Customer Online Survey
Uncover New Profit Channels for Your Business
by Conducting an Online Survey
If you're in business, you already
know how essential it is to "listen" to your customers. What you
may NOT have realized, though, is that there is no better way
to truly understand your customers' deepest desires (the
wants and needs that guide and motivate each and every one of
their buying decisions) than by conducting a survey.
A carefully constructed survey can
be a powerful tool for striking up a personal conversation with
your customers to learn exactly how they feel about your company,
products, and services -- valuable insights that give you the
opportunity to turbo-charge your profits by:
- Gaining a greater understanding
of your potential buyers' interests, challenges, values, and
lifestyles and using this information to make adjustments to
your product or service (or the way it's packaged) to increase
usability and appeal.
- Re-writing the benefits emphasized
in your salescopy to focus closely on those that are of greatest
interest to your target market.
- Discovering new or under-served
micro-niches (those tiny groups
of customers who are typically ignored by large corporations)
and tapping into these additional profit channels.
- Spotting fads and market trends
quickly and capitalizing on them before your competitors
do.
... all without
the typical costs associated with offline surveys, all within
a matter of a few days (or even a few hours)!
Of course,
writing and distributing surveys has become a bit of a science.
Questions need to be carefully worded to avoid biasing the respondent.
Formatting issues need to be addressed before you can start writing
as this will affect the layout of your questions. And questions
of how you will distribute your survey need to be carefully researched
to avoid some dangerous (and potentially costly) pitfalls.
Recently,
when we put together our own Internet Marketing Center survey
(which you can view now by visiting http://www.marketingtips.com/survey)
we did extensive research into survey development and distribution.
And while we already had quite a bit of experience designing surveys
that get results, we were a bit shocked by some of our findings
regarding the latest survey distribution solutions.
So we thought
we'd pass this information along to you in the form of five simple
steps that will allow you to create and distribute your own survey
to generate the highest response... while avoiding the costs,
pitfalls, and hassles that can be associated with this process.
Step
#1 -- Defining Your Objective:
Before you
start writing your survey questions, it's important that you take
time to clearly map out your objectives: what do you want to accomplish
with your survey? Do you want to:
- Learn what your existing customers think of your product or
service?
- Find out what your visitors think of your web site's functionality?
- Discover whether or not your newsletter subscribers are satisfied
with the articles you've been giving them?
- Uncover the objections your potential customers have to buying
your product?
- Research market trends and find out whether or not the product
you've been thinking about developing is going to be a big hit
or a huge flop?
Whatever it is, it's extremely important
that you clearly define your objective right from the start
as this will affect every step you take from that point forward,
from deciding who will receive your survey to writing your questions
to choosing a method of distribution.
In fact, once
you've defined your goals, it should be abundantly obvious who
your survey will target, be it your customers, your newsletter
subscribers, your web site visitors, visitors to another web site
or newsgroup, etc...
And once you know WHO you're going
to be surveying, deciding HOW you're going to survey them becomes
much easier. If you're targeting your web site visitors, your
survey could appear as a pop-up on your web site. If you're targeting
your existing customers, you could send your survey via e-mail.
If you're researching market trends and don't have an opt-in e-mail
list of your own, you might purchase ad space in an industry newsletter
and include a link to your survey.
Whatever
it is you want to know, whoever you want to ask, and however you
want to collect the data, by defining your objective and then
building your survey with it in mind at all times, you'll save
yourself loads of time and money. Plus, you'll also ensure
that the results you get provide you with the strategic information
you need to make smart business decisions and increase your online
income.
Step
#2 -- Writing Effective Questions:
The questions
you write will ultimately determine the usefulness of the answers
you collect, so pay careful attention not only to what you ask,
but how you ask it. Poorly worded questions can result in useless,
biased answers and can even cause participants to lose interest
and leave your survey incomplete.
Points to
keep in mind when writing your questions include:
- Keep your questions short and to the point. By using
simple language and avoiding jargon and acronyms, you make your
questions easy to read and increase the probability that your
respondents will complete your survey.
- Avoid writing questions that make assumptions. For
example, you shouldn't ask "Is your dog male or female?"
without leaving room for the possibility that respondents may
not own a dog.
- Avoid asking leading questions such as: "Through
phone conversations with my customers, I've learned that most
people prefer to receive their newsletter in text format as
opposed to HTML. How do you prefer to receive your newsletter?"
The stated preference will bias the results.
- Avoid questions that ask respondents to reveal sensitive
or embarrassing information (or if you must ask the question,
place it towards the end of your survey, after a few non-threatening
but related questions).
- Limit the number of open-ended questions you ask
(i.e., questions that require a written response) as these are
less likely to be answered. Well-written multiple choice and
scaled questions (i.e., questions that ask the respondent to
rate something) are generally preferred because they're faster
to answer.
