Friday, September 18, 2009

Save Money Using Online Survey Software

There must be a million different messages you see each day urging you to change your business practices and guaranteeing that if you do, you’ll reap the rewards and save a boat-load of money. Trouble is, the bulk of these messages are bunk. One of the challenges for business leaders in this era is making smart decisions that can actually generate savings. However, for those charged with making these choices, there is a light at the end of the tunnel in the form of online survey software.

Online Survey Software that Saves Time
As the old adage says: time is money. One of the easiest ways to save time is to streamline processes in the workplace. When it comes to gathering data from your clients, online surveys offer an excellent savings opportunity. Choose an online survey software service that offers fast survey creation paired with on-the-fly data retrieval and you’ve eliminated two of the most time-consuming activities associated with customer relations. Add to that savings the benefit of flexible survey deployment options and 24/7 access to the survey data and the benefits are easy to assess. You’ll know what your customers want faster, meaning you can adapt your marketing strategies accordingly and, at the same time, you’ll be able to more quickly address customer complaints. After all, it’s easier to keep an existing customer, even a dissatisfied one, than it is to get a new client on board.

Saving Money With Online Survey Software
So, now you’ve worked out that a good online survey software service can save you and your staff time. And as we all know, time is money in the business world. What other savings can online survey software make around your organization? Well, that depends on how you use it – anything that streamlines your processes, whether internal or external, presents a potential for saving money. For example, using online survey software internally can help your human resources team identify training needs or keep tabs on invites to company events. Virtually anything you need to ask staff or customers can be done through the online survey medium – meaning your clients and employees can respond whenever it suits them, and you have access to their responses whenever and wherever you need them. All of this frees you up to focus on developing your business, making contact with new customers and achieving your goals.

Online Survey Software to Meet Your Needs
Whether you’re investigating online survey software services for the first time or trying to find a solution to meet the demands of a growing business, the key to succeeding is flexibility. You need a survey software solution that’s easy to use, offers support when it’s needed and gives you a variety of options for everything from initial survey design right through to the delivery of your online survey results. And all this flexibility can come at a hefty price – but it doesn’t have to. There are a multitude of flexible, professional options out there for businesses just like yours, all you’ve got to do is a little investigation. Granted, investigating your options takes time, but it’s time well spent. Plus, using the demos and free trials available will help you hone your search for an appropriate online survey software service in no time. Allowing you to focus on raising the profile of your business while your customers engage in a meaningful, survey-based dialog with your firm.

source: http://www.esurveys.com/survey-articles/survey-software/save-money-with-online-survey-software-070602/page1.html

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Four Factors That Determine the Maximum Length of Your Online Survey

How long should your online survey be? I’ve seen and participated in a number of discussions on this topics over the last several years. After all, you want to collect as much information as possible from your respondents but at the same time you don’t want to annoy them to the point where they quit the survey half-way through. I’ve compiled a list of four factors/questions which determine how long your online survey can reasonably be to avoid dropouts.

Let’s first acknowledge that when it comes to conducting any survey, the most important element — the most value adding component is the respondent (not the survey software). Most people only have access to a limited number of respondents AND chances are they are only going to get one opportunity to collect the information they need.

Which is why we as researchers tend to want to ask as many questions as we can of each respondent who we manage to convince to participate in our survey. Ask now, or you may never get another chance. Or you’ll have to pay for a whole new panel. Or you’ll have to squeeze, squeeze, squeeze the information out of the data you were able to collect the first time. And squeezed data is never pretty.

The trouble is, when you make the survey too long respondents drop out. I remember a couple of years ago participating in a phone survey. The survey went on, and on, and on and every time we got to the end of topic, I thought it would be over. But it never ended. I eventually hung up.

So it is a balance. And capturing that balance can be challenging. I’ve personally come up with four key considerations that more than anything else dictate how long a survey can be.

1) What does the respondent get for taking the survey? The bigger the incentive, the longer the survey can be. But keep in mind, unless it is a guaranteed incentive (finish the survey and we’ll send you a T-Shirt) you’re only going to get so far. For example, a sweepstakes in which the respondent can win $10,000 will do better than a sweepstakes for $1,000 but not necessarily 10 times better and not nearly as well as a survey in which the respondent automatically receives $20.

2) How interesting in the survey subject to the respondent? I will get the same dropout rate for a long survey about new rollercoasters than I will for a relatively short survey about toothpaste. People like to take surveys about subjects that they find interesting and will stay in a survey a lot longer if it is one that lets them think or discuss matters that are of interest to them.

3) How much fun is it to complete the survey? Believe it or not, a survey doesn’t have to be a boring, unpleasant experience. Questions can be written in an interesting or witty way, and response options can be configured in such a way that that the survey is fun for the respondent to take. For example, it is much more fun to click on pictures of things than on words — and it is more fun to drag a list of items into a specific order than it is to rank items using drop down boxes. The more fun your survey is to take, the longer it can be.

4) What impact will completing the survey have on the respondent? If I’m conducing a survey in my neighborhood to decide whether or not the lot on the corner is turned into a new park or a junk yard, I can feel confident that I’ll get a good response rate from the people living on my street no matter how long the survey is. People will spend more time on a survey that they know impacts them in some way — much more than they’ll spend on a survey that they know only benefits you.

By thinking about how these four factors come together within the context of your survey, you can make a determination regarding how you want to present your survey and whether or not you need to offer a better incentive or — if all else fails — reconsider the length of your survey.

source: http://www.marketresearchtech.com/survey-length-four-factors.htm

Selecting the Right Respondents for your Survey (Setting your Quotas)

Not all respondents are created equal. It’s true. Just because you can convince someone to take your survey doesn’t mean you necessarily want them to take your survey. In fact, ensuring that the right respondents take your survey (in the right proportions) is probably among the most important things you can do to ensure that you finish your project with survey results that you can use.

I’ll give you an example: We once conducted a survey about a concert series we host each spring to try to find out what kind of music our guests wanted to hear. When we go the results back, we were surprised to find that, more than anything else, our visitors wanted to listen to 80s music. By a big margin too.

Fine by me — there is a lot of 80s music that I like. But it seemed a little funny. So we ran a few cross-tabs, looked at some other variables, and found that a disproportionate number of our respondents were between 35-44 years old. Given that research has shown that people tend to be attached to the music they listened to as teenagers, is it so surprising that 80s music was so popular among a bunch of 35-44 year olds? After weighting the data to match attendance at the event, other forms of music, including pop, rock, and a couple of other genres jumped to the front.

Imagine if we had just sent our survey to a bunch of 15-18 year olds. Or if we had sent it to women over 65 years old. Or if we had just sent it to respondents in Mexico.

First rule of survey research: make sure your survey people who represent your customers.

Second role of survey research: make sure you survey them in the right proportion to your customer base.

