Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

...

  • What the study is for

  • How long it will take

  • What their reward is's in it for them

Because people are continually asked for their input, and also have to sift through spam emails, most have learned to skim sift these invitations quite ruthlessly. If you want their participation in your study, you must make your case clearly and concisely. This means that:

  • The invitation should be from a person or organization they know (and preferably have a relationship with), as discussed in “Who should send the email?” earlier.

  • The basic pitch should be clear at a glance.
    If this is a web ad, the ad text needs to convey the basic proposition. If this is an email invitation, the subject line must perform this duty.

  • The person’s most immediate questions must be answered by skimming the invitation.
    Not only do you need to answer basic questions (How long will this take? What do I get in return?), but you need to do it in a way that a busy, only slightly interested person will absorb.

  • It should sound like something they're familar with, so call it a "survey".
    As we mentioned in Using web ads earlier in this chapter, the term "tree test" is unfamiliar, so use the much more familiar "survey".

  • There must be a clear way to start the study.
    This seems obvious, but we’ve seen lots of invitations that included so many other links (to more information, terms and conditions, privacy statements, etc.) that it took some effort to figure out which link was for the study itself.

Here’s an example of the email invitations we use. (It’s also included in the Appendix.) an effective email invitation. Over time we’ve refined it to maximize the response rate:

  •  ss

View file
namesample explanation page.docx
height250

 

Note that the subject line offers a clear and concrete proposition, the “start study” link is early and prominent, the most important questions are listed first, and the whole message is formatted to be easy to skim.

...