March 24th, 2007 by Ed Halteman - A SurveyGizmo Survey Expert
We’re happy to welcome survey expert Ed Halteman to the SurveyGizmo family. Ed took his first course on survey design in 1978 and has designed and analyzed more than 250 surveys in the past 10 years. Ed, who has a master’s degree in applied mathematics and a Ph.D. in statistics, currently heads Survey Design and Analysis (SurveyDNA.com), a company he founded in January 2003. Here’s the first of many blog postings, articles and other forms of valuable insight Ed will be sharing with SurveyGizmo users.- Heidi
Who needs to do a Survey? I already have enough reports on my shelf!
Simply put, the ONLY person (or company) who might need to do a survey is someone who has a decision to make — a decision that will drive action. Even then, needing to make a decision is necessary, but it isn’t sufficient for creating a useful survey.
If you’ve done surveys, how many times have you said any of the following when the results came back?
- “Now I know what I should have asked” or
- “I don’t know if I believe these answers. Let me see who answered this way” or
- “Wow this is great information! I’m going to show it to so-and-so and see what they think” or
- “There is a lot of information here. I’m going to set aside some time to go over the survey report next week.”
These are the warning signs. The survey report is headed for the shelf!
How do you avoid ending up with another survey report on the shelf and no usable information? There are no guarantees, but you can improve your chances greatly by asking yourself if you need to do a survey and pinpointing which specific decisions you are trying to make. Then, go one step further and ask yourself how each survey question will be used to help you make those decisions.
Remember, focus pays off for surveys, just as it does in so many other areas. Stick to what you need. As we say in the business, “nice-to-know” doesn’t count. With the right approach, the survey itself won’t be your main focus — making decisions and taking action will be!
Do yourself and your respondents a favor. Save a survey for when you have a decision to make!
Dr. Ed, “A SurveyGizmo Survey Expert”
Ed Halteman - A SurveyGizmo Survey Expert
Ed has a master's degree in applied mathematics, and a Ph.D. in statistics, and he has specialized in survey design for over 10 years. Ed currently heads
Survey Design and Analysis (SurveyDNA.com) founded in January 2003 and is available for comprehensive survey design services.
Contact them
for help getting more out of your next survey.
We welcome your ideas for Ed’s contributions to our site. If you have any questions, comments or suggestions, please email us at support@sgizmo.com
.
March 23rd, 2007 by Christian Vanek
Last week at SxSW Scott and I agreed not to post boring “feature release” blog posts anymore. But I’m going to turn right around and make an exception in this case, because exporting to SPSS is a long-awaited feature for many of our research users.
For those of you not familiar with SPSS, it is a very popular (or at least widely used) statistical analysis package that researchers and analytical marketers use to crunch up survey data into meaningful stats.
So, without further ado: I am happy to announce that you can now export SurveyGizmo data into SPSS. Not just in a limited fashion, but complete with variable labels and named values (which makes data cleanup far, far easier).
The export option is available under “Reports” for any survey. This feature is available for our Enterprise clients.
Happy surveying!
Christian Vanek
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Christian is a founding partner of
SurveyGizmo, CTO, and the lead software engineer. He comes from an 11-year consulting background focusing on marketing and content management tools. Christian is based out of Cambridge, MA.
March 16th, 2007 by Scott McDaniel
SurveyGizmo just got a nice little write up in the Boulder County Business Report and I thought I would share it with all of you. Reporter Hilary Lane did a great job. She went above and beyond by interviewing some customers like me.dium as well as tracking down an analyst from Gartner Research -
“They seem to have better functionality and a more complete package than their competitors,” said Estaben Kolsky, research director for Stamford, Conn.-based Gartner Inc. “Their biggest challenge is marketing and sales. If they can get people to use them, their five-year estimate of several million dollars is realistic.”
Read the article at Boulder County Business Report: SurveyGizmo makes online surveys, polls a snap
Scott McDaniel
Scott is the lead designer at
SurveyGizmo. He has been passionate about designing friendly, usable web applications for over 10 years at companies such as MarketingSherpa, LexisNexis, MessageMedia, and DoubleClick. He can also rarely be found updating his blog at
scottmcdaniel.com.
March 1st, 2007 by Scott McDaniel
From time to time (okay, it’s actually on a consistent basis!), you send us questions regarding SurveyGizmo’s design features, tracking capabilities, reporting options and more. So we’ve gathered together the most frequently asked questions and posted them in an updated FAQ. If you want to know about system requirements, design customizations, publishing a survey, integrating with outside applications, etc., this is a great place to start.
This list will continue to grow. If you have any suggestions for items to include, we’d love to hear from you. Please email us with your input.
Scott McDaniel
Scott is the lead designer at
SurveyGizmo. He has been passionate about designing friendly, usable web applications for over 10 years at companies such as MarketingSherpa, LexisNexis, MessageMedia, and DoubleClick. He can also rarely be found updating his blog at
scottmcdaniel.com.