This looks fantastic - I like the design and obviously I like the free. The interface is much more attractive than the standard SurveyMonkey and Google Forms options.
Two big questions come to mind. First, do you have or plan on an option for people who don't want to embed a survey but link to one outright? Second, do you expect to leave this up, and if it were to become heavily used do you have a plan for monetizing or are you willing to eat the hosting costs?
I ask because with a bit of reassurance that it will stick around, this looks like a nice, clean tool I have regular use for.
My hope was to make this as clean and intuitive as possible from a UX standpoint, so I appreciate your feedback on the design.
As far as future development goes, I hadn't actually thought about linking to one outright. I wanted to get feedback on this barebones version and go from there. Features in the pipeline right now are mobile responsiveness and multiple admins per account. I will have to look into what you recommended as well though.
As far as monetization goes, I just wanted to build something cool that people use. I figure I can always set up some premium features down the road if hosting becomes too expensive but right now I'm willing to eat a couple hundred bucks a month.
It would be nice to see some examples more than a mockup on the landing page. Both of the builder and the way to fill out the survey.
Is this strictly for surveys or also quizes and other related form-things? Edit: I see now this is for way smaller surveys than I thought. It's basically just a small widget you get from the service.
Shameless plug, I work for Typeform (http://www.typeform.com) where we have a incredibly UI for both building and filling in surveys/forms. Check it out if you're looking for a survery/form/quiz SaaS that have the biggest focus on UX/UI and for more complex forms.
It's not against the Show HN guidelines, but generally it is frowned upon to advertise your project/company on someone else's Show HN post. If you're offering advice, and linking to your own project as a reference to credibility, that's different. Your comment comes off a bit like "If you're looking for a real Survey webapp, forget this and check out mine!"
How bad is !important in this case? I'm aware that it's essentially always bad practice, but my impression was that keeping an embeddable element looking consistent regardless of location was basically its best use.
Using important is only going to fix the problem if you have defined a style for that element. For example, if you have not defined a border then the client will still be able to add one.
Most sites use iframe for embeded widgets for this reason.
I think Stripe's checkout doesn't use iframe. They just define every single style with very specific rules. From what I remember.
Here's my first thought: Pretty and simple.
Second: Who is this?
Sorry, but I don't like signing up to random single page apps without background knowledge about it. Why should I post my email to even more potential spam sources voluntarily?
I do realize everyone has to start somewhere, though.
I agree. I would like to see a "who is this" page as well, followed by a Terms of Service and especially a Privacy Policy. How private is the information gathered from visitors to my website that goes into their database?
Completely agree and will be adding the official stuff later this week. I had been procrastinating on getting this out there so I figured I'd throw it on HN and see what people thought, then go from there. If people didn't see a need for it, no use in putting all the official jargon in.
edit: my personal site and info can be found at www.will-wallace.com, just to put a face and name with the site
This is really nice. I went ahead and made a survey (easy process!) but once I received my embed code I was surprised. The script generated when I made my survey is named in a very predictable, incrementing format. I looked at a few others' surveys by changing the #.js in my embed code.
There needs to be some kind of protection to at least keep people guessing numbers, because I don't want people embedding my survey on their site and interfering with my results.
As someone who does quite a bit of survey work, this looks great for lightweight stuff. I'm biased, but a key part of almost all survey work I do involves cross tabulation, which requires an ability to manipulate the collected data. Do you have any plans to handle data export to SPSS files, or to have a web-based analysis tool that would enable generating simple cross-tab reports?
Also, a small nit: lack of www caused a heroku 404 page, not sure why. After clicking the link once, this stopped happening.
Here's a primer on survey data outfiling [1]. A good target would be to import a survey into SPSS (or you can use the open source PSPP for free) or - shameless plug - datacracker.com (my saas survey analysis app).
Contact me at support at datacracker.com if you want to chat, you'll just get me.
36 comments
[ 2.5 ms ] story [ 92.7 ms ] threadTwo big questions come to mind. First, do you have or plan on an option for people who don't want to embed a survey but link to one outright? Second, do you expect to leave this up, and if it were to become heavily used do you have a plan for monetizing or are you willing to eat the hosting costs?
I ask because with a bit of reassurance that it will stick around, this looks like a nice, clean tool I have regular use for.
As far as future development goes, I hadn't actually thought about linking to one outright. I wanted to get feedback on this barebones version and go from there. Features in the pipeline right now are mobile responsiveness and multiple admins per account. I will have to look into what you recommended as well though.
As far as monetization goes, I just wanted to build something cool that people use. I figure I can always set up some premium features down the road if hosting becomes too expensive but right now I'm willing to eat a couple hundred bucks a month.
Is this strictly for surveys or also quizes and other related form-things? Edit: I see now this is for way smaller surveys than I thought. It's basically just a small widget you get from the service.
Shameless plug, I work for Typeform (http://www.typeform.com) where we have a incredibly UI for both building and filling in surveys/forms. Check it out if you're looking for a survery/form/quiz SaaS that have the biggest focus on UX/UI and for more complex forms.
Thanks for explaining the reason to me!
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/-webkit-box...
http://venturebeat.com/2013/01/17/surveymonkey-raises-800m-t...
http://venturebeat.com/2010/11/03/surveymonkey-debt-financin...
Most sites use iframe for embeded widgets for this reason.
I think Stripe's checkout doesn't use iframe. They just define every single style with very specific rules. From what I remember.
Best of luck you're competing with (Qualaroo) Hiten Shah and crew.
It's free as well!
Sorry, but I don't like signing up to random single page apps without background knowledge about it. Why should I post my email to even more potential spam sources voluntarily?
I do realize everyone has to start somewhere, though.
edit: my personal site and info can be found at www.will-wallace.com, just to put a face and name with the site
There needs to be some kind of protection to at least keep people guessing numbers, because I don't want people embedding my survey on their site and interfering with my results.
Do you have any plans of opening up the code?
Also, a small nit: lack of www caused a heroku 404 page, not sure why. After clicking the link once, this stopped happening.
Contact me at support at datacracker.com if you want to chat, you'll just get me.
[1] http://mktresearch.org/wiki/Getting_a_Data_File