Hot Koehls
  • Email
  • Feedburner
  • Linkedin
  • Twitter
  • Home
  • About
  • Archives
  • Contact
  • Software
    • S3imple Backup
    • Twitter Feed Archiver
    • FileTime
    • Flickr API Demo
Search
Home» For entrepreneurs » What not to do in a survey

What not to do in a survey

Posted by Frank - March 24, 2009 - For entrepreneurs, For everyone, For techies

I purchased Mario Kart Wii and decided to register it at Club Nintendo. It’s an interesting service and I’m playing along to see where they go with it. If you want to register your own Nintendo games, you can find it on the back of a bifold pamphlet included in the game case. Some older games refer to the service as “My Nintendo” — if you had an account there, the system will automatically send you through a transfer process when you log in.

Anyway, after entering the registration code, the system prompted to fill out a quick survey about my purchase. The final question read as follows:

Please share with us your thoughts/comments about Mario Kart Wii. (255 character max)

I didn’t have anything, so I skipped it. Nintendo didn’t like that, and kicked me back to the survey. There was no error message at the top, I had to scroll through the survey to find this message above the comments question:

Please enter your comment

I replied thoughtfully:

Don’t require comments. And if you are going to require them, don’t say “please.”

What have we learned here:

  • Don’t require users to fill in a comment block on a survey
  • Place some form of error message at the top of a submitted page
  • Frank plays Mario Kart Wii (it’s really good)
gaming, usability

Comments are closed.

Categories

  • For entrepreneurs
  • For everyone
  • For techies

Latest Tweets

  • The word traps planners plan themselves into | Life. Then strategy http://t.co/iANAdASb
    May 8, 2012 - 2:43 pm
  • Random network security tip for those about to appear on TV - Boing Boing http://t.co/tC1lXFQ4
    May 8, 2012 - 1:42 pm
  • A Picture http://t.co/H846Uy69
    April 27, 2012 - 12:25 pm
  • The Broken "Buy-One, Give-One" Model: 3 Ways to Save Toms Shoes | Co.Exist: World changing ideas and innovation http://t.co/RI0sVMW6
    April 10, 2012 - 12:23 pm

Recent Comments

  • whiz on What 255 characters looks like
  • Andrew on Find the second (or third, or fourth) occurence in a string
  • IanArcher on Get number of message parts in an email using PHP
  • Usama on Remove parent directories from tar archives
  • Frank on It’s dangerous to go alone

Recent Posts

  • It’s dangerous to go alone
  • Create Self-Signed Wildcard SSL Certificate
  • What comes after the yottabyte?
  • Write code like they do in Hollywood
  • Brian Rolle machine gun celebration
(c) 2012 Frank Koehl. All Rights Reserved.
  • Contact Us
  • Sitemap