Email Marketing

Use Multiple Email Campaigns to Increase Response Rates

Thursday, October 29, 2009 by Ashton Motwani
Email Marketing Tightrope WalkingWhen was the last time you fretted over an email that looked perfect for some of the people in your audience, but seemed irrelevant for others? If you are a survey writer, it was probably not so long ago. It is an essential component of the planner’s job to create an email that would seem inviting to the audience; the hard part is deciding the emails' subject, body and sender so that the proposition is attractive to everyone. If you have been walking this tightrope, it is time to come down.

Multiple Email Campaigns is a Cvent email survey tool feature that gives you the ability to give everyone exactly what they want! Within one survey invitation email, you can send out different messages to different groups of people by segmenting your invitee list. This functionality allows you to specify the From Name, From Email Address, Subject Line and body of the email for each group or targeted list.

Let’s take an example, hosted an event and created an event survey to send out to the exhibitors and attendees; you’ve created separate questions for them and used survey question logic to decide who sees which conference survey template questions. Now, when it comes to the invitation email you realize the exhibitors need an email asking them to fill out the questionnaire asking about how much they gained from the event and why they would/would not want to return next year. On the other side, the attendees will prefer a warm note from the CEO thanking them for making the conference a success and inviting them to vote on which exhibitors/stalls they liked best or how they liked the food/accommodation. It is impossible for the two emails here to be the same; hence the need for multiple target lists.

Customize your email marketing to your audience and take advantage of this functionality in order to increase the open rate of your emails and your survey response rates.

Choose Whether to Manually or Automatically Send Emails

Thursday, October 29, 2009 by Lisa Boruah
Using Cvent’s Web Survey tool, you can choose to send your survey emails manually or setup a specific date and time for the emails to go out.

Manual Send is ideal to send emails to specific invitees from the target list. As you get the option to select:

1. Respondents by choosing which Contact Group the email needs to be sent to
2. Respondents that have not received the email before.
3. Manually enter the search details to search for particular respondent(s)
4. You can click on the Search Button to search for all respondents that have been added to this targeted list


Auto Send on the other hand is ideal to send out mass emails to every contact in the target list on a specific date and time. This feature is perfect to send out reminder email survey invitations to respondents who have not yet completed the online questionnaire or send confirmation emails to completed respondents thanking them for their time and feedback.


Along with these options, there are various other features that you can choose from in the Cvent email survey tool:

1. What format do you want to use to send this email?
Choose from both HTML and plain text or only plain text. If both HTML and plain text are selected, an invitee will receive either the HTML message or plain text message, depending on their email settings.

2. Click Tracking
A way to track which links are being clicked in HTML emails. You can run reports to determine which survey invitation emails and links are getting the most traffic. Turning on Click Tracking enables tracking in your HTML emails.

3. CC Option
Sending to a CC email address is available in all survey email templates. When the CC email recipient takes the survey, the primary contact’s information and email address will be pre-populated within the survey.

To use all these features for your organizations benefit. Sign up for a Free Trial Account now!

10 Tips to Increase Survey Response Rates

Wednesday, October 28, 2009 by Sherrie Mersdorf
Increase Response RatesIncreasing survey response rates is a major goal of most survey builders and market researchers. There's an art and a science to increasing campaign response rates whether it's an email marketing campaign or an online market research study. I wanted to share some of my tips for how to increase survey response rates:

Make the email survey invitation from names easy to recognize. You can do this by including an individual's name within the organization that's well known (such as the CEO or if it's a client survey, the name of their sales rep). You can also use the organization's name, or both. For example, I'm subscribed to a few MarketingProf's newsletters. When they send out emails they include the same person's name and their organizations name so it looks like this: Anne, MarketingProfs. I recognize it everytime, and since I enjoy their newsletter, I made sure to open the email.

Keep subject line's compelling, but short. The subject line and the From Name are the two most critical pieces to get your email opened. Try to keep your subject lines to 35 characters or less. You don't need to put the entire email in the subject line, but you do need to include enough information to make the recipients open the survey email.

Create an attractive survey invitation. Studies have shown that well done HTML email messages get better response rates than plain text emails. With HTML you have the opportunity to include images, change font sizes, bold text, etc. Take advantage of this chance. It's one more way to get people to click through to your survey!

Send personalized survey invitations. Personalizing your emails, even something as simple as including the recipient's name in the greeting, will return a higher response than a generic message. It creates a personal touch, and makes the recipient feel like someone took the time to send them a personal message (even though your email survey tool did it for you).

Introduce the survey. Let the participants know why they should participate in your survey. If they don't understand why their opinion is important to your survey findings, why would they want to take the time to fill it out?

