eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 
eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 

Your Online Guide » Guide to Technology » Get Paid Surveys Online

[A720]Asking Questions In Spanish
by Frank Lucer, Fra

The types of questions you include on your survey will play a key role in determining its success (or failure). You want to encourage participation and sincerity from those who respond. That's why professional survey designers spend a lot of time formulating the manner in which they ask for responses. The construction of their questions, the language they choose, and even their grammar has an impact on respondents' perception and interpretation of what is being asked. And that has a direct effect on their participation.

In this article, I'll describe various types of questions you should avoid asking. I'll also explain why the wrong type of queries can mislead your participants, serve as obstacles to their sincerity, and ultimately, reduce your response rate and skew your data.

Leaders

A lot of people who lack experience in designing questionnaires use words and phrases that can unintentionally "lead" respondents. For example, consider the following 2 sentences and note how their meanings subtly change based upon replacing only 1 word.

"The federal government must lower corporate taxes."

"The federal government should lower corporate taxes."

The first query employs an action-oriented "must." The second uses "should," which is less confrontational. Believe it or not, that minor change in the phrasing of both sentences can impact respondents' interpretation and answers. Don't use words that elicit a certain response. That is, don't lead your participants.

Commingled Queries

Remember, your goal in surveying your audience is to collect reliable data that you can use. If you combine multiple topics into a single query, your data will become skewed because respondents won't have the flexibility to address each topic individually. For example, consider the following "yes/no" question asked by a wireless carrier of its customers.

"Are you satisfied with the level of customer service we provide and the reception you enjoy on your phone?"

Note that the wireless carrier is asking respondents to provide a single answer to 2 disparate topics (their satisfaction with regards to service and reception). If a customer is happy with the wireless carrier's service representatives, but has difficulty getting a clear signal on their phone, their answer becomes unreliable. Commingling the topics confuses the response. As a result, your data will be practically useless.

Imprecise Questions

Designing your surveys simply carries distinct advantages, such as reducing distractions, encouraging responses, and motivating participants to complete them. However, take care not to oversimplify your questions. Many novice designers make the mistake of constructing their surveys with queries that lack precision. As a result, the usefulness of their data is diluted to the point of being unusable.

For example, consider the manufacturer of a candy bar asking its customers the following: "Do you enjoy our candy bar?" Initially, the question seems easy to answer. In truth, it's nearly impossible to answer with any level of value. After all, a participant won't know whether their response should address the candy bar's texture, flavor, or size. As a result, their answer has limited usefulness, if any. Be precise.

Careful Query Design

Creating a survey is a deceptively complicated task. The manner in which you ask your sample population to respond has an enormous effect on its success. A simple word can alter the meaning of a sentence and impact your respondents' interpretation of it. Phrasing can lead participants to offer answers that aren't entirely accurate, diluting the value of the information they're providing. Commingling topics into single queries can limit the accuracy of your population's answers, thereby skewing the data.

We've only covered a few types of questions that you should avoid asking on your surveys and questionnaires. In a future column, we'll explore this area in more detail. In the meantime, use the advice I've provided above to increase your response rate and preserve the accuracy of the information you collect.


To begin...

One of the most famous questions ever asked in an ad was penned almost a century ago by copywriting legend Maxwell Sackheim. It read:

Do you make these mistakes in English?

It was the headline for an ad that sold a rather pedestrian mail-order language course.

Yet it worked so well?pulling in so much money?the company who owned it, continued to run it for 40 long and successful years!

To be sure, a myriad of other headlines were tested, all using the same body copy, before that now famous winner was discovered.

One competing headline even read: Do you make mistakes in English? Certainly close enough, you would think. But it failed miserably, as did all others.

It was only when that seemingly innocuous word ?these? was finally inserted, that direct marketing history was made?and a lesson for direct marketers was learned.

Well, some endeavored to learn it, most never tried. They merely copied its form, without understanding why it worked so well.

Even today, you'll see that same headline in its innumerable permutations:

? Do you make these seven tactical mistakes on a first date?

? Do you make these errors when doing your own taxes?

? Do you make these blunders every time you write your own copy?

So on and so forth.

These copycat headlines will actually work... at least for a short while (particularly with those consumers who don't get out very often).

But as with most formulaic copy, it's soon recognized as a trite, clich'd, over-used and unimaginative pitch that screams: Hey, look! Here's my ad!

Nevertheless, the question remains....

Can asking a question in an ad increase sales?

Some will argue vehemently that the use of a question is a non-starter, a pre-ordained copywriting disaster.

Craig Huey, founder and president of the award-winning Creative Direct Marketing Group, a direct marketing advertising agency, and for whom I've written numerous promotions, froths at the site of a question in sales copy. (He's faithfully crossed out every one from my submitted drafts.)

Nevertheless, a question is a tool. And as with any tool, any copywriting strategy or tactic, if a question is not formulated and handled with proper caution, it could indeed do immeasurably more harm than good.

