Just to be clear: WCC themselves weren't hacked. They use an external service called Typeform to manage feedback and user requests. You can read more about the general Typeform data breach on their website.
Try this: https://www.typeform.com/help/your-reports/
Scroll down to where it says "Share your reports publicly" and I think if you follow those steps you should be able to get a shareable link to a results page.
Tips:
If you just need forms that others can fill out, check Typeform:
You can create logic jumps that you can use to show/hide some form fields depending on the previous answers.
If you're trying to create a full website with this kind of functionality, check Wrodpress and have a look at different form plugins. There are a few different form builder plugins that offer conditional logic with a nice drag&drop editor.
You're going about this the wrong way. People aren't idiots but you still need to step them through things like this. What a "user journey" is can pretty easily be inferred but it's still not language that most people use so shouldn't just ask someone what their user journey is. You build a user journey, through a conversation with them. I'll add that people LOVE talking about shit like this. You just have to go about it the right way.
Also, are you planning to give people multiple turns at this? Personally I know that the way I buy a hyped Nike drop is completely different from the process that I go through to find a deal on a retro runner. So you should give people the option to share multiple journeys because no one is going to be comfortable defining themselves with one process.
This sub seems like it would be a great place to find participants but reddit's format is terrible for actually conducting research. Other design researchers have posted here before with links to a Google Form or some other survey platform and that seems like a pretty good way to gather data in lieu of actual interviews. Typeform is my personal favorite, and if you're really serious about it and possibly even have a budget, look at dscout, because it's amazing.
Source: Not technically a design researcher but I live in the neighborhood.
I think the core concept isn't anything new and has been done tons of times before, text games where the only game mechanic is to choose what to say etc. Given this it is entirely possible for you to do it. I highly recomend doing a MVP using a platform such as Typeform: https://www.typeform.com/
It will let you play test conversation branches without knowing code. You can also test some basic visuals, videos, etc. Good luck.
this is the base form https://etoro.typeform.com/to/sNbx0cIN
This is the form with fake email and username https://etoro.typeform.com/to/sNbx0cIN#username=FAKErandomUSERNAME&[email protected]
I allready voted my link, so can anyone confirm that their link says /to/sNbxocIN ? If they are alike, then there is no unique link.
The form is made on https://www.typeform.com/
from this article that interviews susan bennett about her work as well as the advances in technology that led to the development of siri:
"Apple never admitted that Susan was Siri’s voice, they never paid her beyond the hourly wage in the recording booth, and then–they dropped her. From the iOS7 onwards, all of the original Siri voices were replaced on new iPhones."
there's another really good interview with her and discussion about how our relationship with technology has evolved over time on this podcast. they also mention that different voices have been used since 2013.
Send organizations a link to a survey, and when they fill them out, these services will automatically populate this data in spreadsheets.
Typeform (Prettier than Google Forms)
I’ll give you an example for Starbucks.
Do you want a cold or hot drink?
With or without coffee?
Now you know the customer want a cold, blended drink with coffee. Now you can suggest flavors and sizes.
This limits the number of options for each question asked.
For your business:
At this point you can figure out they might want something between halloween and Christmas/New Years.
I’m not affiliated but TypeForms are very nice options for forms. Or you could build it into a few dozen pages.
Okay so I don't think people will mind doing your survey, but you really need to create a proper questionnaire.
I recommend Typeform or Google Forms are free, usable interfaces for building surveys. There's also Survey Monkey
Give them a link to a Typeform quiz that links to your Calendly.
I haven’t done it, but I assume you can set quizzes such that “if question X equals True, send user to link Y; else, display message Z.”
In my experience the best form software is Typeform. I am not sure what you have in mind with an app, but if people have to install an app (which is a significant barrier) then they can certainly open any mobile browser and access a fixed web page. Typeform provides a very comfortable UI for mobile as well as desktop.
>Google sheets will work just fine for this. The email gets captured in a cell in the sheet, and all info from the guest who submits the form is captured in one row.
Seconding this. I use forms to collect the info of people who attend a monthly support group. They google sheets populated wonderfully and all I have to do is copy the line of emails and paste them into an email.
If you really are struggling with the forms, I would also suggest looking into TypeForm, which is also great at collecting information and keeping it stored online and on a google spreadsheet. I use SS forms and typeform and prefer typeform so I can more easily access info.
I made a take-home salary calculator (deducts tax, pension, student loan etc from gross monthly salary), my own version of Typeform (didn't actually work as a form, but had all the same UI features), a journalist friend's WordPress blog, plus a really tiny project I did for Ford.
OlduvaiMan, thank you for your comment
>It's much easier to just use a star rating system where each star is a link to a landing page where that selection data can be processed and logged in your ESP.