How long will the survey take? Not setting expectations in the beginning for survey length leads to low response rates and high abandonment rates. Not what you want to see. If you don't let people know how long it will take to fill out your online survey, they're going to assume you're hiding something about how long it is. Tell them it will take X minutes or the survey is only Y questions long. Definitely be honest, if you lie here, you're going to hurt your future chances of getting those respondents to complete your next online survey questionnaire.

Remind your survey sample that their responses will be kept confidential. This is particularly important for surveys about uncomfortable topics. For example, you created a poll for a public opinion survey to see how your population feels about an emotional topic such as abortion. If you don't keep the information confidential, you probably will not get honest feedback. Same thing goes with employee questionnaires, they should always be kept confidential and anonymous. Not keeping responses confidential will definitely hurt your response rate, as well as the validity of the data.

Offer an incentive. Offering incentives is a proven method for increasing survey response rates. But this method doesn't work if you don't let people know about it up front. Put it in your email, put it on the welcome page of the survey, then make sure to follow up. Again, if you drop the ball here, the chances of that survey respondent completing your online survey form in the future is drastically reduced.

Always say Thank You! Remember when your mom always made you write thank you notes when you got presents or cards from people for holidays and birthdays? It was because people like to feel their effort is noticed and appreciated. Same idea here, it's nice to just get a short note thanking them for their time. After all, survey respondents are doing you a favor.

Don't over email your contact list. This is very important. You shouldn't be inviting the same people to complete your online surveys every month. It's important to segment your list using whichever survey sampling method that works best for your surveys to avoid email list fatigue. Make sure that you're coordinating with other campaigns as well. Just because you know they're different initiatives you're emailing about, your contact's wont necessarily see it that way. If you begin sending emails too frequently, contacts are going to just delete your email and never open it, opt out or report you as a spammer.

Have a tip that I missed? I'd love to hear it!

Getting the Right People to Respond

Friday, October 23, 2009 by Kelli Kelley
The demands of a market research study are complex. You may need a large number of respondents, but all those respondents need to be the “right” respondents. You don’t want survey responses from outside the target demographic skewing your data, forcing you to start over.

For example, a survey questionnaire we did at my company was recently returned with highly skewed data. We were surveying a school where 78% of the student body was composed of “in-state” students. When we got the results back, only 3% of respondents were in-state students – definitely not representative of the population.

Where we erred: We did not specify what percentage of different groups of people the survey should be sent to, and did not set up quotas to get a certain mix of people. Instead, we just let it fall out naturally, which should have returned results representative of the population.

It is important to specify the type of respondents you need and decide who the email survey will be sent to, and if necessary, set up quotas to ensure a respondent set that matches the population.

It would be almost impossible to cover all the survey pitfalls you can encounter while sampling. My best advice would be to use common sense. When starting the study I’d advise doing a “soft launch” (sending out a small amount of sample) and then check the returns.  If you find that the completes from the soft launch are not representative, work to iron out any issues before doing a full launch.

Invitation Forwarding: It Saves You Time, Grows Your Database of Contacts, and Increases Your Response Rates

Friday, October 23, 2009 by Caitlin Rawles
The Invitation Forwarding feature is one of the absolute coolest things about Cvent Web Surveys software. After all, who doesn’t love having someone else do their work for them? Invitation Forwarding allows your survey respondents to email survey invitations to up to 10 other people. This in turn allows you to grow your database of contacts exponentially, as the system will automatically put all of these new contacts in your Cvent Address Book for you!

In my humble opinion, Cvent does a fantastic job of updating your Address Book for you, and Invitation Forwarding is one of the reasons why. Many of our clients actually find that their Cvent Address Book is more inclusive and “up to date” than their organization’s internal database! Remember that you always have the option to export your entire Cvent Address Book, which in turn enables you to update your internal database, if need be.

Like many of the features present in the online survey application, Invitation Forwarding saves you time that you otherwise would have had to spend hunting down people who were relevant to your survey. Allowing your survey respondents to forward the survey along to other people obviously has other perks as well, since it will undoubtedly increase your response rates and the reliability of the data you collect.

In summary, here is my advice to all of you out there reading this post: Leave the Invitation Forwarding feature turned on on the Thank You page, as long as you are not conducting a private survey. Invitation Forwarding will definitely save you time, increase you response rates, and grow your database of contacts, all of which are guaranteed to make your boss happy.

Online Survey Best Practices for Event Surveys (Part III)

Friday, October 23, 2009 by Sherrie Mersdorf
At the beginning of the week, I shared the first 10 tips from the Meetings & Convention article, Survey Science: How to craft more effective attendee evaluations, in Part I and Part II of this post. The first ten event survey tips include several of your typical online survey best practices: set clear survey objectives at the beginning, create clear survey questions, think about question flow, vary your question types, etc. While the last five tips shared in the article are still good online survey tips, they do focus a little more on event and conference surveys.

