Posts Tagged ‘questionnaire-development’

QuestionPro Survey Software Blog

Friday, March 28th, 2008

The founders/employees of QuestionPro maintain an interesting company blog that, in addition to describing specific features of their service, also includes a variety of more useful, general information that anyone can theoretically use with any survey service. It’s always nice to see a company that isn’t just focused on getting more clients but is also willing to add to the general knowledge available online. (more…)

Optimal Design of Numeric Survey Questions

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008

Have you ever gone to analyze the results of a survey in which you’ve asked for open-ended numeric information (that is, number based fields where respondents type in a number instead of choosing from a drop down list) only to find that many/some of your respondents have entered things like “10-20″ or “about 15?” You’re not alone. While many survey systems work to defeat these “alphanumeric elaborations,” Marak Fuchs published a paper last year in which he discussed the “optimal visual design of open-ended frequency questions in web surveys in order to reduce the percentage of alphanumeric elaborations and explicit extremes to frequency questions.” (more…)

20 Top Tips to Writing Effective Surveys

Wednesday, February 21st, 2007

Martin Day, a Director of SurveyGalaxy, wrote an interesting article entitled "20 Top Tips to Writing Effective Surveys." The article is simply laid out, easy to read, and offers some pretty simple straightforward tips for writing online surveys (or offline surveys for that matter). My favorite tip (of the 20) is "Ensure that the questionnaire flows: whenasking questions group the questions into clear categories as this makes the task of completing the survey easier for the participants."

Sometimes it seems that many of the folks writing surveys — even the professionals — don’t seem to get it that the people taking the survey are for the most part volunteers (unless you’re paying everyone who takes your survey and not doing some kind of a drawing, almost all of your respondents are effectively volunteers) and if you don’t make the experience interesting and perhaps even fun then it is unlikely that anyone is going to go to the trouble of finishing the survey.

Not every survey can be fun. Some surveys are on boring topics. Some surveys use complex methodologies that make it difficult to create any kind of positive user experience. But it seems to me that it is important for us to at least try. If we’re going to ask our volunteers to give us their time and their opinions, it seems that the least we can do is try to make the experience at least somewhat entertaining and interesting.

To that end, in addition to Martin’s article below, I also present you with a link to a page on SurveyGalaxy which offers a list of the most highly rated (i.e., most interesting) surveys available on SurveyGalaxy as rated by respondents. Note that these aren’t always the prettiest survey in the world or the most interactive — but something about them has made respondents give them high ratings.