Comments (6)
I feel like there would be the risk of appearing like we're not respectful of people's time, but I'm open to suggestions.
from surveys.
My sense is that it would come down to messaging. One of those devil in the details type of things. As I write this, my thoughts are around making connections, continuing a dialog, community, "for those that are interested", and highlighting resources that some might not be aware of.
Given the people working on the survey, my guess is that you all have a unique vantage point in the industry and have a good understanding where things happen.
What if it was something simple like:
<some sort of thank you message for completing the survey>
"You made it to the end! Looking for more? Do you love surveys? Are you really excited about reading meeting minutes to discover the next big css feature? Or, maybe you enjoy active discussion on discord? Here are some additional resources if you're interested in learning more about the css community:"
<a small curated list of resources>
The above is super cheesy and likely the wrong tone, but hopefully it illustrates the point.
from surveys.
There are so many links to CSS resources though, what would make this special?
from surveys.
When thinking through an end-to-end experience, I like to think of it as a conversation
- "Hi! Are you interested in taking a survey?". Respondent discovers the survey. It's unknown how much context they have at this point.
- "Welcome to the survey site. Here is a brief introduction". At some point they land on the survey site's landing page. An opportunity to orient the respondent and give them a high level overview that hopefully motivates them to continue forward.
- "Would you be willing to share your thoughts and experience using css?". Taking the survey
- "Thanks for taking the time to share". Showing gratitude for their time
- "If you're interested in learning more..." Giving an interested person a path forward
It's similar to when you're in a meeting and someone gives next steps. Or, when you're saying goodbye to a family member and you highlight when you'll see them next.
What makes it special is that out of all the resources available (sea of the internet), a few highlighted and highly contextual links can be provided giving a respondent a directed path forward. This also signals that their engagement matters beyond a survey. This has the added bonus for new joiners (ex: early career) as it starts to form connections in the community.
For myself, the desired links would be where the conversation continues. For example, if implementers use this information to drive conversation, then having a link to those forums (if appropriate).
Example of my desired connections:
- Links to implementers or groups that consume the data
- A links to the W3C css working group
- A link to any of the working groups mailing groups
- Links to places where less talked about css standards develop (ex: print/books/ebook)
from surveys.
Well, currently the "thank you" page is already pretty busy with sharing links. We could also add a link to our Discord I guess?
I think what you're talking about would be better addressed by adding links to the survey results themselves, since they're seen by an order of magnitude more people than actually take the survey. But that too is already pretty full of various links so I don't know if we want to add even moreβ¦
Anyway I'll keep all this in mind, thanks for the suggestion :)
from surveys.
Seems reasonable :)
from surveys.
Related Issues (20)
- Higher Education Degree - or Degrees?
- [Copy edit] [Subjective] Section: Why are there JS questions in an HTML Survey? HOT 1
- Bad copy for `alt` question HOT 4
- State of JS 2023 Feedback HOT 17
- State of Node.js/State of Back-end JavaScript 2024 Suggestions HOT 39
- State of JS 2024 Suggestions HOT 9
- Inconsistent result for the Most Adopted Feature award in State of CSS 2023
- Broken link for the Ratios Over Time heading in State of CSS 2023
- How to help with data normalization
- I wonder when I will know the results of the survey HOT 2
- [Comment Report] Exclusive Accordion / hKZyC4UOLMe1jryB0hdHQ
- [Comment Report] Popover API / JznsTrWdydxePZABVgSPm HOT 1
- [Comment Report] Form Pain Points/<code><input type="date"></code> / MhVWkGitKH0gAy82JObuI
- State of HTML 2024 Suggestions HOT 2
- [Comment Report] Solid / 060GbLVX4zvRMYovErSoR
- [Comment Report] React / 8OJHpE5Bfao_KrI3mfHgD
- State of JS 2024 Suggestions
- [Comment Report] Solid / 060GbLVX4zvRMYovErSoR
- [Comment Report] Browser APIs Pain Points/Dates / FgK5P_M-bfwfDD4Zrj31w
- [New Questions]
Recommend Projects
-
React
A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.
-
Vue.js
π Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.
-
Typescript
TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.
-
TensorFlow
An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone
-
Django
The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.
-
Laravel
A PHP framework for web artisans
-
D3
Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. πππ
-
Recommend Topics
-
javascript
JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.
-
web
Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.
-
server
A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.
-
Machine learning
Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.
-
Visualization
Some thing interesting about visualization, use data art
-
Game
Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.
Recommend Org
-
Facebook
We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.
-
Microsoft
Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.
-
Google
Google β€οΈ Open Source for everyone.
-
Alibaba
Alibaba Open Source for everyone
-
D3
Data-Driven Documents codes.
-
Tencent
China tencent open source team.
from surveys.