Well, let me correct that: if you're a direct marketer who tests you can measure precisely how much harm a poorly phrased question will do... or how well a good one will convert.

The secret to constructing a well-built, hard-working, money-sucking question

For Max Sackheim the secret sauce in his brilliant question was intrigue and curiosity, both of which were lacking in: Do you make mistakes in English?

Understand, that question failed because it was a yes or no question?and a yes or no question should never (with qualifications) be asked in sales copy.

Why? Because either of the two possible answers, yes or no, will effectively end the conversation you're trying to conduct with the reader.

I'll explain...

If the answer to a question?especially one in your headline'is no, the reader will assume there's no further reason to continue reading your letter. In other words, you asked, I answered, now good-bye.

Similarly, if the answer is yes, the reader responds with a big: Yeah, so? (And again, he's gone.)

A yes/no question does not sink the barbed hook in the fish's mouth (not that I'm equating consumers with a large or small mouth bass).

Why then ?these??

By inserting the word ?these? in his headline, Sackheim prevented the reader from answering yes or no.

And, because the reader didn't know what ?these mistakes? were, he had to keep reading in order to find out. And that was the key to the ad's success.

Because the first objective of any sales copy, from the headline on down, is to compel the reader to keep reading. Otherwise, how else will you get the chance to prove your product's worth?and ask for the order?

Never give the reader time to think about the answer

It's dangerous?for you as a marketer.

You want to do all the thinking, and answering, for the reader. You want to direct the conversation and provide the conclusions?always!

For example, if you ask a question that doesn't either hint or overtly state that the answer will only be revealed by reading further, sorta like in these questions:

? How many times a day do you dream of becoming rich?

? When are you finally going to tell your boss to take this job and shove it?

? How much money have you lost in the stock market this year?

You're, in effect, asking the reader to step away from your ad and discover the answer elsewhere (either in his own thoughts and musings, on his hard drive, or in the file cabinet in the attic).

In any event, he's distracted. You've lost his attention, you've broken the connection?you've pulled the plug!

For an ad to be successful, it can never be laid aside. It must be read in its entirety with rapt attention, growing interest, and compelling desire.

But, since there are exceptions to all rules...

This is the only time answering ?yes? to a question will move a sales conversation forward?and not end it

Now this is rather advanced stuff (so don't try this at home, you could hurt yourself)...

Nonetheless, if you can pose a question?numerous questions, in fact'in such a way, where you know, and want, the answer to always be yes...

You will be leading the reader by the eyeballs into a state of blissful acceptance'of your argument or contention?and ultimately of your offer.

I'll explain...

If your question is more or less rhetorical?where you and the reader know the answer is yes, sorta like in these questions:

? You know that Big Pharma has the FDA in its pocket, right?

? Couldn't you use an extra $10,000?tax-free'in your bank account starting tomorrow?

? Wouldn't you like to be your own boss, and never have to answer to anyone else again?while doubling your income?

You're, in effect, positioning yourself as the reader's good buddy, his wise and magnanimous advocate (well, kinda).

In any event, you're agreeing with him, and prompting him to agree with you. You're standing beside him, confirming his deepest beliefs and/or suspicions?and you're hurling rocks at his enemies.

You're bonding!

And so the more he answers yes to your ?leading? questions?and to your similarly orchestrated statements and contentions?the more inclined he will be, by sheer force of habit if nothing else, to say ?YES!? when you ask him to open his wallet and give you his credit card number.

Get it? Questions? Yes, no?
Article Source : Pg. 16

About Author
Both Frank Lucer & Barry Densa are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Frank Lucer has sinced written about articles on various topics from Customer Service, Computers and The Internet and Finances. SurveyGizmo is a leading provider of online, check them out on the web for more great ways to use surveys to enhance your business.. Frank Lucer's top article generates over 60500 views. to your Favourites.

Barry Densa has sinced written about articles on various topics from Surveys, Advertising Guide and Computers and The Internet. Barry A. Densa is one of America's top freelance direct response copywriters. Visit and see how Barry easily and quickly. Barry Densa's top article generates over 6600 views. to your Favourites.
EditorialToday Guide to Technology has 3 sub sections. Such as Technology, Increase Adsense Revenue and Information & Technology. With over 20,000 authors and writers, we are a well known online resource and editorial services site in United Kingdom, Canada & America . Here, we cover all the major topics from self help guide to A Guide to Business, Guide to Finance, Ideas for Marketing, Legal Guide, Lettre De Motivation, Guide to Insurance, Guide to Health, Guide to Medical, Military Service, Guide to Women, Pet Guide, Politics and Policy , Guide to Technology, The Travel Guide, Information on Cars, Entertainment Guide, Family Guide to, Hobbies and Interests, Quality Home Improvement, Arts & Humanities and many more.
About Editorial Today | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Submit an Article | Our Authors