, balanced by age, gender, state and urban/rural status; we field by web and SMS; we weight back to the latest published NPC demographics; and we report a 95 % confidence interval on every reported headline.

1. Sampling frame

Our master panel comprises Nigerian adults (18+) who have explicitly opted in via web sign-up, SMS short-code (VOTE to 2348) or partner-channel referral. Each panellist provides phone, state, age band, and gender at registration; ethnicity, religion, education and income are optional. We exclude duplicate phone numbers, deactivated SIMs and panellists who have not engaged in 180 days. The panel is rebalanced quarterly against the latest National Population Commission and INEC voter-registration figures.

2. Mode of administration

Polls are fielded across two modes: a responsive web survey distributed via the homepage, partner blogs and email; and a SMS survey using Termii to deliver questions and collect 1–3 character responses (e.g. VOTE NF1 A). Mode is recorded for every response and we report mode-effect deltas on every poll page.

3. Weighting

Raw responses are weighted by iterative proportional fitting (“raking”) against four marginals: age (5 bands), gender, state (36 + FCT) and geopolitical zone. Weight trimming caps individual weights at 5× the mean to limit influence. Where a poll asks a sub-population question (e.g. only registered voters), we apply a screening filter before weighting.

4. Field period

Field periods are typically 5–7 days; flash polls (e.g. presidential addresses) close in 24–48 hours. Every published result discloses the exact field date range, total sample size, mode breakdown, weighting variables, and a margin of error at 95 % confidence.

5. Quality controls

6. Limitations

Like every survey, our polls are subject to non-response bias, self-selection at the panel-registration stage, social-desirability bias, and the limits of stated-vs-revealed preference. Polls are snapshots, not predictions. We urge readers to view multiple polls over time and to read the full methodology note attached to any individual poll before drawing conclusions.

Methodological queries

Researchers, journalists and academics may request the underlying sampling files, weighting code and field protocols by emailing research@nigeriapolls.com.