11. Avoid the spam folder. Once upon a time, spam folders weren't something paper survey designers worried about. It's a different story now with email survey invitations. Nat Estes, an account executive here at Cvent, shared his tips in this article: Avoid using all caps in the subject line, avoid the word "free" and the use of lots of dollar signs or exclamation points. These tips apply to both sending reminder survey invitations as well as the initial invite.

12. Offer incentives. We've talked about how incentives tend to boost survey response rates in the past. Offers can include free products/samples, cash, gift cards and drawings, or it can even go the route of sharing the survey report after the survey is over.

13. Use pre-meeting surveys. Post-attendee surveys are no brainers at this point, but they don't always tell the whole story. Think of this survey questionnaire example, the post-seminar survey shows that the majority of the attendees have a positive impression of a product. The planner doesn't know if their impression was changed because of the seminar, or everyone already had a positive impression before the event. The reverse could be true as well. The majority of registrants may have had a positive impression before, and after the event had a negative impression. Something went really wrong! But if you don't ask pre-event survey questions, you're not going to be able to track the change. Not to mention the benefits of asking other pre-event survey questions about what they want to get out of event, etc.

14. Use regret event surveys. As a leader in the event management space, this tip is near and dear to our hearts here at Cvent. Most people make the mistake of just forgetting about those people who say they can't come, "They don't matter." This is definitely the wrong approach. Every planner should want to know why people aren't coming to their event. Regret event surveys should be kept short, only a few questions. The questions should try to find out if the invitee is still interested in the topic or product, why they can't come (schedule conflict, not in the budget, etc.).

15. Conclusions? Don't Jump! Lots of us look at survey results and draw conclusions about the entire target population based on a small survey sample. If your event survey has low response rates, don't make drastic change's just because that's what the survey data pointed to. Think about how representative the sample was, and if the changes make sense.

Hopefully everyone will consider asking attendees to give feedback through survey questionnaires or comment cards after the event. If you get really adventurous, you can set up survey kiosks at the event using a kiosk survey system (My suggestion? Cvent.) to catch attendees while your event is still top of mind.

Response Rate Boosters: Sending Reminders

Wednesday, October 21, 2009 by Tyson Gingery
I recommend taking advantage of the technological power within good online survey software programs.  A great way to increase your survey response rates is to send reminder email survey invitations to your customers if they have haven't completed your questionnaire after receiving notification of selection for your surveys.

People are busy; email inboxes are bombarded with messages, alerts and spam.  Customers may delete your survey invitation email if they are in a hurry, trying to clean up their inboxes, or do not feel the feedback survey is relevant or interesting to them.  Often, people will receive a survey invitation and look through it, but not follow-through in clicking though to the survey questionnaire to complete the actual online survey poll.  They may even have made a mental note to complete the survey later, but then it gets lost in the shuffle.

You can take steps to reduce both these nonresponse problems by sending personalized email survey reminders.  If a respondent or customer contact does not respond to your online questionnaire within a given time frame (that you specify), you can program your online survey software to automatically resend survey invitations (multiple times!).  You set up the invitations, so you can choose to resend the original invitation or tweak it with a different message to remind them they have yet to complete the survey.

In your reminders, let respondents know that they previously received an invitation from you because their opinions are valuable, and they were selected as part of your survey sample for a good reason.  Restate the incentive if you're offering one. 

As we all know, however, there is a delicate line between reminding and nagging.  If you drift toward the latter, chances are your respondents will become annoyed and reactively delete emails from you (surveys or otherwise).  In general, send a maximum of three or four survey emails to your respondents after they’ve received the original invitation and survey poll link.  If they've deleted or lost your previous emails, they may respond to one of the reminders, and who knows… even if they’re ambivalent toward completing your internet survey, you might catch them at a better time and get a completion.

Are Your Online Surveys 508 Compliant and Accessible?

Wednesday, October 21, 2009 by Lisa Boruah
According to The Center for an Accessible Society there are over 49 million Americans living with a disability of some type, with over 30 million between the ages of 21 and 64. That's nearly 20% of the population or 1 out of every 5 people.

Cvent Web Surveys provides federal, state and local government entities with an on demand, feedback management solution. As a web based survey company, our online polling tool enables government officials to quickly and easily gather feedback and analyze the opinions of constituents, while increasing survey response rates and ensuring data protection and security.

Section 508
refers to a statutory section in the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (found at 29 U.S.C. 794d). Congress significantly strengthened section 508 in the Workforce Investment Act of 1998. Its primary purpose is to provide access to and use of Federal executive agencies’ electronic and information technology (EIT) by individuals with disabilities. The statutory language of section 508 can be found at www.section508.gov.

Section 508 requirements are separate from, but complementary to, requirements in sections 501 and 504 of the Rehabilitation Act that require, among other things, that agencies provide reasonable accommodations for employees with disabilities, provide program access to members of the public with disabilities, and take other actions necessary to prevent discrimination on the basis of disability in their programs.

