- Spend less time on marketing. Improve your product. It's a no brainer \
- Get out of your office. Now. Please:-) Visit Ramu makhija, Ray jones....
- Stop smoking
- Print less, pitch more
- Internalize Guy Kawasaki and Jagdish Sheth
- Write more and work less. Blog.
- Join Linked. What, you haven't?
- Comment Here:-)
Showing posts with label Humor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Humor. Show all posts
Mar 24, 2008
Marketing "Mantra's"
Mar 21, 2008
"new" "guidelines" for "web design" and "web designers": part one
- Thou shall not use one more pixel than is required
- Thou sall not use one more kb than required
- Thou shall be a miser in colors
- Thou shall consult your SEO before design
- Thou shall not abuse thy usability folks
- Thou shall stray from the web safe palatte
- Thou shall learn web analytics
- Thou shall be detached from your design
- Thou shall learn to spell apophenia ( is my spelling correct?)
- Thou shall read Jagdish Sheth, and alvin toffler
- Thou shall stop talking about cognitive psychology
Aug 16, 2007
Surveys: What “not” to do : part 1. keep it Brief
More and more people are realizing the need for “measuring” customer satisfaction, or the “User experience” of their websites. It is a good trend nevertheless I have seen many worrying and erroneous usage of this technique. Now, this post is not a tutorial for correctly designing surveys, I am sure there are many books and articles out there.
What I plan to do is to have to series of post which will each point a major flaw in survey design, with a slight dash of sarcasm. I will not give screenshots, and even if I do, I will obfuscate the screenshots.
Why is this a series and not a single post? Many reasons. No, this is not a secret conspiracy to take over the world, or any means for world domination.
- One post will be too way too long. Blogger’s like it short and sweet (see, size does matter)
- It is but a nice way to cure my blogging block (writer’s block) and one point at a time means I have a lot of fodder for many posts. (Look ma, I do think)
- Also, it gives me a chance to ingest a bit of humor in my writings. Jammy, Rahul, you are supposed to laugh at the posts. Not me!)
Size does matter:
1) Keep the survey brief: Why?
I am your customer. I am looking for some information/ product/completing my task on your site and you expect me to leave my tasks to spend my valuable time on your survey so that this information can help you?
Get the point. No?
Now go on, go on, and finish the 54Th question for your next survey.
8-10 questions are a decent number. Anything more than that will cause surveytigue (survey fatigue) and your customer will lose interest. And remember, you read about the word surveytigue here at masoodnasser.blogspot.com
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