I’m guessing the the reason for these two rules is fairly straightforward. If you don’t survey the right people in the right proportion, how will you know if your results reflect the behavior and attitudes of all of your customers (or the specific group of customers you are trying to understand)? If the people you survey aren’t representative of the people you’re making decisions about, there is very much the possibility that in conducting your survey you could be doing more harm than good. Its as if, in the example above, we got the results of our survey and then went about featuring 80s bands at all of our concerts. Nobody would come. We’d lose tons of money. And we’d assume that the research must have been flawed.

There are three important steps to having the right survey respondents take your survey. Step #1 is figuring out who the right survey respondents are. Step #2 is finding those people. Step #3 is actually convincing the right people to take your survey. The remainder of this post is about Step #1.

If you want to be technical about it, step #1 could also be called “setting your quotas.” It is the process of making sure in advance that you select people in the right proportions (that is, 50% male, 50% female; or 60% male and 40% female) to best represent the people you want to understand.

If You Want To Survey The World

Maybe you just want to learn more about people living in a particular city, or in a particular state, or even in a particular country.

This information is actually easier to come by than information about your customers, and it may even be possible that the information is available for free. The census bureau offers a great deal of information which can be broken down in a number of different ways, and can be narrowed down to very specific regions. You can find information about age, income, how many cars people in a particular region have, and lot more. Other countries offer similar information.

You’ll find that you have a lot of data to choose from. What you need to do at this point is determine which of it is relevant. For example, if you’ve created a new kind of dental implant, you may not want to spend much time collecting demographic information about people under the age of 40. Conversely, it may turn out that it doesn’t matter how old your respondent is (because you have a product that is equally useful to everyone of every age) but it is really important to survey only women. Make these decisions as you are pulling the data so that you can make sure your “quotas” are in the right proportions.

If You’re Trying To Survey YOUR Customers

If you don’t know the demographic and behavioral makeup of your response base, you may find yourself a little challenged with step #1. After all, if you’ve never surveyed your customers before, how are you going to know who you should survey?

When I used to work in the marketing department of a summer-stock theater, we used to go into the parking lot and write down the states on everyone’s license plates. Pretty crude. But if a substantial number of your customers pay cash and you don’t have a way to know where they are from, it can be a reasonably effective method for understanding where your customers come from.

If you’re an online business, or a business that has invoices that contain content information for your customers, then you can probably get some useful information right from your database. You can examine the breakdown by gender and figure out where they live. You can tell, for example, whether or not all of your customers come from a specific geographic area (indicating that you should only survey people from that area) and even how frequently they visit you (if you’re trying to find out about your repeat customers, it may not be appropriate to survey people who haven’t been visiting you for long).

Theme parks and other out-of-home entertainment destinations periodically conduct something called a “Point of Origin” survey. This is a survey, conducted of randomly selected guests as they enter the facility, is used to establish a baseline understanding of where people are coming from, how old they are, gender, ethnicity, and other information. Because it is a random survey of customers, and theoretically reflects all of your customers, it is a valid way of understanding who your customers are — which means that you can use it to make such statements as “25% of my customers are between 25-35 years old” and then use it to make sure that approximately 25% of your respondents fall within that age range.

A Point of Origin survey doesn’t have to be long. And it isn’t hard to conduct. All you need to do is have an employee stand just inside the front door of your store and ask people to take a short, anonymous survey before they start shopping. Alternatively, you could conduct the survey at the cash register, which would give you the added capability of know who purchased and who didn’t.

Remember — keep your Point of Origin survey short so that it won’t create any hardship for your paying customers. Let them know why you’re doing the survey (you’re trying to learn just a little bit more about the people who are your customers) and perhaps offer an incentive for participating (chance to win a pair of stereo speakers, or something that you actually sell).

Once you’ve conducted your Point of Origin survey, you’ll have a good basis for determining who should participate (and in what proportion) in your other surveys.

What If There Is No Easy Way To Determine Your Quotas

Sometimes you want to survey someone other than you customers. Maybe you’re creating a business plan and don’t yet have any customers. Or maybe there is no easy to way to survey your customers. Or maybe there isn’t time to survey your customers.

When you’re in a situation like this, sometimes the best option is to make an educated guess. That is, watch the customers walking in the front door. If it looks like there are more women than men coming in, then maybe you survey 70% women and 30% men. If it looks like you have a lot of customers with kids, maybe you say that you’re going to survey 60% families with kids and 40% families without kids.

What is important, when you’re doing things this way, is that you make sure that you’re surveying enough people from each group that you want to be able to describe to make your results meaningful. For example, your customers may be mostly women with just a few men and you might decide to survey 95% women and only 5% men. While this will probably give you good overall results, you need to ask yourself up front whether or not you’re going to want to look at the results from the men separately from the women (perhaps you want to know why the men are coming into your store).

To effectively do this, you need to collect at least enough male responses so that you can analyze them properly (do you really want to launch a new men’s product line based on what 10 men had to say?).

In my experience, as a rule of thumb, any time I want to be able to summarize the results from a particular subgroup of respondents, I try to make sure that I have a minimum of 50 responses in that group (although, to be fair, I should say that my average sample size for most projects is about 1,000 responses so collecting 50 from a particular subgroup isn’t much of a challenge for me). If you’re only collecting a few hundred responses you may feel comfortable going as low as 25, but you probably don’t want to go lower than that (and even then you’re going to have to watch your margin of error).

The point of all this is that even if you guess, as long as you have enough of a sample from each of the segments (that is, as long as you have enough male and female respondents) you should be able to compensate if you later find that you’ve collected too many responses from one group or too few responses from another group.

Guessing isn’t optimal, but when it comes down to it, its better than not having any quotas at all, and 90% of the time it is going to get you into the right ball park.

source: http://www.marketresearchtech.com/survey-quotas-establishing-respondents.htm

Online Survey Content Security Doesn’t Exist

received an interesting question from a reader earlier today about survey security. While I’m not actually answering his question here, it did raise an interesting point about online research — which is this: there really truly is no way to protect the content that you display in your survey from falling into the wrong hands. If you have a secret product or concept , your best bet for keeping it secret is not to test it using online research.

Before sending me the note telling me just how wrong I am, record the following:

As I figure it, there are four different kinds of security as it applies to online surveys. The first kind of security is what we’ll refer to here as back-end security. This basically means that strangers can’t simply log into the survey software server and start making changes to your survey, or download your data, or do all sorts of other things which really ought to be protected by a good password. Most survey systems do a pretty good job with this, assigning separate accounts, usernames, and passwords to each survey respondent. Some even take it to the next level, by allowing account administrators to set different permission levels for each user on the account, thereby ensuring that people who are meant to have access to your survey can’t “accidentally” go and make changes.

The second kind of survey security is where only authorized people are allowed to take your survey. Some implement this feature by giving you one respondent password that you can share will all of your respondents, or some systems even allow you to give every respondent their own password (or access key) which not only keeps out the riff raff, but also makes sure that each respondent can take the survey only once. This type of security not only ensure that only the “right” people take your survey, but also that the wrong people can’t get access to the content of the survey.