Why should you use Cvent's online survey application?

• We're a GSA Schedule Contractor
• Our survey tool allows you to maintain compliance with Section 508 of American with Disabilities Act (ADA)
• Our on-demand, secure network ensures compliance of all your suryve data
• Survey creators have full control over branding of web surveys and email marketing
• You can create online exams with our enhanced survey scoring features which assign a value to  every response and calculate scores

Use Click Tracking When Sending Links in Your Survey Emails

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 by Ashton Motwani
Say you want to send out a particularly important website link in your survey emails leading to your website, a sponsor’s website or any other page on the internet with information you really want the respondents to visit. Now, you’ve designed different emails, but are wondering which one will be most effective – how do you find out? Click Tracking.
Here's another scenario. A sponsor is funding your online survey and wants to know how many people are actually clicking on their image and going to their website. They want to be able to track the ROI on their sponsorship – how will you do this? Click Tracking.

Click tracking is a powerful new feature in the Cvent email survey tool that is of invaluable importance to anyone who puts in website links in their survey emails. How does it work? When someone clicks on a link in an email, the information is first sent to Cvent and then the respondent is directed to the URL for the link.  Using click tracking, we can track how many times a link was clicked on uniquely, or in total, and at what date and time. Use any of the reports below to get exactly the data you want about who clicks on the link, when they click on it and how many times they clicked:

Clicks by URL – Returns a list of details about the total clicks for all URLs clicked for all emails in the survey within a selected date range. Click on the URL to view the Click Details by URL report which will list all the clicks for that URL. 

Total Clicks for the Top 10 URLs
– Returns a chart and table with details about the total clicks for the top 10 URLs. The 10 URLs are ranked based on the number of times they were clicked for all emails in the survey project.

Total Clicks Over Time for the Top 5 URLs
– Returns a chart and table with counts of clicks for the top 5 URLs (by number of times clicked) within a selected date range. The chart returns counts over a period of days, weeks or months.

Clicks by Respondent
– Returns a list of details about clicks made by each respondent within a selected date range.

Clicks by Email Type
– Returns a list of details about clicks made by email type within a selected date range.

Clicks by Contact Field
– Returns a list of details about clicks made within a selected date range and grouped by a selected contact field.

So the next time you decide to put in a link into a survey email, remember, it is not just a link but a vast source of information that lets you know your survey respondents' preferences, interests and usage. Happy Tracking!

Don't Have Time to Create Surveys Online?

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 by Cvent Client Services
In today’s world a lot of organizations from various industries conduct surveys to get the feedback about their products or services. Responses collected from survey respondents are used to further improve the quality of the products or services.

But do the survey writers and builders have enough time to spend creating the surveys, running the survey reports, analyzing survey data and sending the presentation to their bosses for the review?

There is a solution to this: Cvent's Survey Professional Services Group. Cvent offers a variety of online survey surveys to get your survey campaigns up and running with minimal time and effort on your part.

Survey Building: Let Cvent turn your paper survey or list of questions into a professional online survey. Web survey services team can review your questions and responses, as well as add conditional logic to make sure your electronic survey is designed to capture accurate, reliable data points.

Graphic Design Services:
The skilled designers on our survey design services team can create professional looking surveys that can match a desired look and feel, be consistent with your organization's branding, and even feature embedded media.

Summary and Analysis Reports:
Surveys create a lot of data - combing through it to find the meaningful trends is time-consuming work. Cvent's Survey Professional Services Group takes the pain out of analyzing survey data, because we'll turn your piles of data into eye-catching, boardroom-ready reports that highlight the business intelligence that matters to you. The report looks great, and so will you.

How to get most out of your project?

Most people conducting surveys today are not trained survey experts. A little help from our online survey professional services enables you to get the most out of your project - even if it's your first survey.

Strategy Consultation:
Not completely sure how best to use web based surveys in your organization? Talk to one of our experts to learn what kinds of questions and responses you should include to accomplish your organizational goals.

Question/Response Review and Commentary:
Before you send personalized email survey invitations out into the world, let our Survey Professional Services Group review it and make recommendations to improve the quality of your survey data.

List Procurement and Response Generation:
Cvent can connect you to your target demographic and build your survey sample list, helping you capture accurate, meaningful data.

Turnkey Project Management:
At times it's best to leave things to the experts - talk to us about letting Cvent run your survey campaign from start to finish.

Send Your Survey Emails through Cvent.... Please!

Monday, October 19, 2009 by Caitlin Rawles
Import your address book into Cvent Web Surveys tool to save you and survey respondents time“Well, you see… I just don’t have the time.” A frustrating excuse heard every day all over the world, because everyone knows that you can and will make the time for anything important enough. Obviously time is valuable, but you choose to spend your time as you see it benefiting you most, or as you see yourself enjoying it most.