Most important, be careful that you
don't succumb to the temptation to ask every question you can
think of, regardless of whether or not it contributes to your
objectives. Do you REALLY need to know the middle name of their
grandmother's first cousin? Probably not...
The fewer questions you ask, the
more responses you'll receive. And more responses equals more
accurate, more useful data!
Step
#3 -- Formatting Your Survey:
The way you
design your overall survey and lay out each question is going
to have a huge impact on how your questions are interpreted and
whether or not your survey is completed.
Designing
your questions:
Obviously,
how you design and format your questions is going to be affected
by how you choose to distribute your survey. If you're e-mailing
the survey to your customers in a plain text format, you're going
to be more restricted in the types of questions you can ask because
there are only a handful of ways you can format the answers. On
the other hand, if your survey will be Web based, you have the
option of using bolding, color, and graphics to enhance readability.
Of course,
limitations aside, you have quite a few formatting options to
choose from when designing your survey questions, including:
- Multiple
choice questions
- Open-ended
questions
(e.g. "What do you think about...? Answer:_______")
- Rating
scales (e.g. "On a scale of 1 to 10 -- 1 being Strongly
Agree and 10 being Strongly Disagree -- do you think...")
- Agreement
scales (e.g. "The sky is blue." Do you: Strongly Agree
/ Agree / Not Sure / Disagree / Strongly Disagree)
- Check boxes
(e.g. "Check the statement that most closely describes
how...")
As I've already
mentioned, you'll want to limit the number of open-ended questions
you ask, as respondents typically prefer multiple choice style
questions. However, when presenting possible answers to multiple
choice questions, it's usually a good idea to include an "Other"
option; this leaves room for answers and possibilities that you
may not have thought of.
Ordering
your questions:
While you shouldn't immediately bombard
your respondents with your toughest questions, you should try
to place the questions that you most want answered closer to
the beginning of your survey as opposed to the end. That way,
if respondents decide not to complete the entire survey, at least
you'll have answers to your most important questions.
Of course,
with that said, you should be sure to start your survey with a
few easy questions that get the respondent comfortable answering
your questions and develop a rapport with them. This will help
to ensure that when you ask the tough questions, respondents won't
shy away and you'll get more accurate, honest answers.
Also, be careful
to ask questions in a logical order. Just like good writing is
structured to guide the reader through the text, a well-designed
survey flows naturally through a logical sequence of questions
that keeps respondents answering. By jumping around, asking unrelated
questions, you'll confuse people and drive them away.
Step
#4 -- Deciding How You'll Distribute It:
You basically
have three choices for distributing your survey. You can:
a) Send
the survey directly in an e-mail.
Obviously,
the biggest advantage of doing your survey by e-mail is that it's
FREE (assuming you have your own opt-in e-mail list). You can
design your survey in just a few short hours, e-mail it to your
customers and subscribers, and start receiving results within
hours.
The drawbacks
are that you're limited in the questions you can ask by the plain
text format; you must enter the results you generate by hand into
a database or spreadsheet, which can be very time-consuming; and
compiling and analyzing the results can be confusing (especially
if you're not very good at math).
If you have
a few hundred customers or subscribers, and you have only 10 to
15 questions you'd like to ask, an e-mail survey might be the
most cost-effective choice for you. However, if you want to survey
a larger group, or if you'd like to include more customization,
a web-based survey may better suit your needs.
b) Host
the survey on your web site.
The beauty
of designing a web-based survey is that you can not only include
HTML enhancements like color and graphics, you also have the option
of making it "dynamic," which means you can customize
the questions each person will answer based on their responses
to a few key questions.
For example,
if you sold three products on your web site, you might want to
ask different questions about each. Rather than forcing all of
your survey respondents to wade through questions about products
they don't own, you could design a dynamic survey that asks "Which
of the following products do you own? Check all that apply."
Based on the respondent's answer, the dynamic survey would automatically
customize the questions that follow.
Unfortunately,
the do-it-yourself web-based survey can be really difficult to
implement unless you're prepared to hire a programmer or you have
advanced programming skills yourself beause:
- Building
your own survey to customize the questions to individual respondents,
track the results, store the results, and the manipulate them
into useful reports is a huge undertaking.
- The survey
software that's available (ranging in price from $299 to $799+)
typically needs to be customized, which once again means you
need advanced programming skills.
... Quite
frankly, unless money isn't an object and you have a skilled programmer
at your disposal, hosting your survey directly on your site really
isn't worth the time and expense given the third-party solutions
that are now available.
c) Use
a third-party survey provider who will host the survey on their
site.
