Methodology of ASA Economic Surveys
ASA Staffing Employment and
Sales Survey
ASA Staffing Index
The ASA Staffing Index tracks weekly
changes in temporary and contract employment. The index survey methodology
mirrors that of the quarterly ASA Staffing
Employment and Sales Survey.
Survey results are typically posted nine
days after the close of a given work week,
providing a near real-time gauge of staffing
industry employment and overall economic
activity.
Participants include a stratified panel of
small, medium, and large staffing companies
that together provide services in virtually
all sectors of the industry and account for
more than one-third of U.S. staffing industry
establishments and sales. Like the quarterly
ASA Staffing Employment and Sales Survey,
percentage changes in employment are
derived by weighting responses according
to company size categories.
Two numbers are reported weekly. The
first is the weekly percentage change in
staffing employment. The second is the
index itself, which shows staffing employment trends over time. Both numbers are
posted on the home page of the ASA Web
site,
americanstaffing.net.
The index is calculated by applying the
weekly percentage change in employment
to a reference value set at 100 for the week
of June 12, 2006. The index reflects the
percentage change in employment since
that reference week—so when the index
reaches 200, staffing employment would
have doubled since June 2006. The index
does not estimate total industry employment; the quarterly ASA Staffing Employment and Sales Survey provides that data.
ASA developed the index with the
expertise of the Lewin Group, an economic
research firm.
Benchmarks
Both the quarterly ASA Staffing
Employment and Sales Survey and the
ASA Staffing Index weekly survey rely on
periodic benchmarks from the U.S. Census
Bureau. In 2011, given newly released
benchmark data from the 2007 Economic
Census, ASA revised historical figures for
staffing employment, sales, and payroll
back to 1990 and ASA Staffing Index
values to the index’s inception in 2006.
The 2007 census data were used as
benchmarks for the quarterly survey
results from 2007 to present. The 2007
census data were also used as benchmarks for the index back to 2006; 2006
and 2007 were peak—and similar—
years for the staffing industry, and the
index covered only the last six and a half
months of 2006, which were much more
like 2007 than 2002, the previous census
year (and hence the next available benchmark).
Data from the 2002 census were used
as benchmarks for the quarterly survey
results from 2002 through 2006. Data from
the 1997 census, the first to use the North
American Industry Classification System,
more clearly delineated “temporary help
services” than the Standard Industrial Classification it replaced.
In developing the quarterly survey
methodology in 1992, DRI used the
1987 census of service industries as
well as several other sources in estimating industry size and market share
weights—long before the introduction
of NAICS. Using the 1997 NAICS-based
census provides better comparability and
continuity of data for the 1990 to 2002
period than the original DRI estimates,
particularly given the principal interest
in the results of the quarterly survey has
been changes over time rather than absolute levels of employment, sales, and
payroll.