Support Forums : Preventing Abandoned Surveys

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Preventing Abandoned Surveys

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3:37
May 30, 2007


TARE

New Member

posts 2

Hi. My survey was abandoned by every single person who looked at it.

I thought something was wrong, so I went in and tried it myself and found that everything works, so it’s not a problem with surveygizmo, it’s a problem with my survey.

It’s short (only one page), includes a request at the top to hit “submit” even if it’s incomplete, none of the questions are “required”, it allows the person surveyed to comment, none of the questions ask for specific identifying information on the survey taker.

Any ideas why my survey is getting abandoned by every single person who looks at it?

How do I encourage people to take the survey and to actually follow through?

3:42
May 30, 2007


Christian Vanek

Moderator

Cambridge, MA

posts 784

Tare,

Would you mind posting a link to your survey so I can take a look. You can email it to support [at] sgizmo.com if you’d prefer and I can pick it up from there.

Also, is your survey embeded on a webpage, or is it a stand alone survey?

There are many ways you can increase the likelyhood of someone taking your survey — once I see it I’ll be able to give you my best advice.

-Christian

3:51
May 30, 2007


TARE

New Member

posts 2

Here is the link to the actual survey:

http://pro7.sgizmo.com/survey.php?SURVEY=XIWK0W18JMBJVCO7E3HU0XC9F29MRK-8884-915020&pswsgt=1180264832

The survey is not embedded on my site, but there’s a widget/button on my blog that takes the person to the link. You can see it by going to

http://www.threat-assessment.blogspot.com

On the right hand side, in the sidebar, there is a red box that says “Workplace Violence: Take the Survey”

Any suggestions at all from anyone on improving the survey, visibility, or anything else, would be greatly appreciated.

4:47
May 30, 2007


Christian Vanek

Moderator

Cambridge, MA

posts 784

Hi there!

My first suggestion is to place the Survey Link (image) in a more prominent location. Preferably above the fold (in the first screen grab of your website).

You might want to make your image a little clearer or just use plain text for the invite.

I think most of your abandons are currently caused by web crawlers (like google or yahoo) that are indexing your blog. You can add an attribute to your html inside the anchor tag it’s called rel=”no-follow” — that tells google not to follow that particular link.

You might also want to include a header graphic at the top of your survey, something to catch the eye and lead them into the survey. It should be as relevant to workplace violence. I usually look for these images on iStockPhoto (great site).

I’d also put a line at the top of your survey telling them how long the survey should take. Something like “This is a one page survey that should take no longer than 3 minutes.” You can also add some line breaks to your intoductory text to make it less of a “block” (people hate reading online for some reason).

You might also wan to publicize your survey a bit. Do you have any fellow bloggers that might be willing to post an invite to your survey on their blogs? Maybe a Google Group? Community website? Etc.

If you want to track what responses come from which source you can just tag the survey URL when you give it to their webmaster, like this:

http://s-xiwk0-8884.sgizmo.com/?source=google

SurveyGizmo will handle the tracking any URL variable that you pass to it (great for tacking Adword campaigns, btw).

Actually, that’s another idea (if your budget allows) you can post an Adword listing asking people to take the survey.

Those are some ideas off the top of my head. If anyone else on the forums has some suggestions I encourage you to post them!

-Christian

3:29
June 4, 2007


Narisa

Member

posts 13

Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox also offers some usability tips.

Summary:
To ensure high response rates and avoid misleading survey results, keep your surveys short and ensure that your questions are well written and easy to answer.

2:11
October 11, 2007


velmas

New Member

posts 2

I’d like to add a solution option for preventing abandoned surveys: make the survey the landing page of the website and completing the survey grants entry into the website.

I haven’t tried this option yet, but I’d like to know what everyone thinks about the idea. Will it increase my rate of responses on my 3 question survey?

8:36
October 12, 2007


velmas

New Member

posts 2

Hi Christian,

What do you think of my idea of creating a website landing page around my 3 question survey? Completing the survey would grant entry into my fashion e-zine. I would love to read your comments on it. I need to find ways of incouraging women to complete my surveys and I’m open to suggestions.

3:04
October 15, 2007


Scott McDaniel

Moderator

posts 94

Hi Velmas

That could work. Testing it and giving it a try would be the best evidence.

We do have a lot of people using our tool to power landing pages that create some sort of a barrier page to their offer.

Good luck

Scott

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