| bio | website | twitter.com/lnrb0b |
|---|---|---|
| location | Bristol, United Kingdom | |
| age | 30 | |
| visits | member for | 9 months |
| seen | Feb 18 at 14:19 | |
| stats | profile views | 0 |
Front end developer
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Sep 24 |
awarded | Editor |
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Sep 24 |
revised |
How best to integrate an exit survey Added a titled update |
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Sep 24 |
comment |
How best to integrate an exit survey @JimmyBreck-McKye that's a great point - I didn't think of that |
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Sep 24 |
comment |
How best to integrate an exit survey Thanks for your answer! I was thinking about the call-to-action button approach but wasn't sure it worked for an exit survey - would you suggest combining my two surveys into one 'how was the experience' form? |
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Sep 24 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Sep 24 |
comment |
How best to integrate an exit survey Thanks for the response, definitely agree with lots of it. In your opinion does the type of website and user group make a difference? I have a site for very specific trades people around the world. I cannot afford to travel to each hub, find some people who likely use my site (or one like it) and question them. I have some other sites which would benefit from the 'walk-in testing' you describe (my office is on a busy university street). I was thinking of taking the same approach to all sites, but maybe I can do away with surveys in most instances... |
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Sep 21 |
comment |
How best to integrate an exit survey @Captain exactly! I don't want to guess how long a user has been using the site. I could store a cookie with a first hit time and then run something based on a combination of time elapsed and number of pages hit, but it would all be rather random! |
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Sep 21 |
awarded | Student |
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Sep 21 |
asked | How best to integrate an exit survey |
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Sep 21 |
awarded | Autobiographer |