I’ve seen this kind of survey software security implemented well, but I’ve also seen it implemented poorly. Some systems, instead of assigning each survey an ID made up of a random collection of letters and numbers, use a sequential, easy to guess series. Which means that it really isn’t all that hard to view (and possibly edit!) surveys written by other clients of the survey system. So watch out for that.

The third kind of security about the connection between the respondent’s computer and the survey software server. Is it secure (look for the https: in the URL). Frankly, unless you’re doing super secret stuff and your concerned that hackers and government agents are trying to listen in on your respondents, I’m not sure it is something you need to worry too much about. But if you are afraid of industrial espionage or that someone is going to tap into your wireless signal, then you may want to take the precaution of choosing a system that allows for encrypted connections.

It’s easy enough for a well thought out survey software program to provide good security surrounding these first three measures. Where they get into trouble — and where you get into trouble if you believe them — is when they start to protect your survey content.

The fourth kind of survey software security is content protection, which basically means keeping your untrustworthy respondents from copying the top secret images and product descriptions that you include in your survey onto public web sites or your competitor’s email account.

I know, I know…there are survey systems that feature technologies that make it harder to copy images or capture video. This can be done using javascript, or by doing some crazy encryption to the feed. One could even go so far as taking over the computer so that nothing else works except the survey.

But I have a camera. And I have a video camera. And if you don’t completely lock down my computer, I have some really good screen capture software that lets me capture both audio, images and pictures. If I want to capture your survey content, believe you me, I will capture your survey content.

And then I can do pretty much anything I want with it, can’t I? No doubt 600-1000 people took that confidential survey of yours, and how are you going to know which one of them posted it to the anonymous message posting board using an anonymous IP address?

I suppose it is theoreticaly possible to embed a visual identifier into each image (a watermark of sorts) so you can trace the image back to whoever posted it online, but I’ve never heard of technologies built into survey software (if it does exist please let me know — I’ll report it here!).

There are also ways you can reduce the risk. You can, for example, use a pre-screened panel made up of people you trust. Employees, for example. Another approach is to threaten your respondents with legal action (although most will figure out pretty quickly that you have no way of identifying them). You could also threaten to stop doing online surveys if they leak your secret.

But the best way to ensure that your super secret new business idea doesn’t leak out onto the Internet is not to do online research (there, I said it). If your entire business model is based around keeping something confidential, do not put it in an online environment in front of strangers. Period. And don’t trust any research firm that says they have a foolproof method of keeping your images, video and other content safe. If they do, just pull out your camera or video camera and press record.

source: http://www.marketresearchtech.com/category/internet-survey-software

Why Use Survey Software?

Survey software can be used in two forums; market research and scientific research. Consumers are most familiar with market research. These surveys typically consist of a few demographic questions about your age and gender along with questions about how much you enjoy a particular product or service like laundry soap, a television show or customer service.

The opinion of the public directly affects businesses and how they are run. Companies depend heavily on the consumer’s thoughts and opinions to stay competitive. Surveys and polls provide the perfect outlet for businesses to learn who their consumer is and what they expect.

When used correctly, survey software can assist you in determining trends, mathematically calculating the needs of your customers and building a more successful business.

In this site, you’ll find articles related to surveys, as well as comprehensive reviews and a side–by–side comparison to help you make an informed decision on which survey software is right for you. At TopTenREVIEWS, We Do the Research So You Don’t Have To.

source: http://survey-software-review.toptenreviews.com/

What to Look for in Survey Software

Conducting and calculating surveys can sometimes be difficult and frustrating. Survey software should help alleviate some of the difficulties associated with market research and analysis. Survey software should provide the surveyor a degree of creative freedom in question choice and design as well as include enough analytical tools to calculate accurate and relevant results. This is the criteria TopTenREVIEWS used to evaluate survey software:

Administration Options
Top survey software should provide various options and methods to administering surveys including through the Internet, face–to–face interviews, paper print outs or email.

Survey Creation
The software should provide options and features that allow those administering the survey to customize its look and set restrictions associated with their survey. This may include question creation and type selection as well as font, image and color; and respondent restrictions like passwords and skip branching.

Survey Analysis
Survey software should include analysis and statistic tools. Many programs include simple analysis like percentages and pie charts. Top programs include more sophisticated statistical options, like standard deviation or cross tabulation charts. The software should also be compatible with a word processor or text writer to export analysis reports.

Ease of Use
Survey software should be powerful enough to produce relevant and reliable results and easy enough for novice surveyors and computer users to understand and operate.

source: http://survey-software-review.toptenreviews.com/

Pricing Structure: You get what you pay for—or do you?

Each survey vendor has their own unique pricing structure, and it’s important to know exactly how each one works. So when comparing survey companies, keep these thoughts in the back of your mind:

  • Know what you’re getting for your money.
  • Are there any discounts you can get for committing longer?
  • What is the duration of the contract you’re signing?
  • Is there a contract?
  • Is there a way to try out the survey solution before you buy it?

As you can see from our pricing model, we provide a variety of purchasing options. We believe SurveyGizmo gives you the best bang for the buck because we don’t require you to sign any contracts but still give you a huge amount of advanced features. You can also upgrade and downgrade as you please and we’ll never delete any of your survey data. You’ll never sign a contract with us, but if you do decide to commit to a year, we offer a 10% discount and if you are an Academic Institution or Non-Profit organization our discounts go even deeper.

source: http://www.surveygizmo.com/how-to-choose-a-survey-software-vendor/

The Survey Feature Set & Why It’s Important

Understanding the features that you need to create the survey that you want, is a major step in picking out the right online survey software vendor. The following are features we focused on when developing SurveyGizmo.

  • Flexibility — In an ever changing market place, not being tied down to a contract with a survey company can be very important. That’s why SurveyGizmo is a month to month service, and as a bonus we never delete any of your survey data—even if you downgrade to a free account!
  • Question Types — Knowing which questions types you’ll want to use before creating the survey can help greatly in your survey provider journey. We provide over 20 question types for survey creation flexibility.
  • Integration Ability — Survey systems that easily integrate into other systems can be a huge time saver. That’s why we offer an easy to use survey API as well at third party integration tools including SalesForce.com and ExactTarget integrations.
  • Reporting — Getting your survey data out in an easy to understand and analyzable way is the main reason to conduct a survey. SurveyGizmo makes it easy to act on the information you collect with multiple report types including TURF, Cross Tabulation, and Customer Satisfaction reports.
  • Survey Logic — Knowing the type of surveying you plan on doing can tell you what type of logic you’ll need for your survey. We provide logic for disqualifying survey takers, emailing invitations to your survey, page jumping, showing/hiding questions, custom scripting, and much more.
  • Response limits — Having an idea of how many people you plan on taking your survey will depend on the response limit you’ll want to pick. Although we have response limits for each account type each month, if you go over that limit, we will save the responses and all you have to do is upgrade to the next level for that month and they will be unlocked.
  • Publishing — A variety of publishing options can be key to getting your surveys out and completed in an efficient way. With SurveyGizmo you can send out email invitations to your survey, embed your survey into your website using JavaScript, HTML, or iFrame code, or publish a link anywhere on a website.
  • source: http://www.surveygizmo.com/how-to-choose-a-survey-software-vendor/

Why Measure Organizational Performance?

