Showing posts with label crowdsourcing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crowdsourcing. Show all posts

Wednesday, 25 November 2009

Reach the world with viral surveys on Facebook

In our last blog post we discussed the possibilities of virally spread surveys in social media. After posting it we got some questions from people asking how they should go about to make the most of the fan pages they have on Facebook. For this we put together a video called ”Reach the world with viral surveys on Facebook”. Enjoy!









What’s the next step?
If you’re already using the Webropol survey software you can start sharing surveys on Facebook right away! Any survey created can be shared with fans and friends using the application. If you’re not using the Webropol survey software yet, you can start by making free and ad-free polls with the Facebook application.

Grab the application for free at http://apps.facebook.com/webropol

If you're interested in hearing more about the possibilities of virally spread Facebook surveys, don't hesitate to contact us! Also be sure to visit our Facebook fan page for more news and information!



Ps. If you for some reason cannot access the video above, it’s also available on Youtube.

Tuesday, 3 November 2009

Online viral surveys on Facebook

OR: How you turn 200 fans into a million responses at zero cost

We’re very excited to present a solution that will change online surveys forever. The new Facebook application from Webropol allows for viral spreading of surveys. This means you can harness the force of social media for product development, idea generation, feedback, and virtually any other kind of surveys. The application will help you turn 200 respondents into a million responses – at virtually no cost!

To be honest with you, even we think it’s quite a bold statement to say that you can somehow turn 200 people into a million responses. That’s why we start this blog post by putting our money where our mouth is.

Let’s say you have a modest Facebook fan base of 200 people and you send out a message with an online survey link attached. A response rate of 25% you will get you 50 responses. However a good result this is, it’s not using nearly the full potential of social media nor nearly reaching all 300 million Facebook users. What if you could somehow reach the friends of the respondents and the friends of those, and the friends of those...?


The force of viral spread
The average user of Facebook has 130 friends. This where the WEBROPOL application begins: when a person responds to a survey, she can show it on her news feed for her friends to see. When you factor in that 130 friends of each of the fifty who responded see the survey, you reach an additional 6500 pair of eyes. And if just a modest 5% of those take the sur vey, you have 375 responses more. Once again, the friends of those who responded see the survey in the news feed and answer. At just three steps from the original respondents, you could have tens of thousands responses.

Online viral surveys on FacebookOnline viral surveys on Facebook

















Should your viral response rate hit as high as 20 per cent, you would get a staggering million answers with just three levels!


How does it work?
Using the WEBROPOL application is a no-brainer. You simply create a normal survey and paste its link into the application. Then you go to your Fan Page and send an update to fans. There you can even target the recipients based on location, age and gender. Just click ”send” and wait for the responses to drop in!


Free to use and no ads!
The WEBROPOL application is 100% ad-free: there are no annoying ads, no pop-ups and no intrusive messages. It’s also worth mentioning that no information is passed on to any 3rd party. The application is absolutely free to use and there are no separate licence fees or hidden charges.

If you you’re not using the Webropol online survey software yet, you can still create simple polls with the Facebook application. Then just click ”Polls” and send out a poll to your friends!

Try out the Facebook application right away!



Glossary & Frequently Asked Questions

What’s a Facebook Fan Page?
In Facebook’s own words, a Fan Page is ” a public profile that enables you to share your business and products with Facebook users. When your fans interact with your Facebook Page, stories linking to your Page can go to their friends via News Feed. As these friends interact with your Page, News Feed keeps driving word-of-mouth to a wider circle of friends.” It’s completely free to set up and operate a fan page even for commercial purposes!

Just to get an idea of different fan pages, have a look at these: Coca-Cola, Pringles, Nokia, Webropol.

How many people are on Facebook?
According to Facebook its users have on average 130 friends. The number of Facebook users amount to over 300 million spread world-wide. Every day more than 8 billion minutes are spent in Facebook. For more information, see the Facebook statistics page.

Thursday, 4 June 2009

Surveys and Social Media: Crowdsourcing made easy

Social media allows for an informal dialogue between companies and consumers. But perhaps the most interesting thing is what Forrester Research calls the ”Groundswell”. In essence, it’s about understanding how consumer masses are shaping both society and business – and how that force can be harnessed in marketing. One application of the Groundswell is crowdsourcing, where consumers are engaged in innovating, designing or even creating products and brands.