Do you mean similar to this?
/to/EG?email=&score=10&plan=&country=&signup=
speaking of Dropbox, what is this style called that people like dropbox and typeform are doing? Kind of reminds me of the kanye album cover from 2016
Have you checked this out: https://stripe.com/subscriptions
It's Stripe's API specifically for subscriptions.
Also, I know TypeForm has some great integrations with Stripe if you don't want to code it yourself right now, and just get something out there.
Because of the responsive design it could be tricky as it will be optimized for each platform. You can find all the sizes on this help center article https://www.typeform.com/help/a/image-sizes-360029258012/
They're nicer than google forms (I think), they offer answers in excelform so easy to manage directly.
It worked fine. For those who don't use smartphones I generated a tinyurl and I included it on the magnet so it is easy to type in when on a computer.
For the save the dates I started with showing date & place, asked for full names and snail mail address details (so I could address the invitations properly) and if they had any questions.
For RSVPs I started with showing day's itinerary, I asked for e-mail address (for further comms & headcount), I asked for confirmation from main invited person (ceremony/ceremony+reception/reception only/none of it) and same question for their partner/+1 (I referred to as +1, which I only recently learned is a faux pas), and if they needed a room on prem (half of our invitees are from abroad).
When deadline for menu is nearer, I'll be sending out a mail with another link to the meal form.
Not sure if this applies to you but on my business website, we use Typeform to collect responses and details from customers. They actually have a little integration with Notion as well. I’ve also heard people using Zapier to send responses from Google Forms to notion but I don’t know the specific details. I hope this helps!
A suggestion.
You mentioned wanting to make the experience of voting more interactive and in-depth, so you could try the form creation tool, Typeform. https://www.typeform.com/
Just a suggestion, kudos for taking the initiative to do this. Hope this helps!
If you're talking about the last two questions with the tables I totally agree. Almost did the same thing.
OP you might try typeform if you want to get a getter completion rate - https://www.typeform.com/
I use and recommend TypeForm. It’s not native, but integrate nicely into SS (even the low discontinued templates) and is easy to use.
It sounds like you’re looking to create “logic jumps”, which Typeform offers. I use the forms on three separate websites. One is embedded onto a page of the site, one is linked to the announcement bar on another, and I have it as a button in the pop-up on another. Works great for me. Hope this helps.
Django is for making websites.
If you have something already working (congratulations!) and just want to add a form, Django isn't what you need. It's hard to know what to suggest without knowing what you want from the form submissions - just to store them somewhere for you to look at? do they need to be processed by code? does that need to happen "live" as they come in? do the results of the processing need to be displayed on the site? etc.
If all you want is to have a form which saves the submissions somewhere I'd look at something like https://www.typeform.com https://www.surveymonkey.com or https://www.google.co.uk/forms/about/
Hi u/Actualise101. We use Typeform for our surveys. It's like Google Forms but a much cleaner interface and it's a better experience for users.
You can learn more about Typeform here: https://www.typeform.com/
We also do not ask for personal financial information. We ask for an email so we can set up a phone call.
You can email me at diana [at] northone [dot] com if you have any more questions. :)
Unfortuntaely this survey requires the user to be logged into a Google account. No, thanks. There are privacy friendly alternatives out there. Please at least use something like typeform.com.
Also most colleges offer easy to use survey kits to their students. Please use them. If possible, data should travel only to the ones dissecting them.
That form they have is simply from TypeForm (https://www.typeform.com/). They make great multi-step forms. You can connect then resulting data to any turnkey website solution out there. No need to dev stuff if you just need a form and seo.
If it's just a form, I would honestly use https://www.typeform.com. They let you make really nice-looking forms and the Google Sheets integration is free. You can honestly just circulate a form link at the moment.
haha. yeah, i had a similar problem running operations at my last company. they wanted to implement a true SRE model, and I said sure - just give me the head count and i would be glad to have a system admin/developer on every one of your teams. Or, let's get an existing engineer some sys admin training and he can be your sre. Of course, yeah, that will probably cut into your productivity of product development.....soo......you still want do "SRE"?
Quickly they realized that Google's "SRE" model - pedantically implemented with dev/sys-admin skill cross overs - doesn't make sense for every organization.
I agree with your document approach, although no-one seems to ever want to fill them out and can never keep track of where they are. If solving for it today, I would probably setup a beautiful questionair using https://www.typeform.com/ It's surprising how beauty and simplicity can inspire good behavior from engineers. No one likes a fucking Jira form, bleh!
I think you are asking all the right questions though. good luck!