Each organization may have its own reason why to measure performance. Human behavior is ultimately not an exact science but still we constantly try to put things into context so that we can improve what we do. Not taking organizational development serious leaves a less chance of employee retention costing your organization up to 2-3 times the hiring costs.

Our research indicates that measuring instruments discussed in the organizational performance and development section make the obscure more tangible. Having the tools to identify performance gaps and performance strengths gives your organization and employees clarity and allows you to address issues in a structured manner. Perhaps most importantly, results prompt discussion within your organization, business unit or team which breads a self-helping culture.

To a large extent the discussion component is self-helping. Whether a manager reviews a report about his/her performance, engages employees on the results in a constructive manner (Management Performance) or taking inventory (Organizational Culture Monitor / Employee Satisfaction), they all produce discussion and are conducive to improving productivity and performance.

Opening the window for personal development and organizational growth will produce a very real advantage and cost savings by embracing a structured basis to further excel.

source: http://www.visionmetrics.net/en/whymeasure.aspx

Survey Evaluation & Continuation


Data collection is one thing, however if you don’t do anything with it employees will not reap the full-potential. 360 degree feedback reviews will provide you with a structured basis to illustrate and show employee performance challenges and performance strengths. Although a self-reflective report may, to a large extent, be self-helping as employees will want to correct certain deficiencies, it is up to your development goal strategy to follow through on the continued success and talent development. It is important to consider providers that show top high scoring and top low scoring per rater group, as these will provide each employee with the most urgent areas of focus to be addressed.

Use Common Sense:
The best gauge we always go by is to use common sense and give yourself the time to think through what you want to accomplish. The answers will in most cases present themselves. If not it is advisable to engage your third party provider or consultant on how best to go about your deployment strategy.

Other Factors to Consider
When deciding on a survey feedback system, depending on your budget and company size and growth, consider a system that allows multiple surveys and survey types running at the same time so that you centralize your data collection instead of having multiple vendors your employees have to get familiar with. Search vendors that provide a host of solutions in an "all in one solution" so that you have a centralized database of respondents that allow you to simply pool groups to different types of surveys for re-use instead of a one "fly-by" survey.

source: http://www.visionmetrics.net/survey-resources/360-degree-feedback-software.aspx

Survey Software and Questionnaire Implementation


Describe one behavior in a question:
Often the case when companies create their own questionnaires, they address two or even three behaviors in one question when it is possible that the employee can score higher on one behavior while scoring lower on another.

Maintain Consistency:
Approaches vary on how to layout a survey. Will the survey form be job, group, department, company specific or a combination? All have their advantages and disadvantages. The more specific you get the more difficult it will be to aggregate results over different departments or company level, risking employees feeling disavowed with process due to differentiating criteria.

Perhaps one survey form on a company-wide level may be too broad not taking issue with the specific competencies on different employee and management levels. We often advise companies to conduct one or two forms and keeping them general enough to address common behavioral traits shared in your company culture, vision, mission and work expectations. Especially larger companies should consider retaining certain oversight with structured consistency.

Benchmark:
When considering any 360 degree feedback software system, consider benchmark functionality. Any one survey taken in one moment’s time will provide you with 60% insight, while conducting them annually or even bi-annually will provide you with comparative analysis of progress or lack of. In the long run this approach will provide much more tangible benefit. See our 360 degree feedback tool for more information on this.

Positive Question Formulation:
Formulate your question in a positive manner avoiding negative constructs. As administrator of the metrics program you are setting the tone. It is never productive to start negative from the outset. Having faith and trust in your organization will render significant participatory results as opposed to starting out with a low morale survey.

Avoid Survey Overkill:
Keep you 360 degree review forms simple and short. Especially with 360 degree feedback systems which are quite labor intensive, you will want to keep employees engaged and not give reason to lose interest by the use of overloading surveys with too many questions. Always ask ‘Is this question relevant to our company vision, mission, work ethic or work expectation?”

source: http://www.visionmetrics.net/survey-resources/360-degree-feedback-software.aspx

Longitudinal Surveys - Definition and Examples

Personally, out of all the types of surveys one could do, I find the longitudinal variety to be the most interesting and the most informative, simply because a trend/behavior is being tracked over a period of years.

The good news is that you don’t have to wait 10 years to conduct your second survey. Longitudinal studies that go back in time are called retrospective studies and would be used where a researcher investigates recorded bahevior over the years (population, medical records, etc) and uses todays number to make a statement.

One of the more famous around the area I grew up, is the Framingham Heart Study. I have a few friends that go out to Framingham every few years to get their blood taken and levels checked. They are in the third generation of program participants. Most of the now common knowledge concerning heart disease, such as the effects of diet, exercise, and common medications such as aspirin, are based on this longitudinal study.

If you like the idea of a repeating, long-term survey, there’s a neat documentary series you could watch called “Seven Up!” which follows the lives of 14 British children starting in 1964. Each new film in the series (Seven Up, Seven plus Seven, 21 Up, 28 Up, 35 Up, 42 Up, 49 Up, etc) profiles the lives of the participants at 7 year intervals. It’s not very exciting compared to some of the blockbusters or short web clips of today, but provides a much more lasting impact and effect.



source : http://www.surveysoftwarehq.com/category/online-survey-software/tips

What is a Transactional Survey??

Ever wonder why the clerk at the pet food store asked you for your zip code? It’s to gather more information about where their customers come from. That information, combined with the amount of money that customer spent, allows a company to make better decisions about where to advertise, and what types of messages to use.

AFTER SUPPORT CALL

“You recently received support from Prezza Technologies.We strive to provide the best customer satisfaction possible, so please take a moment to answer these questions:

For the following questions, please rate the support you received on a scale of 1 - 5 (5 is the best, 1 is the worst):

1. Speed of Response.

2. Attention to Detail.

3. Customer Service Rep Friendliness.”

Surveys like the retail example and the support example are called “transactional” because companies are introducing a method of capturing feedback at a typical transaction event. People are much more likely to respond if surveys are not just mass emailed to people, and can be much more effective when conducted by a person. Our survey software can work on the web or over mobile devices.

