Nerissa — she's an author.

CategoryUX Marketing

Using survey results to start a conversation.

In my past life as an associate at a PR agency, I was on the account team for a major credit card company that did a survey of Canadian small business owners every quarter. After the survey was complete and results compiled, I was responsible for pitching local and national media outlets to let them know about the results. The CEO was involved in the whole survey process, so it was natural to have him speak to media.

After my third or fourth round on the project, I asked more senior co-worker on the team if there was another way we could use the results. My mistake may have been speaking off the cuff, because when my coworker asked: “what do you mean?” I didn’t have an answer.

Well now, I have one… or a few.

With so much time and money invested in creating a survey, getting respondents, compiling results and everything else, there has to be a way to get more ‘bang for the buck’.

Here are a some ideas on how survey results can start conversations and be used to share information with an online audience.

First, tracking and getting involved in relevant conversations or groups online before the survey starts and while it’s underway can be a great way to prepare for when the release goes out. The last thing you want to do is start talking to your audience only to push a product or your company.

Then once the survey’s out, start a conversation:

  1. Ask followers and fans what they think. Is there a topic covered in the survey that could be of interest to your audience? Or a certain segment of your audience? Take the opportunity to ask for general opinions and get feedback.
  2. Go beyond spitting out a stiff, scientific list of results and tell some stories. How did you and your team come up with the idea? Did anything interesting come out of the survey that didn’t make it into the release? These juicy bits are great to share in a blog post or podcast.
  3. While Twitter and Facebook might be great to ask a question + get an answer, consider using forums if you want more of a conversation. Especially if you want to reach out to a network that might not be familiar with your company or products.
  4. Are pictures or music important to your survey? Consider making a song list or posting images to Pinterest. For example, a Songza list connected to a survey that finds people work out best to music that’s over 180 beats per minute. Or linking a list of recipes on Yummly using the foods in this survey that ranks 41 superfoods according to health benefits.
  5. This one is a stretch from #4, but it could be interesting. There’s a big app world out there. Maybe there’s an app that’s easily connected to some aspect of your results. Say you’re reading a blog post about this study that found many food trucks beat out restaurants when it came to food safety. Wouldn’t it be great to find out in the same post there’s a Street Food App?!

For more reading, check out this post on why ‘most social media marketing strategies are garbage’.

And it’s a little… sell-y, but here‘s a blog post by SurveyMonkey on surveys as conversations.

Happy surveying!

How responsive design can be used to target your mobile audience.

Last week at HackerYou we covered responsive design in all it’s glory. The main idea is nothing new. In… response… to trends in mobile browsing, developers are building sites that look beautiful regardless of screen size that the site is being viewed on.

This got me thinking about messaging, of all things. Mainly I started to wonder if the message of a site changes when it goes responsive.

As developers, we make decisions about how the content on a page will shift to accommodate small screen sizes. In general we want to make sure none of the information is lost when a site goes from a large screen to a tablet or mobile phone. But we still have to decide what information will be in view from first mobile-glance.

Using huge margins and padding all over a page is good for readability, but space is at a premium on smaller devices. Time is a premium too. People spend a lot of it on their phones, and mobile users are usually going somewhere quickly. It’s safe to assume that they’re looking for very specific information: hours of operation, a phone number, a map, the date of an event, etc.

Beyond simple changes that make a site 100% easier to view on a small device, like shrinking images, navigation menus and text, there’s the way content is laid out. Having those basic, ‘quick-hit’ pieces of information at the top or front and centre of the smaller versions of a site makes all the difference.

This is how you do responsive design. Smallest version of site includes info people on mobile devices are probably looking for.
This is how you do responsive design. Smallest version of this site for a wedding includes information guests and invitees are probably looking for if they’re on a mobile device.

The other thing I started thinking about after class was how responsive websites can offer unique marketing opportunities, not necessarily with changing information on the site, but using [or creating useful] content and arranging it on the site in a way that speaks directly to mobile users.

Take sites for web designers and developers as an example. Generally there’s a specific segment of the market looking at a site from a mobile phone. Someone who is looking at a web developers’ site from a mobile phone (or if they’re resizing their browser!) is probably a designer themselves, and a potential <wink>client</wink>.

Or, a tech company that’s releasing a new version of an app or smartphone will probably have a website highlighting all the new features of their product, but the responsive version of the site can highlight the new features of their product specifically applicable to mobile users first.

The best example I found of how this could work would probably be the site for iPhone app design and development company, RAMOTION. The largest version of the site features a full-background slider of work they’ve done.

Full-screen version of ramotion.com
Full-screen version of ramotion.com…
When ramotion.com goes responsive...
Site goes responsive.

When visiting the site from a mobile phone, the portfolio slider scales down. More room is left at the bottom of the screen for a header that says ‘We Build Mobile’.

I’m willing to bet a toonie that the minds behind ramotion.com knew that anyone visiting the site on a mobile device would probably be a potential client or connected to a potential client, so having that short but direct part of the heading for the next section visible on the home page speaks directly to that audience. It also lets visitors know to scroll down!

What do you think? Is it possible to use responsive design to target certain site users or should responsive design be left alone?

*Wedding site images courtesy of studiofunction.com/wedding, designed by Frank Maidens. RAMOTION site images courtesy of… RAMOTION.com