I hear the “time excuse” almost every day from our survey clients, especially when it pertains to uploading contacts into the Cvent Address Book and sending emails through our email survey tool. “But, we’re just really busy over here at XYZ Company, and we have an internal database where we store all of our contacts. I think I’m just going to use the website link to distribute my survey.” At this point, I usually make one last attempt to showcase the benefits of emailing through Cvent, and then I give up.

I’m not going to give up this time though. Because I do recognize the many benefits of sending emails through Cvent, my goal in this post is to convince you that you should make the time to take the necessary steps to do this. I will make my argument in two simple points below. As you read through it, hopefully I will change some of your minds, especially those of you who are constantly “too busy.”

1) One word: Pre-Population. People are selfish. If they feel like an email has been personally written to them, they are much more likely to read it and respond than if they realize it is a mass email that has gone out to 50,000 recipients. If you upload your contacts into the Cvent Address Book and send your survey invitations through Cvent, you can pre-populate various contact fields in the email. For example, instead of opening with “Dear Valued Employee,” you can send personalized email surve invitations that say “Dear Suzie.” This makes people feel good and will thus increase your survey response rates!

2) I bet you didn’t know taking the time to upload your contacts into Cvent's online survey management software application will ultimately save you time in the future! As you know, you can display whichever contact fields you like in the Contact Profile for any given survey. If your respondents are accessing the survey from a Cvent email, this information will be pre-populated for them. However, they can update it if something changes. For example, if one of your contacts get a promotion (and their title changes), when they update this in the Contact Profile for one of your surveys, this change will be reflected in your Address Book as well!

As you can see, sending your survey emails through the Cvent survey application will increase your survey response rates, and it will also ultimately save you time. If that doesn’t convince you this is the best way to distribute your surveys, I don’t know what will!

Response Rate Boosters: Increasing Survey Legitimacy

Monday, October 19, 2009 by Tyson Gingery
Online surveys offer many advantages over traditional quantitative research methods (such as phone and mail surveys), like cost efficiency, user-friendly survey design software, and getting results in electronic format.  One concern with using an online survey mode is that it can sometimes produce lower response rates than other modes. With some planning and careful consideration, however, you can get response rates equal to (or higher than) traditional methods.  One of the main ways you can raise response rates is by increasing your survey’s legitimacy to your audience.  Make respondents feel like they should complete your survey because it is important in some regard.  To do this, implement the following guidelines:

Be professional throughout the entire communication process.  Choose your survey sample wisely, and make sure the survey is relevant to them.  Let them know why you’re asking for their time, and that you really appreciate their opinions.  Tell them what the results will be used for, and that you can send a summary if they wish to see one.  Use appropriate language, and avoid wording things too casually unless the sample’s demographics call for it.  Send them thank you notes.

Personalize the survey for each respondent.  This includes sending personalized email survey invitation, such as referring to them by name instead of "Dear Valued Customer," if you have access to that information.  If you already have demographic data about your respondents elsewhere, do not ask them for it in the survey (link to it later on).

Use a custom survey banner.  Survey respondents like to know who the survey is from, what it concerns, and that it is from a legitimate organization for a legitimate reason.  Adding your logo or letterhead to the survey template design makes it easy to remind them who you are.  This is also basically a free form of branding.

Anything you can do to keep your survey in the research and scientific realms will help increase legitimacy.  Respondents are more likely to complete a survey offered in this manner than when paired with a sales pitch.  If possible, partner with another organization, such as a local research office, college or nonprofit organization.

6 Easy Steps on How to Create Customer Surveys

Friday, October 16, 2009 by Sherrie Mersdorf
Many people ask the question How do I create a customer survey? The basic steps are the same no matter what type of client survey you're writing: customer satisfaction, global market research, product development surveys, etc.

Step 1: Sit down and figure out what the goal of the survey is. Are you trying to identify upsell opportunities? Want to discover features missing from your current product? Figuring out if it's a good idea to take your marketing overseas and attack a global market? In the very beginning of the survey planning process, you should know what it is you want to get out of the consumer survey. If you don't have a firm customer satisfaction survey objectives in the beginning, while you go through the other steps such as writing survey questions or selecting the best survey software, you're going to stray from the path. If you stray from the path, you may find the final survey results are not as helpful as you had hoped.

Step 2: Decide on a research methodology. Your goals should help you on this step as well. You need to first decide if you're planning to do qualitative or quantitative research. From there narrow the scope further, if you want to do qualitative research are you interested in focus groups, advisory boards, one-on-one interviews? With quantitative research you may decide on comment cards, feedback forms and surveys. Is your survey method going to be online, telephone-based or paper questionnaires?