That's a cool story and it sounds like you can certainly compete on quality too :)
I'm not sure how much you are willing to spend to test ideas out, but if I were you I would just try to get some strangers to mail you their blades. To me that's the first "assumption" you can test out. Maybe you spend a hundred bucks to cover shipping for ~10 people, sharpen for free and do so when they fill out your survey/email gathering tool and provide feedback after. Or maybe that's finding two people to do this ~5 times each to test more of your subscription angle. There are pretty cool free tools for this ( https://www.typeform.com/)
Someone below mentioned hurdles like "...taxes (income, sales, etc), liability (might need to set up an LLC), setting up a web store and advertising costs, etc.". These are all valid but not super scary at least to test out the idea. If you go this route maybe ship with tracking numbers and insurance just in case? If someone gets their steel (or your steel) stolen off their porch when you mail it back, they'll be upset.
We use Typeform for our quizzes on Beardbrand and Typeform did a case study on us to share how we do things. Check it out here:
https://www.typeform.com/blog/inspiration/beardbrand-personality-quiz/
&
https://www.typeform.com/help/lead-generation-personality-quiz/
Vshred is built on Wordpress, so they're most likely using a plugin. Google "wordpress survey plugin" and take your pick.
Beardbrand is using Shopify, and they're using Typeform for their survey, see here: https://beardbrand.typeform.com/to/BjphSb
Check out Typeform for their service.
I see... Indeed, if we just put it in the "welcome" sticky thread, many people will miss it. Do you know about typeform? It's a popular tools to build free polls/surveys/contact forms, it would allow to easily build a good looking form to collect those domains, with lengthy enough description at the top, without needing to pay or host anything.
This sounds like a great event and, as an occasional organizer myself, I enjoyed reading your takeaways. I wish I had some cool Hearthstone Meetups in my city as well.
One tool that I have used before to survey my attendees is TypeForm. It let's you create a quick questionnaire/survey that looks very clean and is easy/responsive to use. I don't work for them or anything, so I recommend it purely based on my experience in using it.
In the future, I would also recommend collecting an email address of the attendees so you can contact them for the follow up survey. People who have feedback will gladly give it, and it may help you identify other pain points for future events. It's worth noting that if you're collecting email info, it's good practice not to send a ton of emails which can be resolved by assuring your attendees that you will only use it for the survey and for future events, with an option for them to opt-out.
Good luck in your future event-planning! :)
https://www.typeform.com/help/prevent-duplicated-submissions/
You can just do option 1...
You could try something like http://once.ly/index.html but I think you'd need to generate a URL for every single recipient- if that works for you, cool.
This also wouldn't prevent resubmission if people just copy the destination URL after going through the shortened link one time.
I really recommend the two options outlined by type form instead.
I'd say is mandatory, though your landing page needs a little bit more info. A picture (or mockup, 3D prototype, something if your product is not real yet), some info about it, etc. Right now it seems like a "hype" type of website, but that only works for iPhones and stuff that's already brand-recognized.
Chek other landing pages, I like the Typeform one, highly visual and gives a ton of info, but it doesn't work for every product. It seems that Pear Cards are some sort of motivational/inspirational cards for people to reflect about themselves and their actions, highlight that!
I made a quick mockup of what I associate with your brand and your cards, of course I'm NO web designer and I'm quite weak at art, but bear in mind that 99% of landing pages look the same.
Over @ r/bengals they run a weekly contest through Typeform. Looks like it would be easy to set up, and the results should be simple enough to sort & report with google docs.
Might want to take a look at TypeForms to see if that's what you're looking for. Otherwise you may need to get someone to build you a complete custom form using dynamic data to populate certain fields. I would suggest using WordPress + Gravity forms to build something more specific. Hope that helps!
Perhaps stating different theological questions with answers related to the positions each branch of common theological belief would be a more accurate and clear representation of the views of this sub rather than yes/no on these questions. I like the idea though.
Something along the lines of:
Are all people able to follow Christ or are there an elect people chosen by him for his kingdom? [word better obviously, probably with less implicit bias in the phrasing]
1: The Calvinist view, commonly held by reformed Protestant denominations; [then describe the position]
2: The Armenian view...
3: etc
4: Other: describe your view
If it seems daunting to accurately come up with the questions and theological positions, I'm sure you could request help in a post to fill in the positions from the community.
Also, try typeform for these kinds of things, it almost makes filling out the form engaging rather than a drag.
Congratulations for your achievement. I like your idea and your decision "I will not build any new features until ..." but I believe that you can improve a little more your survey, using typeform surveys. https://www.typeform.com
I think that to be relevant with what you talk about during these meetings you should reach the people who will come to them. This will help you to solve their problems, not 'average problems'. Ask the organizers about Facebook group link and ask there, then you will reach the real users and real problems they have. You can use Facebook for that and support it with some free questionnaire that you can do with FB, twitter or fre tolls like https://www.typeform.com/