Slang, Industry Jargon, and Colloquialisms – One of the Top 10 Mistakes Survey Writers Make
Do you use slang, industry jargon, colloquialisms, or catchphrases in your questions? If so, you are committing one of the most common Survey mistakes.
Do you use slang, industry jargon, colloquialisms, or catchphrases in your questions? If so, you are committing one of the most common Survey mistakes.
Do you provide incomplete or overlapping responses to your multiple choice questions? If so, you are committing one of the most common Survey mistakes.
For the second year in a row Maven, the world’s first knowledge logistics platform, has been selected to the AlwaysOn Global 100 companies to watch.
Maven Selected by AlwaysOn as one of the AlwaysOn Global 100 Companies to Watch Read More »
Do you use vague language in your Survey questions? If so, you are committing the Survey writing mistake that led to the infamous Soap Survey disaster.
Vague Language – One of the Top 10 Mistakes Survey Writers Make Read More »
Do you use compound questions in your Surveys? If so, you are committing one of the top survey mistakes and setting yourself up for poor results.
Compound Questions – One of the Top 10 Mistakes Survey Writers Make Read More »
Do you use emotive language in your Survey questions? If so, you are unfairly influencing answers to match your viewpoint and adding bias to the results.
Emotive Language – One of the Top 10 Mistakes Survey Writers Make Read More »
Did you forget to define the units in your number questions? If so, then you can forget about getting accurate and meaningful Survey data.
Number Questions with No Units – One of the Top 10 Mistakes Survey Writers Make Read More »
Do you ask leading questions in your surveys? If so, you’re committing one of the biggest survey mistakes. Learn why you should never ask leading questions.
Leading Questions – One of the Top 10 Mistakes Survey Writers Make Read More »
Maven launched on May 8, 2009. Here’s to five years of making people smarter!
Happy Launchiversary! Read More »
One of the toughest things about my job at Maven is watching very qualified people miss out on big opportunities because they didn’t respond quickly enough to an invitation to consult. It happens almost every day. You see, our customers typically want to speak with someone (or read Survey responses) RIGHT NOW, and the fastest