source: http://www.surveysoftwarehq.com/category/online-survey-software/tips

Survey Software Highlights the Multi-Tasking Generation

Of those polled, 84 percent of students reported that they regularly use their cell phones for sending and receiving text messages. Of those who text, 70 percent admitted to text messaging while in class.
Excerpt from the article: In a generation of technology and information, students have the ability to engage in constant communication with others, but this practice may actually harm their education, according to a recent poll. The informal survey conducted around the Fresno State campus revealed some prevalent issues regarding students’ usage of text messaging. It looked at the frequency of text messaging by students and their attitudes about its effects in the classroom. “This is a multi-tasking generation and many people think they’re not being distracted,” said Dr. Tamyra Pierce, a Fresno State associate professor of mass communication and journalism. The survey, which was distributed to Fresno State students of ranging class levels, looked at their regular use of text messaging. In particular, it focused on the frequency of text messaging while in class. Of those polled, 84 percent of students reported that they regularly use their cell phones for sending and receiving text messages. Of those who text, 70 percent admitted to text messaging while in class. “I’m not at all surprised by this,” Pierce said. “I see it all the time.” Pierce, who has conducted formal surveys of her own regarding the use of text messaging and MySpace among high school students, said 47 to 49 percent of students text message and 10 percent admitted to text messaging during an exam. The real question: Is this frequent text messaging harmful to students’ educations? The informal campus poll revealed that 64 percent of students believe that text messaging in class draws their attention away from lectures. “Several semesters ago I had to go to a ‘no cell phones in sight’ policy because it just got out of control,” Pierce said. “Students think they can do it all and they won’t be distracted, but I think they are.” Many students, however, say that their studies are not affected by their texting habits. Fresno State junior Amy Munson admits to texting on a daily basis. “I actually have a Sidekick and a cell phone for texting and I’m on them all the time,” said Munson, a communication major. “Honestly, I text to stay awake in class,” Munson said. “As long as I’m constantly doing something, then I won’t completely zone out on what the teacher’s saying. It almost helps me listen because at least I’m getting bits and pieces.” Fresno State senior Martin Campanella believes the prevalence of text messaging also depends on the type of classes students are in. “I’m an engineering major,” Campanella said. “It’s mostly guys in my classes, so you don’t see it as much. I think girls text a lot more. It is like they can’t wait to talk about all this stuff.” Kevin Tague, a third-year health science major, said he rarely text messages but it still affects his concentration. “You hear it all the time,” Tague said. “Even when phones are on vibrate it gets annoying.” But this scattered concentration and distraction is what Pierce warns students about. “You get so engrossed in it and sure you may only miss this much, but that small amount may be what’s on the exam,” Pierce said. While Pierce has enacted a no cell phone policy in her class, many teachers have yet to go that far. Munson said some teachers do get more of her attention than others. “If someone’s just standing there for an hour talking, guaranteed half the class isn’t going to hear a thing,” Munson said. “I definitely get more involved when there’s interaction in group work and then I won’t text.
source: http://www.surveysoftwarehq.com/category/online-survey-software/tips

Tips for Lengthy Surveys

  • With larger surveys/reviews, its generally a good idea to include a PDF copy of the entire survey, available to the respondent at the beginning of the survey, so that it can be reviewed ahead of time before completing the survey. The link to this PDF can be included in both the emails survey invite, survey intro text, as well as the header/footer in the survey.
    • For information on exporting PDF version of the survey please see Additional References below.
    • Once you generate the PDF file, you can upload it in your QuestionPro Account. Please see Additional References for more information on uploading files.
    • You can copy the URL/Link for the uploaded file and use it anywhere on the Survey as well as in the Email Invitation. You can also add text around this link that specifies the steps needed to download the link, etc.
  • Important Note: QuestionPro does not provide the option to go back in the Survey. Also the back button on the respondent's browser is not supported. If the respondent uses the back button in the survey, you will experience unpredictable results (depending on the web browser they are using). As a result, its best to warn your respondents on this at all points in the survey process:
    • Survey invite email
    • Intro text of the survey
    • Header/footer within the survey
  • We suggest using the Save and Continue option on lengthy surveys. When using the "save and continue" feature, its best to educate your respondents how this feature will work ahead of time (via survey invite email, intro text of the survey, and/or header/footer within the survey). Please see Additional References.
  • We suggest using Page Breaks in lengthy surveys. Idealy there should be 4-5 questions on a page. If the questions are text input type questions where respondents are required to provide lengthy comments, its best to put a page break after every 2-3 questions.
  • There is a time-out period of 60 minutes for the survey. What this means is if the Survey is inactive for more than 60 minutes, the response will not get saved. 15 minutes before time-out a warning message is displayed (Pop up).
  • source: http://www.surveyconsole.com/help/249-inline.html

After you have decided to conduct a survey, the most important part is to design the survey questionnaire with questions that are more relevant to your business. Although most survey software has a good collection of questions, it is important to know their purpose so that you can use the right ones.

Open Ended Questions - These get a more detailed picture of the customer’s response. It also gives the customer a chance to give as much information as possible, without any constraints. However, as these are time consuming, its use should be limited.

Demographic Questions - These are used to gather information such as age, sex, income, nationality etc. This helps in getting a better understanding of the customers and design promotional programs in a more customer centric manner.

Personality Related Questions - These help to get a thorough understanding of the personality of the customer. The questions may be related to hobbies, personal likes and dislikes, special interests etc, to understand the attitude of the particular customer and study how it affects customer satisfaction.

Dichotomous (yes/no) Questions - These are used to screen out the non-customers, especially if you are interested only in your existing customers.

Multiple Choice Questions - These questions allow answering by selecting the best of a given list of options.

Rank Order Scaling Questions - These allow the customer to rank a list of various brands based on personal preference or a particular feature.

Most survey software have a collection of these and many other types of questions in a database, and all you have to do is select the relevant questions and add it to your survey form. You can also add your own question if you think that is more relevant.

source: http://www.ehow.com/how_5167833_survey-software-types-questions-answers.html

Features of Survey Software v9


Earlier versions of Inquisite Survey System included role-based access to feedback data such as Survey Administrators, Survey Analysts and Survey Reviewers. Version 9 now provides a new interactive analytics engine and report builder that will help these roles provide even better insight into customer and employee opinions and motivations.

Data Analysis

Survey Analysts can customize reports relevant to their business objectives instead of having to use the canned reports of earlier versions. They also have the ability to control the depth and breadth of the data analyzed.

Additional features include:

  • Best of both quantitative and qualitative data with automatic tabulation of both pre-coded and uncategorized responses, plus scoring and aggregate numeric statistics
  • Customizable charting by question that distills lengthy tables into concise visual summaries.
  • Interactive segmentation with flexible answer grouping (“roll up”) in frequency and multi-banner cross-tabulations

Survey Administrators can customize reports by combining report filtering with customized views for Survey Analysts.

Report Formats

With a new analytics engine, the look and feel of reports can be customized. This can eliminate the need to export the data to other applications for better analysis.

It also enables the drilling down or filtering of data using the mouse and by “drag and drop”.

Using Surveys to Evaluate Social Networks

Most solutions discussed on Inquisite's website involve CRM — Customer Relationship Management and ERM — Employee Relationship Management solutions. Although both these terms generally refer to specific software solutions, one could think of social networks as extensions of these.

With so many questioning the value of social networking solutions, perhaps integrating this type of survey software into the social network will help organizations understand how their social networks are doing and where they need to work harder at making them more useful for both customer social networks and employee social networks.