Step 3: Survey Design. I'm making the assumption since you're reading a survey blog about how to create customer surveys, you're not interested in the other market research methods right now so I'm going to focus on the process of building customer surveys. Once you've gotten through the first two steps, you're ready to start writing survey questions (Finally! I bet you thought this would be the first step!). Customer satisfaction survey design can be the biggest challenge. Luckily, there is survey designing software to help you step through this. Survey software tools often have templates and question libraries to help you write good survey questions.

Step 4: Data collection. Okay, you've picked your customer survey methodology, created a client survey and you're ready to field your survey (or use the data collection tool in your survey application to collect responses). Exactly what you do in this step will depend on what type of survey you decided to collected: telephone, paper, online. One way to get survey responses is to use email marketing tools to send personalized email surveys. You can also share the link on your website, social media sites, invoices, etc.

Step 5: Analyze customer feedback. Analyzing survey data is one of people's least favorite parts of the surveying process. We have some tips for how to analyze survey data here. Don't be afraid of this step. You need to conduct the survey customer analysis to achieve your goal. It's what you set out to do, so keep your chin up. You're only a step away from the final product (and once you choose survey analysis methods you should be almost finished).

Step 6: Share the survey findings. This is what you set out to do. Get answers to your customer questions. Take the customer feedback analysis you completed in the last step and format it. You're creating a survey report you can share within your organization (and maybe with others outside of your organization). If you need tips for creating survey reports or an example survey report, you can read more about them here.

Step 6.1: Take action. This is still part of step 6, but it's important enough it should be broken out. In your customer analysis survey report, you should have shared your recommendations for moving forward. Make sure you make recommendations and there is an agreement about moving forward based on the customer survey findings. If you don't plan to take action in Step 1, then you should save yourself the time of conducting the customer research in the first place.

Any other survey research design tips? How have you used these steps to create a customer survey that improved processes in your organization?

Create Better Emails by Analyzing Click Tracking Reports

Friday, October 16, 2009 by Caitlin Rawles
“Knowledge is power.” Again, a statement that I frequently heard from my parents and teachers growing up. When I was 10, I was probably told this because I was complaining about doing my fifth grade homework. These days, I still say this silently to myself from time to time. This is because knowledge is power not only to the fifth grader who is trying to get A’s in school, but also to anyone trying to make a profit in the business world.

There is no way around it; Cvent Web Surveys software provides you with business knowledge. By surveying your client pool, you will learn about their likes and dislikes, and you can thus enhance your products or services to meet the needs of those who matter. The web survey application also provides you with another kind of knowledge though, through the recent addition of click tracking reports.

Whereas the actual act of surveying customers allows you to learn more about them “from the horse’s mouth”, click tracking reports give you insight into which links people are clicking on in your survey emails, which can be extremely beneficial as well. For example, if you send your monthly e-newsletters out through the Cvent online survey platform (as many of our clients do), then you can run click tracking reports to view which links to outside websites your recipients are clicking on. Who is clicking on which links? Which URLs are the most popular?

Cvent email marketing click tracking reports include graphs that are easy to read and interpret. You can export them into Microsoft Word, Excel, or PDF. Most importantly, however, click tracking reports teach you how to place information and links in your emails. If you use emails to market your organization at all, then click tracking reports will help you leverage your ability to format those emails in order to generate the maximum possible business (and money!) for you.

Use Shortcuts As Often As Possible to Save Time Creating Surveys

Thursday, October 15, 2009 by Dorian Rosen
Be a Road Warrior with Cvent Survey Software ShortcutsI have always been told that shortcuts have a negative connotation.  “You can’t take a shortcut through life,” was a common phrase in my household whenever my parents caught me scheming the best way to get the dishes unloaded.   But let’s be honest: Who actually likes to load or unload the dishwasher?  It takes time and you always feel like there must be an easier way once the task is finished.  Well, the advice bestowed upon me was seldom heeded and to this day I am a huge fan of shortcuts.  When traffic has me down, I will take a "shortcut" through back roads.   Even if that route takes me ten more minutes than had I remained in traffic, I feel a sense of jubilation; I am the road warrior.  

But, to me, shortcuts are invaluable resources in any respect.  Who coined the phrase "Time is Money?"  And doesn’t the calculation of opportunity cost, the foundation of economics, factor in the lost time you exchange to reach a separate goal?  (It does.  The all-knowing Wikipedia concurs). 

I have used this logic for years to justify shortcuts I have made; the results of those decisions beside the point.  And I do have a point which is this; if a shortcut will get you to the same end point, with the same results, just in a few less clicks, why not take full advantage?

Cvent agrees and has added 3 helpful shortcuts to our feedback software that will save you time and shield you from the dreaded hand cramp. 

The first is the Quick Links displayed on the left of your screen.  The 4 links allow you to:
1. Create new survey
2. Search your contact database
3. Add a new contact to your address book
4. Add a new contact group
 
These are likely the most commonly used features in your account.  You won’t need to remember which link goes with what tab and what features go with which link. 
 
