Archive for the ‘Dial-in Surveys’ Category

Change Question Phrasing with Variations

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

We are pleased to add an easy-to-use interface for variations. These allow you to randomly rotate between different phrasings of the same question. This technique is used to address potential ordering bias by putting different options first, or for other methodological reasons.

variation

Our interface makes it easy to add a random variation. When editing your poll, just click on the new “variation” button, and a dialog pops up letting you provide an alternate phrasing. You may map between the variation’s options to the original answers (e.g. pressing “1″ in the original survey means “520 Bridge”, whereas pressing “2″ in a random variation might mean “520 bridge”). When you call in to record your survey, we will prompt you to record a variation just like any other question, e.g. “Please record question 2 with variation 1 at the beep..”

When someone takes a poll, we automatically pick between the original question and any random variations. For example, if a question has two random variations, one third of people will hear the original verison; one third will hear variation #1, and one third will hear variation #2. Later, when you dump your raw results, we will tell you who heard which variation.

Partying and Polling with Publicola

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

Publicola LogoSeattle is a hotbed for new media experiments, and Publicola is no different. It’s a politically focused blog run by former editors of The Stranger, has attracted a series of investors, and in just a year is read by everyone in Washington politics.

Last year we sponsored a poll that Publicola did for the Seattle Mayor’s race. It got so much coverage in other local media, and such a large surge in traffic to Publicola, that they decided to start running polls on a regular basis. So last night, at Publicola’s 1 year anniversary party at the Crocodile (with some great bands), we jointly announced plans to feature polls once or twice a month on Publicola’s website. A respected local polling firm, EMC Research, will help design and analyze results, and yours truly will be the engine that powers it all.

We love helping new media find cost effective tools to be able to compete with the big guys. The local TV stations can afford to purchase surveys from SurveyUSA, but until we arrived on the scene, innovative blogs like Publicola had no retort. Now they can participate too, and readers benefit from better reporting all around. We’re just happy to make it easy and affordable for anyone to gather data from the phone.

Powering good causes

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

Two very cool things happened yesterday: first we moved into our new offices in a historic building in downtown Seattle; and second, all the two dozen non-profits that live in our building threw a massive annual open house party spanning 14 floors with hundreds of people!

It’s clear that we’re housed in a building that has a great sense of community and purpose, and we wanted to give back to the festivities. With no time to throw our own little party, we instead decided to sponsor a contest to give away $200 to the one cause that got the most votes. But how to collect those votes in a huge party with lots of people?

Vance Contest Poster

That’s were Precision Polling came in. In less than 10 minutes we designed and recorded a survey that people could dial into to vote for their favorite org. We also created a poster to advertise the contest (see below), and gave it to the non-profits to post at their parties (they loved it).

As the evening went by, people dialed in to cast their votes. We could see who was leading in real-time from our iPhones, and at the end of the night could instantly announce the winner: GroundWire, a non-profit that helps other non-profits use technology to reach their goals. Congrats guys!

If you’re setting up a contest, or organizing an event where you want live participation, think about using Precision Polling. It takes minutes to setup, and at 10 cents a minute, it would take 100 calls for you to get charged just $10.