One key area of crowdsourcing is getting input, feedback, and suggestions from consumers on a large scale. When done in a planned manner, it can be very effective. In the UK, Walker’s got over 1,2 million suggestions when they asked people to come up with new flavors for their crisps. From a marketer’s perspective the value of that information cannot be measured in money – Walker’s had 1,2 million people telling them what kind of products they would like to buy!

On a similar note, NASA held a nation-wide student contest to name its next Mars rover. From over 9000 suggestions, the NASA panel chose the suggestion of a 12-year old, aptly naming the rover ”Curiosity”.

So there’s clearly a power in big crowds. But what if your company isn’t big enough to reach the attention of nine thousand people – let alone millions? And what if your budget isn’t big enought to run ads in every media to get everybody’s attention? Luckily, social media provides you with a very cost effective solution to reach your loyal customers and a fans.


Here’s four ways to start

ONE: Start Twittering
There is a huge potential in Twitter. Britney Spears, for example, has over 1,6 million people following her Twitter profile. If you think that Twitter is only for individuals, and not organisations,you need to check out the Social Brand Index. You’d be surprised how many companies, government organisations, NGOs and other organisations are twittering! Micro-blogging, as it is called, is a great way to invite people to give feedback and suggestions for just about anything. Just post a link to your survey on your Twitter profile and wait for hundreds or thousands of people to respond!

TWO: Find Fans on Facebook
There’s plenty of other social networking sites, but Facebook is perhaps the one best suited for consumer contacts. Facebook also provides companies with a possibility to engage in a dialog with consumers directly, something that previously might not have been possible. Such a case is Coca-Cola,which has almost 3,5 million people signed up as fans on Facebook. Imagine having those brand-loyal enthusiasts respond to a survey on new beverage flavors, for example. Even with a response rate of just 10%, it would amount to 350,000 responses!

But there’s more to Facebook than fan pages. If your company doesn’t have a fansite of its own, paid ads are a sure way to reach people. Via Facebook you are able to target users based on several factors, such as geographic location, age, gender, keywords. They keyword kan relate to just about anything, ranging from music taste to job title.

It’s really easy to get started with Facebook advertising. Just create an ad with a few clicks (and pay as low as $0.20 - $0.40 per ad click) and have people respond to your survey. Make sure you have an advanced survey tool, because that will eliminate the need for a separate campaign site –just make the survey look snazzy and have the clicks directed straight to the survey form.

THREE: Spread Virally by Social Bookmarks
Naturally, there is always the possibility for social bookmarking. If the survey is interesting enough, you can add it on services such as Digg, Technorati and Delicious for free. People actively browse for interesting topics on the aforementioned sites, and when they find an interesting topic, they’ll bookmark it. Then the friends of those people see the topic and bookmark it and quickly there’s an avalanche of people building up.

FOUR: Set up a community
There are several free solutions available that can be used to create online communities, such as Ning. Naturally, other commercial options are available as well.

Genelec, the manufacturer of award-winning audio monitors for professional and home use, recently set up its own community. It now has almost 800 active audiophiles talking and sharing stories about Genelec’s products. For a company that previously would have had little direct contact with its fans, having a community opens a whole new way to get feedback and engage the fans in an active dialogue. Here, too, structured surveys could bring valuable insight into the minds of people who like and buy professional audio equipment.


How to manage the information collected?

We’ve talked a lot about different ways to tap into huge crowds online. But connecting with almost the entire world is only step one. You’ve only passed the vital bottleneck of access, but you still have to deal with perhaps the most demanding part. That’s collecting and structuring the information people give you. Do you want people to send you e-mail, type their ideas in comment fields, or even send you snail mail? How do you think Walker’s would have managed if all 1,2 million product suggestions would have come in on the back of post cards?

A good way to do crowdsourcing easily is to use a survey tool. Firstly, it solves the problem of collecting data. Secondly, it helps you collect information in a structured and standardized way. Instead of having thousands of people pouring their hearts in free, unstructured way, you can have information gathered in different categories. You are also able to take a quantitative approach to surveys, which means that you have people rate different things on scales.

What kind of tool should you be using? For starters, be sure to use a standalone survey tool . It is not restricted to any specific platform, which means you can use it in any social media you like. A second criteria you should take into consideration is flexibility. You might want to invite respondents on your opt-in mailing list as well, so be sure to use a survey tool that manages the use of several channels – and is able to show the different channels on your reports.

Oh, and don’t forget – it might come in handy to have a survey tool that allows for exporting data into statistical software, such as SPSS and SAS. This allows for the serious number-crunchers of you to make just about any deep statistical analysis of the data set.


For more information on Webropol, visit our website!