Another great shortcut is the Quick Add Respondent section link.  This is located under the Manage Respondents tab and allows you to add someone to your targeted list AND send them a survey invitation email in one click.  If you sent out your email survey and realize a few people were left off the distribution list, this is an easy way to combine 4 steps into 1.  

There is a grab bag of goodies located under the Administration tab, from Parked Reports to Account Users and everything in between.  This is also where our Customer Support tab is located.  This tab has all the important information you will ever need to know: it has our contact information, is home to the comprehensive User’s Guide, and is also where you go to register for our training classes.  However, I realize that in the midst of a panic, clicking into the Administration tab, then selecting Customer Support then clicking the appropriate Section Link is probably not the path most taken.  If only tears had directional powers… to simplify this process for you, while we work to complete the sob recognition feature that will automatically direct clients to the support page, we have added a Support hyperlink at the top right of the page.  This link will take you immediately into the Customer Support page where you are free to bask in the support glow.   

To sum it up, there are things that will be missed and things that will be overlooked when using shortcuts.  That is an inevitable consequence of the sheer purpose of shortcuts.  However, when you know what you need and the path to get there seems daunting, use one of these shortcuts.  You too will feel like a road warrior. 

Time is Money

Wednesday, October 14, 2009 by Caitlin Rawles
No matter what kind of business you are in, you are looking to make a profit. Money may not be everything, but to those of us in the professional world, it certainly counts for a lot. We are all always looking for new ways to increase our revenue and decrease our expenses, and those of us who are smart know that time wasted is the greatest expense of all.

I am not saying this just because Cvent writes me a paycheck twice a month, but rather I am saying it because I know that it’s true: Cvent Web Surveys software is a time-saver. Our clients may pay us to license our online survey application, but in the end, the time they save thanks to the web surveys tool allows them to profit in the long run.

One of our primary goals here on the Cvent Web Surveys Client Services team is to educate clients on the best ways to use the Cvent survey tool in order to save time (and money!). In my opinion, there are a couple of features in particular with which you should familiarize yourself if you want to maximize the time that you save using our system:

1) Question Import: This is a new feature with our most recent product release, which occurred in August 2009. Question Import allows you to bring your questions into your web based survey questionnaire in bulk, which saves you the time of having to add them individually!

2) Answer Import: This feature is wonderful, especially if you are looking to pre-populate answers to your survey questions for your respondents. It is also useful if you want to bring historical data into a survey. If you import this data into the survey, then you don’t have to bother manually entering the responses from the back end!

3) Cloning Your Survey: If you run an annual client survey, and perhaps you only alter it a little bit from year to year, you will save a lot of time by simply copying or cloning the original survey when you go to send it out again. Keep in mind you can always make slight edits or changes to the copied survey if you need to do so.

4) Data Lists: Most of our clients do not make use of these, probably because they simply are not aware of the value of this feature. However, you should know that you can create account-wide email survey templates under the data lists section link. Saving your emails in the data lists section allows you to copy your email templates across surveys in your account. Do you send the same or similar emails out for multiple surveys? If so, then data lists will save you a lot of time!

5) Automatic Send by Date/Time: It will also save you a lot of time if you schedule your emails to go out automatically on a specified date and time. Not only will this save you the time of manually sending emails, but it will also negate the possibility you may forget to send the email when you planned to send it.

If you make use of all 5 of the features listed above, not only will you get out of the office earlier, but you will also bring more money in for your company or organization. Always remember that “time is money,” and familiarize yourself with the Cvent Web Surveys tool so that we can help you save both.

Public Opinion Survey in Real Life: Americans Want Solar Power

Wednesday, October 14, 2009 by Sherrie Mersdorf
American's want solar energyA new public opinion poll was commissioned by SCHOTT Solar and Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) for the annual SCHOTT Solar Barometer Survey. The attitude survey found 92% of Americans think developing and using solar energy is important for the United States. With all the political debates going on in Washington, this does not rank among them. Survey responses were consistent across all political affiliations and ideologies. 77% of survey respondents indicated they think the development of renewable energy sources should be a major priority for the federal government, this includes providing financial support when needed. The most favored renewable energy source is solar (44%), followed by wind (17%), natural gas (12%) and nuclear (10%).

The private sector sees the possibilities in the solar space as well. They aren't waiting for a web survey to tell them. According to Cleantech Group, the "cleantech sector" has grown almost 25% over the last 5 years. Just in the last quarter, solar was the leading sector. There is still plenty of room for growth in this area though. The SCHOTT survey found that almost half (49%) of the survey sample are currently thinking about solar power options for their home or business. This is a big opportunity for organizations looking to develop solar energy solutions.