If you are
planning to survey more than a couple of hundred people, a third-party
survey provider is the route I'd personally recommend you go (in
fact, this is how we recently implemented our own survey) -- you'll
get all the benefits of a fully-customized, dynamic survey
with real-time tracking and analysis of your results without
the programming headaches and expense.
Depending
on the survey provider you choose, you'll either be asked to fill
out your questions in a special template they'll give you OR you'll
be asked to send them your questions in a simple Word document.
Either way, the survey provider will look after all of the technical
"behind-the-scenes" programming issues.
If you have
a large number of opt-in e-mail subscribers that you plan to survey,
another big benefit of third-party survey hosting is that you
don't get stuck with the increased bandwidth charges that
come with hosting the survey on your own site.
Plus, even
though your survey is hosted on their web site, your survey
respondents will never know they've left your web site. Most
survey providers offer full customization of your survey with
your logo, your graphics, and your web site colors, all of which
appears in a frame set on your site (your survey is still hosted
on the survey provider's site, but the survey pages are "called"
from their site into a frame set on your site).
Of course,
with all of that said, when we were preparing to choose a third-party
provider for our most recent survey, we spent a lot of time carefully
researching all of the options available, and based on what we
learned, I would like to offer you a couple of words of caution:
- You
should always remain 100% in control of your opt-in e-mail list.
To distribute your survey to your customers and subscribers,
some third-party providers will insist that you give them your
opt-in e-mail list. (This is especially common among "free"
and "low cost" providers.) Don't do it! This is your
private property and you have a responsibility to your customers
and subscribers to protect their personal information. Don't
hand this over to anyone, ever!
- Be wary
of those survey providers who offer "free" or "low
cost" services. There are frequently hidden costs that
can snowball very quickly. For example, some survey providers
will quote you a price for 300 or 500 or 1,000 responses, but
then charge you a fee of as much as $1.60 (or more) per response
over your quota.
Deals that
sound too good to be true usually are. The reality is, if you
have more than a few hundred subscribers and you plan to ask more
than 10 basic questions, you need a professional survey provider,
not some $20 deal that requires you hand over your entire opt-in
e-mail list to strangers, and not some service that charges you
"per response" over a set quota.
The third-party
provider we finally settled on to host our survey had none of
those "surprise charges," and we maintained full control
of our customer and subscriber list. We just sent them a Word
document with all of our questions, and they put together a very
professional-looking, dynamic survey using the logos, colors,
and design we wanted. They
even double-check and test the logic of your survey questions
to make sure everything flows and makes sense.
I think what
really impressed us most about this company is that they're not
intent on two-bitting you to death with "extra" charges
for the essential services you need. In fact, we found them to
be priced 30-50% lower than their closest competitors. Plus, they're
really dedicated to ensuring you get the best results from your
survey and their customer service far exceeded our expectations.
If you'd like
to check them out for yourself, you can visit http://www.marketingtips.com/livesurveys.
Right now, they're offering a $100 gift certificate to anyone
who tries out their demo, to be used towards your first market
research project with them. Honestly, after the endless hours
of extensive research we put into this, I really can't recommend
anyone higher.
Step
#5 -- Persuading Them to Participate
Once you're
ready to launch your survey, you'll need to turn your attention
to persuading your customers and subscribers to actually fill
it out. Here are a few suggestions for maximizing your response
rate:
- Offer an
incentive like a free gift or enter respondents into a special
prize draw (this will increase the response you receive by as
much as 17%).
- Let respondents
know that their answers will be kept in the strictest of confidence.
- Tell them
you want their honest opinions, good and bad.
- Provide
your contact information for those people who want to verify
where the survey is coming from.
- End your
survey with a nice thank you that lets respondents know you've
received their answers and when they can expect to receive their
gift, or that you've entered them in your special prize draw.
These simple,
but effective little steps can have a dramatic impact on the overall
response you receive to your survey. Remember, offer a benefit
to your customers and subscribers that rewards them for participating
and lets them know that you'll be using the results to improve
your product, service, or newsletter to benefit them!
Final
Thoughts:
Before
you launch your survey on a wide scale, do a small test to
a handful of participants to make sure all your questions
are understandable and not offensive in any way. If the wording
or layout of any questions need to be tweaked, it's better to
find this out before you send your survey to your entire opt-in
list.
Then, once the results are in, don't
let this valuable information sit idly, gathering dust on your
desk. Use it as a guide for improving the vitality of your business.
Now is not the time to be sensitive or offended if some of the
answers appear overly critical or unreasonable. Take deep breaths
and make objective decisions about whether or not there are areas
of your business that could be improved.
Even small changes to your sales copy,
your packaging, your web site design, etc... can make a BIG difference
in the sales you close. Use this competitive intelligence to stay
on top of how your customers and subscribers are feeling about
your offer and your business. And then use this information to
prosper and grow!
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