After all, who doesn't love to take a survey? If it's well designed and implemented and valuable information is gleamed from it and used, then most people respond well to them.

source: http://www.cmswire.com/cms/enterprise-20/inquisite-provides-actionable-feedback-to-decision-makers-003022.php

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Do it yourself, Web-style

Self-completed Web surveys offer many advantages, including lower data collection costs, shorter data collection time periods, enhanced survey controls(namely automated skip patterns or forcing responses when applicable), and reduced data entry errors. But the enormous potential of Web surveys must be balanced against an equally large weakness. Most North American households do not have computers or Internet access. In October 1998, only 42 percent of U.S. households reported owning a computer, up from 24 percent in 1994. Another study, conducted by CBC/New York Times in 1998 suggested that two-thirds of all households contacted have access to a computer, and a third of these respondents have Internet access (Dillman 2000, Mail and Internet Surveys). While the proportion of the population with Internet access will continue to increase, the issue of valid coverage is an important consideration when conducting a Web survey.

This article reviews Web survey software from three providers. Each piece of software was used to create a simple Web-based survey. In conducting this review, the author imposed several constraints:

  • The same short questionnaire was used in all cases.

  • The survey was created by the author using each piece of software, and hosted on a site not affiliated to the software provider.

  • Each survey was tested to ensure that respondents could complete it online.

  • Each software program was used on the same computer (running Windows 98).

    The software packages reviewed are: SSI Web (Sawtooth Software), The Survey System (Creative Research Systems), and Survey Pro (Apian).

    There are several features that are common to all software packages. First, they all provide a detailed instruction manual that is surprisingly easy to use and follow. Second, they all have very friendly technical support that is available without charge over the phone. In each case, I contacted technical support and asked questions about actually hosting or publishing the survey, and received courteous, helpful advice. Third, all packages are relatively similar from a functionality perspective; they all allow skip patterns, optional response verification to ensure that certain questions are answered or that the response is in an appropriate range, and finally they all provide the ability to show answers to previous questions on the screen (for example, "You mentioned that the last quick-service restaurant you ate at was Burger King; how satisfied were you with their speed of service?")

    SSI Web
    SSI Web from Sawtooth Software is an excellent Web survey software package. Although expensive compared to the others reviewed - $3,000 for 50 questions, $9,000 for the 500-question version - it is relatively easy to use. A survey is created using either a template or by pointing and clicking and typing in text. It is very easy to change the order of questions or to add graphics.

    One of the strengths of this package is the format for laying out and displaying questions; you simply enter your questions and possible responses, and Sawtooth Software handles the formatting and questionnaire layout, while providing the ability to change this formatting if desired.

    Of the three packages reviewed, SSI Web also has the strongest survey preview feature, which opens the survey in a separate window and shows how it will actually appear to potential visitors. This is extremely useful to adjust any formatting or page breaks.


    Another strength of this package is the online data management module. It allows a researcher to not only monitor responses but also to calculate frequency counts providing a convenient method of monitoring the progress of the survey. Additionally, a researcher can also provide a password to a client, so that they can tabulate frequencies, but not provide the ability to change or adjust password quotas (the read/write capability requires a separate password).

    A separate add-on module integrates SSI Web with Sawtooth Software's powerful conjoint packages.

    The Survey System
    The Survey System is an extremely versatile collection of software packages. With the Basic Edition ($499), users have a complete survey creation and analysis system for questions with 10 or fewer answer choices. Questions are constructed using drop-down menus and help wizards that are common to many Windows-based software packages. The Basic Edition of The Survey System is designed to appeal to all users; those outside of the traditional market research departments can easily create a simple survey, while market research professionals will appreciate the added analytical tools available from an add-on statistical module.

    For larger surveys and more sophisticated users, The Professional Edition of The Survey System is reasonably priced at $999. There are several unique features to this package, including the ability to calculate values from other questions, combine Web responses with other information from the same respondent (such as historical data), and the flexibility to establish different quotas for different groups of respondents.

    One of the nicest features is the built-in spellchecker. For those of us used to having this feature in Microsoft Word, it is comforting knowing that the chance of a typo is reduced. Also, a range of different questions types can be used, including grid-style tables.

    The Survey System has two main strengths. The first is the ability to produce professional, camera-ready reports (complete with tables, charts and text) on a Web page. This feature demonstrates the advantage of Internet-based surveys - the ability to quickly collect the data and quickly produce quality topline reports.

    The second strength of this package is the e-mail integration package. Although your ISP may not appreciate (or in some cases may even forbid) the sending of bulk unsolicited e-mail, this feature does provide the ability to manage the e-mail invitation process, including the inclusion of passwords in the link so that respondents do not have to enter them, and the ability to send either reminder messages to non-respondents or thank-you e-mails to those who have. This feature will be very useful to researchers who are using a managed database of people who have agreed to participate in future research projects.

    A separate optional add-on module lets users record respondents' answers in their own voices.

    Survey Pro
    The Survey Pro package from Apian software is a complete data collection package that can be integrated with Apian's other modules. The main survey design package costs $1,195, and the add-on NetCollect module is $595, putting the total price for a single-user license at $1,790.

    Since this package is part of a total survey data collection system, it allows the user the flexibility to quickly change from a Web-based survey to a paper survey. However, this functionality makes creating and formatting the Web survey cumbersome. Unlike the other software tools, formatting or editing questions (including changing the order of questions) is not easy.

    Alternatively, the strengths of this package are first the ability to quickly integrate the respondent data into a finished report. The report produced is based on a template designed by the user, and can be instantly assembled with topline information once data collection is completed.

    Secondly, of all the packages reviewed, Survey Pro is the easiest to host. The process of completing the questionnaire and actually getting it up on your Web site is simple and straightforward.

    Publishing the Web survey
    Although Survey Pro was the easiest, the process of hosting of publishing the survey was more challenging than I expected. Each piece of software requires the uploading of different script files and will likely require the use of a file transfer protocol (FTP), a method used to upload and download pages from a Web server. I used Ipswitch's WS_FTP Pro (available from www.download.com or www.tucows.com) for this. If you have previously published a Web site using Microsoft FrontPage and are looking for a "Publish Web" button, you will be sadly disappointed.

    Part of the problem is that specific requirements among ISPs vary. One provider may require a separate setting accepting perl files, while another requires that all files be uploaded to a common location. This has the potential for the user to be left in the middle, caught between the software maker and the Internet provider. The software company would suggest that you contact your ISP if you have problems, while your ISP would suggest contacting the software manufacturer.

    In any case, it is possible to publish your own survey. However, if this seems like too daunting a process, each of these software companies offers a fee-based hosting service, where you design the survey using their software, and then for a fee, they will host it on their own servers - an acceptable solution if you do not have the time or inclination to do it yourself, but still want to conduct Web survey research. Contact each of the providers for more information.