One think I always tell you to look for is the survey methodology used to collect the data and draw conclusions. According to the SEIA press release, a third party market research firm conducted the online survey between August 31 - September 8, 2009. Email survey invitations were used to solicit survey responses to the online market research survey. Due to the quantitative market research method, the survey results are 95% accurate within plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

Use Cvent Web Survey Software to Send Emails

Monday, October 12, 2009 by Cvent Client Services
Did you know, Cvent’s online survey tool can be used to send out email blasts and newsletters? Users can use the email survey tool to design emails and send them out to prospects, clients, employees etc. Emails can be customized using Cvent’s HTML editor to take their emails to the next level. Instead of sending boring plain text emails, users can add their logo and images into the email making it more appealing or draw more attention to the calls to action. Here are some of the fascinating features you can use in Cvent’s HTML emails.

Add Images: Using the HTML editor you have the flexibility to add multiple images into the email, you can add your company logo as the banner of the email and other images within the body. You can use the HTML editor to resize an image to fit into the email, you can also position the image to be centered or left or right aligned.

Add Data Tags: You can personalize the email marketing using Cvent’s data tags to add contacts information, such as name, address, membership ID etc. This feature allows you as a sender to add a personal touch to the emails, resulting in the recipients feeling valued and remembered.

Attach Documents: Sometimes you want to be able to attach a document. Using Cvent’s email software, you can upload your document into the document library and add a link in the email to download the document. Using this feature you can send out related documents to your email recipients. This feature is particularly useful, to send out certificates or reports to the recipients along with your email.

As you can see, there are many interesting features in the Cvent tool. So what are you waiting for, sign up for a trial account and explore how you can improve your email marketing using Cvent's email survey software.

Your Message Will Go Nowhere if it is Caught in a Junk Mail Filter

Friday, October 9, 2009 by Matt Michels
Earlier this year, I was talking to a potential Cvent customer that was sending out a customer satisfaction survey. For people taking his survey, he offered a promotional gift upon completion.  He said that his response rates were miserable and he couldn't understand why. I looked over his survey, found a few small issues with the content, but nothing too alarming. I then looked at his invitation email. It was full of words like “FREE” and “GIFT”, all in capital letters. There were also dollar signs in the title. This email was begging to be caught in a junk filter.

I took his email, reworded it with words like “complimentary” and “no cost” and got rid of those dollar signs. I then ran it though Cvent’s Spam-O-Meter just to make sure our message was clean of junk words. This prospect then ran his survey again.  He finally got the response rates he was looking for.

Cvent Email Survey Software Content Analysis Tool

This message in this blog… Make sure you run your email survey invitations, reminder emails, and partially completed emails through Cvent’s Spam-O-Meter. You’ve worked too hard and too long putting the perfect survey together for it not to get to your target audience.

The Best of... 5 Must Have Online Survey Software Features

Thursday, October 8, 2009 by Sherrie Mersdorf
Only one more day until our blog will be a year old. As someone who has spent the better part of the last year uncovering online survey pitfalls and survey best practices to share, I'm excited about this milestone. Here are some of my favorite posts about Cvent Web Survey software features.

Stay Accountable with Easy-to-Create Parked Reports: Creating and managing web surveys is a time-consuming task alone. Add in management and colleagues constantly asking you for updates and reports, and you have even more pressure. Thankfully, this post outlines how you can park reports to share with anyone without giving them an account login.

Segmented Email Marketing Equals Higher Response: Cvent Web Survey software's centralized contact database helps users segment their lists by any criteria: geography, title, industry, etc. This allows you to better target your survey sample lists and email marketing. Segmenting your contact database is definitely an email and survey best practice.

Respond To Survey Feedback Quickly With Triggered Survey Email Alerts: This post explains the value of email alerts. This is definitely a very powerful feature. And don't think you're limited to just one alert, the August release gave survey writers, creators and administrators the ability to set up multiple alerts that will go to different people or groups based on the criteria they set in the alert. Triggered email alerts allow you to quickly website visitors.

Online Survey Tip: Import Known Data To Improve Respondent Experience and New Web Surveys Feature: Question Import: I know I'm cheating a bit in my top 5 posts. However, these two features are both import features that, in my book, go hand in hand. You can save time by importing your entire survey (all survey questions and answer choices) instead of going through the manual data entry a second time. The other feature I'm lumping in is the ability to import completed survey responses. This allows you to do paper surveys in conjunction with an online version of the survey, then store all the data in one place.

New Web Survey Feature: Advanced Link Logic: This post explains my favorite new feature in our survey tool. Released in August, this feature gives you the ability to customize which answer options a survey respondent sees based on how they answered a previous question. By keeping the survey questions and answer options more relevant to the respondent, you keep the survey more engaging which will increase completion rates.

Of course, it was hard to narrow it down to just five (okay, six) awesome features. If you want to learn more about our online survey software tool, please sign up for a product demo.