- From: Doug Schepers <schepers@w3.org>
- Date: Thu, 24 Jan 2013 18:29:41 -0500
- To: Andre Jay Meissner <ameissne@adobe.com>
- CC: Scott Rowe <scottrowe@google.com>, "public-webplatform@w3.org" <public-webplatform@w3.org>
Hi, Scott- Looks great! I think Jay has some good points. I noticed a couple of things, too: * #3 s/company/organization/ * Maybe tell people how many pages it is? * Move the last question, #39, to the 3rd page, to make the survey seem shorter... I always dread hitting 'continue' in surveys. Regards- -Doug On 1/24/13 5:22 PM, Andre Jay Meissner wrote: > Hey Scott, > > love to see this evolving + great work! Here are my comments: > > 1. As a rule of thumb, ideally, the first survey page should not > contain more than *one* absolute no brainer question. Something like > "yes I want to proceed/no", "I am male/female", "I like/dislike"... > sth like that. Do not ask for the userID as the first question, do > this as the LAST one (when the form is filled out. Yes, you can > invite for lunch at that later time as well ;))! > 2. I would move the whole "You and your work" section to the end. Ask > the private stuff in the end. > 3. #2 Designerdeveloper, Developerdesigner, Designstudent...? I suggest > to use checkboxes, not radios, here. Or provide a ton more options. > Or not ask for profession/job title, ask for experience > (checkboxes). Like that. > 4. I don't get the "(#!%*@!!!)" at #5 - sorry. > 5. #5: include "not sure" and/or "don't know" as options > 6. #6 needs more explanantion (like examples/links, imagine noobs > facing this question) and/or a "not sure" option > 7. #11: Huh??? If you want to do conditional question blocks maybe > phrase a bit different and/or ask this as one of the first questions? > 8. #12: hehe, date field, huh? ;)= > 9. #12ff: doublecheck "Doc Sprint" spelling > 10. #14/15: consider people answering the question AT the Doc Sprint > 11. #33 link to examples (and do that with similar stuff as well) > 12. #34 wow, that's hard to answer for people NOT following all our > conversations... ;)= > 13. #33, #34, #35, +… add a "don't know" option == "Hey Scott I didn't > get the question but WANT to answer and help you to improve this survey! > > In general, with close to 40 questions, consider to let the user decide > if he/she wants to take the short or long route as a first or second > question, and build a conditional route to the longer version after > approx. 2 minutes into the survey. It's much harder to build that path, > but quite doable on this topic - and it will deliver better results as > if people begin to rush through non-mandatory fields to get to an end... > > HTH *Jay > > > Von: Scott Rowe <scottrowe@google.com <mailto:scottrowe@google.com>> > Datum: KW 4 | Donnerstag, 24. Januar 2013 22:56 > An: "public-webplatform@w3.org <mailto:public-webplatform@w3.org>" > <public-webplatform@w3.org <mailto:public-webplatform@w3.org>> > Betreff: Contributor survey > Neu gesendet von: "public-webplatform@w3.org > <mailto:public-webplatform@w3.org>" <public-webplatform@w3.org > <mailto:public-webplatform@w3.org>> > Neu gesendet am: KW 4 | Donnerstag, 24. Januar 2013 22:57 > > Please review this WPD Contributor Survey <http://goo.gl/i0nFV> and > append your comments and suggestions to this thread. > > Note: this is not yet a formal survey. If you do submit it, your > responses won't count. We will ask you to formally take the survey > as soon as it is finalized. > > The purpose of this survey is to start developing some metrics > around the community composition (who are you people?), doc sprints, > site usability, and community involvement. > > Many of the questions anticipate (ahem) improvements, and the survey > will establish a baseline for future surveys. So don't be surprised > if we ask questions that cover obviously broken functionality. > > The survey will be available via a link on WPD (haven't decided > where yet), and I'm planning on testing the survey at the Berlin doc > sprint. > > Thanks! > +Scott > > >
Received on Thursday, 24 January 2013 23:29:51 UTC