Are your Web site's visitor's satisfied with the content that you're giving them? How do you know? Feedback forms and surveys are the answer, and today I'll show you how to build, implement, and enhance these valuable marketing tools.
The more that you know about the visitors to your site, the better off you are. This information allows you to tailor and improve your site's appearance, approach, and content. Running polls and surveys are one way to accomplish this goal, but an all too often overlooked tool is the basic feedback form. Flexible, practical, and easy for Webmaster's of all levels to employ, these tools should be a part of every web site. Here's an example of the most simple type of feedback form, one that provides room for comments, plus allows the Webmaster to contact the respondent for follow up if necessary (this is only an example):
This is one place that you do not want to be too fancy, since the feedback you want to receive includes comments pertaining to your site’s ‘availability.’
Name: |
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Email: |
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Comments: |
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Ensuring
Relevant Feedback
While you could make a basic feedback form that was simply an
opportunity for any respondents to submit comments in a free-form
environment, getting surfers to focus in on relevant information
is essential, and is also an opportunity for you to tailor the
results that you collect. These are not necessarily mutually exclusive
goals, when you consider the flexibility of HTML forms.
Consider the type and amount of information that you will wish to collect from your sites visitors. Remember that a feedback form is not meant to be an in-depth survey, but is really a way to provide visitors with an easy to use contact mechanism. Try not to make the questions that you ask mandatory for the completion of your form. Or in other words, dont require the respondent to answer a lot of questions just so that he can tell you youre doing a great (or not so great) job.
I like to
place a limit of four questions on a feedback form. This is because
these forms are used by surfers to send you comments, not because
they wanted to take a quiz, but since theyre now communicating
with you, you might as well realize some added benefit. Because
I do not want them to think too hard (or they wont bother),
and because I like uniform responses which are easier to process,
I use drop down boxes offering pre-selected answers.
I also tend to limit these to four possible answers for each question.
For example, one question might be "How often do you visit
this site?" with the possible answers being "Daily,"
"Weekly," "Monthly," "This is my first
visit." Of course, the questions, and possible answers, will
be unique to the needs of each site that uses a feedback form.
Avoid asking personal questions (if possible), and
be sure that your Privacy
Statement covers your use and dissemination of the collected
data.
Technological Tips and Typing Tricks This is where
JavaScript comes into play. While you wouldnt want to use
a JavaScript based feedback form due to the reasons listed above,
a JavaScript enhanced form would be gracefully degradable,
and provide a number of useful functions; such as allowing you
to pre-select the possible responses through the use
of drop down menus, validate email addresses, and convert upper
case characters to lower case, among other uses. There are many
resource sites such as The
JavaScript Source that offer these types of scripts, free
for you to use. You must also
consider the type of form handler you wish to use.
Simply, this is the heart of your feedback form, and determines
how the submitted data is processed. There is no handler attached
to the form example above (which is why you cannot submit information
with it). Form handlers may use your Web servers mail package,
a database interface, CGI script, JavaScript, mailto:
command, or other mechanism to send the information to you in
the format you wish to receive it in. Your ISP can help you determine
the best form handler for your specific application. I personally
like to use cgiemail,
but FormMail
seems to be a more popular method of sending form output via email
(which is the way that I prefer to receive it). Feedback forms
that write their output to a Web page for public display are typically
known as "Guest books" although their use in
this application may not be in your best interest... Don't want
to get your hands dirty by building your own form? Then Click
Here. No matter
how you build it, or what questions you ask, having a feedback
form is a great idea!
I have seen fancy Flash based forms, and ones that
used other exotic technologies that might limit their
availability to surfers. This is the biggest technological mistake
that Webmasters make with feedback forms. This is one place that
you do not want to be too fancy, since the feedback you want to
receive includes comments pertaining to your sites availability.
In other words, if a statistically relevant segment of your sites
visitors cannot fully access your features, wouldnt you
want to know? How else would you know?