    Here to stay
    Web surveys are certainly here to stay, and will likely become more and more accepted as a mainstream data collection option. Of the three pieces of software reviewed in this article, two are excellent options for the researcher interested in designing their own Web survey. SSI Web is an easy-to-use but powerful survey design and hosting package that provides all the tools necessary to conduct Web surveys. The Survey System is also a superior product that is easy to use and not only creates Web surveys but also provides the tools for quick and professional analysis and reporting all in one package. I would not hesitate to recommend either package.

    source: http://www.quirks.com/articles/a2002/20020704.aspx?searchID=36876606&sort=9

  • Survey Software Removes Bias

    To this day, customer feedback remains the single-most accurate representation of a company's performance and its consumers' expectations. The veil of anonymity allows survey takers to be completely honest and forthright, and the companies giving the survey don't get a sugarcoated version of reality. Honest, biting truth is the only way to understand the necessary changes you'll have to make to your business to succeed, and survey software allows any company to get their hands on the real picture. Still, former customers with some perceived grievance against the business often give a skewed perspective when surveyed or asked to give a review.

    What if you could get customer feedback that wasn't tainted by subjective opinion?

    KeySurvey.com's online survey software gives companies the opportunity to get the opinions of their target demographics without tarnishing the answers with subjectivity. By using survey software, you will have access to raw data that reveals the true, actual opinions of potential customers - the very same people that will one day be interested in your products or services. Whereas most customer feedback comes from former customers with their own biases, the data from professional survey software is free of customer bias.

    KeySurvey.com is totally malleable and customizable - surveys can be given in multiple languages, and customers can either start from scratch or use our templates as a starting off point. Survey creators can add their own personal touches, too; choose from fifteen different questions types and integrate your own corporate logo and colors into the survey design. Our surveys aren't static, thoughtless electronic versions of simple paper surveys. Instead, KeySurvey.com survey software adapts to a customer's response, using advanced logic to ask different questions based on the previous answers

    source: http://www.keysurvey.com/resources/articles/survey-software-removes-bias.jsp

    Measured Satisfaction of your Customer and Employee

    The success of any organization is measured both by customer satisfaction as well as by the satisfaction of its employees. If you own a business, no matter how small, you know how important it is to know the views and ideas of your employees in order to increase productivity. This can also improve the quality of the services you offer. Therefore most companies nowadays prefer to organize online employee-satisfaction-survey that take note of their likes and dislikes regarding company policies, work-related problems, HR issues, and more. This work was earlier done manually but now there is a number of customer -survey software available in the market which provides results in a few seconds

    Why Email Survey Software Work?

    Most companies and organizations are inter-linked by networks which allow employees to share vital information as well as their views regarding a number of issues. State-of-the-art -email survey software makes this task easier than ever. This software is extremely simple and operates in a simple environment. It is very user-friendly too and does not much training either. Most of this web- survey- software is equipped with the appropriate features as well as gadgets that ensure the success of the survey. Moreover, fierce competition in the industry ensures that most manufacturers keep improving and updating the survey software.

    The first thing to do before designing an online -survey is to decide the kind of information you want. Having a brainstorming session is the way to kick starts the process, followed by prioritizing the topics you list. This will help you to decide the amount of attention you need to devote to each item in the questionnaire.

    There are a number of websites that advertise these products. Just shop around for one that best suits your requirements and pocket too.


    source: http://www.pcql.com/2009/08/07/the-benefits-of-employee-survey-software-for-your-organization/

    Understanding Survey Software Features

    If you take a look at the features that different survey softwares offer, you will quickly realize that understanding all of them is no mean task. But it is very important that you do because only then you can choose the right survey software. It is important for one other reason, it determines your price. More features invariably means more dollars. So if you don't choose the right survey software, you might end up paying more for features you don't need.

    While it is impossible and not even worthwhile to look at all the features, here is a look at some of the important ones. Chances are that these are the ones will make or break your decision. The features have been divided into 6 categories based on their function in the process of conducting an online survey.

    Survey creation

    • Images, sounds, video - This allows you to insert images, sounds, and videos in your surveys, and can enhance the appearance of your surveys. However, use it only when necessary since it increases the time it takes to download and display your survey, and certainly don't overdo it.

    • Question library, response library, sample surveys - These allow you to create surveys quickly since you don't have to create them from scratch. They are a must if you do a lot of surveys regularly. And they don't impact the price that much, so you might as well opt for them.

    • Skip logic - This allows you to skip questions depending on the answers to previous questions. Most survey softwares allow either AND or OR logic to decide whether to skip or not, but some allow a combination of any logical conditions. It might sound like a "nice-to-have" feature rather than a "must-have", but you will be surprised how often you need to skip questions in your surveys.

    • Data piping - This allows you to use the answers to some questions in the following questions. This is a very neat feature and it allows you to "personalize" your surveys. For e.g., you can say "Thanks Steve" instead of only "Thanks" if you know that the name of the respondent is Steve from a previous question. It also allows you to ask questions like "What do you like most about Coke?" when the respondent has selected Coke as his/her favorite drink in the previous question.

    • Advanced survey creation features (spell check, auto-correct, thesaurus, import from MS Word) - These are fairly advanced features and not really required in most cases, especially if you don't do surveys regularly. You can spend the time to spell check the survey yourselves. However, if you do a lot of surveys, then you might want these features. But they will impact the price quite a lot since they are considered as "premium" features.

    • Branding (your logo and background color) - This allows you to place your company logo and use your company website's background color for your surveys. This is good enough in most cases, but not if you are looking to customize each and every aspect of the survey. It is quite an important feature since it gives your respondents the feeling that they are still on your website.

    • Advanced survey presentation features (pre-designed editable survey templates, new templates, full-customized look) - These are fairly advanced features and allow you to customize almost every aspect of the survey. Survey softwares do this in a variety of ways: they have pre-designed editable templates, ability to create new templates, or create surveys with a full-custom look. These features are also considered as "premium" features and will impact the price quite a lot.

    Survey Distribution and Tracking

    • Handheld device - This allows you to distribute your surveys on hendheld devices. This method of distributing is not as common as the other methods like placing link on website, embedding entire survey in websites, sending email invitation with link, or embedding entire survey in emails and newsletters. But it is definitely becoming popular because of the convenience it offers for taking surveys "on the road". As of now though, it is considered as a "premium" feature and will impact the price.

    • Track respondents - These allow you to track your respondents after they receive your email invitations. The simpler ones allow you to maintain an email list and send email invitations to all or some email addresses in the list. The more complex ones allow you to create an "audience" from the list in a variety of ways. They also allow you to track who read your email invitation and clicked on what links, who took the survey and who didn't, send reminders to the ones who didn't, etc. All these complex tracking activities fall more under the realm of "campaign management" than conducting surveys though. If you need these features, you are much better off going for a full-blown campaign management solution than a survey solution with half of what you need.

    Taking Survey

    • Password protected surveys - This allows you to protect your surveys with a password. The respondents have to know the password to be able to take the survey.

    • Save and continue later - This allows your respondents to save the survey and continue later. It is a very good feature to have especially if your surveys are going to be long. Some survey softwares make the respondents explicitly save a link and bookmark it to continue later. These don't work that well compared to some others that don't require the respondents to do as much.

    • Response validation - This allows you to validate the responses your respondents enter. These features are very important since they ensure that your respondents enter "valid" responses and increases the quality of the results. Always prefer survey softwares that have more types of response validation.

    • Respondent uniqueness control - This allows you to ensure that a respondent takes the survey only once. There are a few ways to do this and not all of them are "full-proof". If you want to strictly enforce respondent uniqueness, make sure that the survey software allows you to send unique URLs to every email recipient. It is the only "full-proof" method of enforcing respondent uniqueness.

    Response Collection

    • Email notification upon response submission - This allows you to get email notifications when a respondent completes a survey. It is the only way to get the responses with survey softwares that don't store them in a database. But it is also offered as an addon by those that do store them in databases.

    Survey Analysis

    • Graphical reports - This allows you to graph the results and not all survey softwares have this feature. If you like to see results in neat-looking graphs, make sure that the survey software has this feature. Check out the sample reports; most companies have them on their website. Or better yet, try out the product and generate them yourselves!

    • Advanced analysis features (cross-tabulation, sub-set analysis, 360 degree feedback, etc) - These allow you to perform advanced analysis on the results. Cross-tabulation allows you to relate the responses of one question to those of another. Sub-set analysis allows you to perform analysis on a sub-set of the responses by filtering out certain responses. These are definitely "premium" features and will impact the price.

    • Export data - This allows you to export the responses so you can do analyses in your favorite tool, like Excel or SPSS. Make sure that the survey software has this feature, especially if it doesn't natively support the advanced analyses that you want to .

    source: http://www.streetdirectory.com/travel_guide/print_article.php?articleId=2243

    Why More and More People Are Using Online Survey Software

    We live in a world packed with data – and making sense of all the information on offer is a huge part of forming successful strategies for everything from product launches to sale marketing and even making decisions on training and education. One of the most effective ways to obtain and manage feedback, comments and customer satisfaction is through the use of online surveys. Because we’re more connected today than ever before, odds are your customers would welcome the opportunity to complete a questionnaire online over spending time standing with pen and paper in hand to provide the same information. What’s more, taking online surveys is a growing leisure activity. Many organisations pool surveys and pay people who match the profile of the target audience to complete them. This guarantees you useful data, because the participants are engaged and specifically sought out to complete your survey.

    Online Surveys for Research
    An easily-accessible means of collecting and interpreting information about your customers, products and website visitors is key to making the most of your resources. So whether you’re looking for feedback from your customers or demographic information on your audience, an online survey can generate serious results. And, with the popularity of online surveys on the rise, there are a number of services available to streamline the survey making process. Some online survey software provides you with tools to track and analyse the data you’re collecting on the fly – allowing you to interpret the results on demand, and make alterations to the survey itself if the data you’re receiving doesn’t meet your needs.

    Options for Conducting Online Surveys
    There are a number of ways to structure an online survey. The key to saving time in survey design is to think carefully about what you want to learn. Once you know what you need to know, it’s relatively simple to craft a survey from a standard template – often, these templates will include common questions with standard multiple choice answers. After you’ve designed your survey, you’ll need to consider how it will be delivered. Ask yourself whether it’s appropriate to email your customers, or if your site visitors would rather have the option of clicking a link to obtain the survey. Other options for survey delivery include providing kiosk-style access to surveys on a central computer, offering the surveys on classroom desktops and even having the survey window launch at random or deliberate points on your website. Harnessing the power of online survey software puts all these options at your fingertips.

    Success Through Online Surveys
    A large part of success is understanding what motivates your target audience – and to get to the root of this, you’ll need to ask a lot of questions. Why did they opt not to make a purchase, who chooses blue over green, what are the demographics of our client base - they’re all important questions, and they’re all easy to find answers to. By designing an online survey that’s easy for users to complete and simple for your own staff to interpret results from, you’ll empower your entire organisation. The added benefit of an online survey software is that the data you retrieve is easy to manage – no more wading through piles of paper with illegible handwriting, the data is just there on the screen for you to review.

    source: http://www.esurveys.com/survey-articles/survey-software/why-online-survey-software-070523/page1.html

    What to Look for in an Online Survey Software Service

    Once you’ve made the decision to start conducting online surveys, there’re a few more points to consider. Finding the right online survey software service can take a lot of the hassle out of conducting surveys, and collating data – leaving you free to focus on keeping your business running. A good online survey software service is flexible, allowing your surveys to grow and change as your business needs evolve. So, to find the best online survey software service, you’ll want to ask a few questions before settling on a solution.

    How Time Consuming is the Survey Making Process?
    One of the keys to getting the best result from your online surveys is streamlining the process of creating the surveys your customers and visitors will receive. An online survey software tool that takes up half a day to create a survey is counter productive – you might as well get your secretary out on the street with a clipboard to ask people random questions. A good online survey software solution can help you craft a professional, user-friendly online survey in minutes by using stock templates that can be easily personalized. When comparing online survey software services, try the demos on offer – odds are if you get bored or confused doing a ‘free trial’ survey, the tool isn’t right for you and the surveys produced won’t be enticing for your customers. Always seek out services that offer a trial or demo free of charge to see how flexible the product on offer really is; but, don’t be put off if the demo version of the survey software is in some way limited.

    Is the Online Survey Software Service Flexible?
    Any good business person has a vision of the future – and whether you’re using online surveys to tailor product launches or gain an insight to your clients, the survey software service you choose should be flexible. Online survey software services with built-in flexibility will allow you to create a number of different survey types tailored specifically to the needs of your projects, as well as providing you a variety of ways to view and display the results of your online surveys. Another important feature in terms of flexibility is how the survey itself is deployed – many online survey software suppliers are one-trick ponies, allowing you only one method of distributing the survey to your contacts. Seek out online survey software suppliers with a variety of options – invite participants to your survey by email, have the survey appear as a pop-up window or embed it in a webpage. Allowing you to provide surveys in different ways helps keep your customers interested in the online survey process – providing you with more consistent, reliable results for your efforts.

    What’s the Cost of the Online Survey Software Solution?
    Last but certainly not least, the price you pay for an online survey software package must be taken into account. Some firms charge a per-survey fee, others charge by the number of responses or participants and others offer a scalable service payable in monthly increments. The important thing here is to consider what your business needs – if the online survey software service you’re considering forces you to sign up for a full year but you’re uncertain of the success your surveys will face, find something a bit more flexible. An online survey service offering a selection of packages at variable price points is usually preferable as it allows you to try using a survey service for a month without any long-term commitment or penalty. Also, consider the time you or yoru staff will be putting into the survey-making process – a good, flexible online survey software service will save you time, which ultimately saves you money.
    source: http://www.esurveys.com/survey-articles/survey-software/what-to-look-for-in-online-survey-software-070602/page1.html

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