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"All the right junk in all the right places" - Meghan Trainor

 

OK, so you’ve we’ve prepared your our tree, created a good list of tasks, set it all up in your a testing tool, and figured out which users you’re we’re going to target.

You’re We’re ready to go, right?

Ah, not quite. There’s something wrong with your our study.

It’s likely there’s at least one glitch in your the study that you we haven’t discovered yet. The problem is that you we don’t know what’s wrong. At this point, you we can either:

  • Launch your the study anyway and let your our participants find the problem for you us (and maybe muck up your the data as a result), or

  • Take an afternoon to pilot your the study, find the glitches, then launch a slightly revised study that gives you us higher-quality results.

Luckily, doing a test run of your a study is simple, and the problems you’ll we’ll find are usually easy to fix.

 


Trying out

your

the task wording

A pointer to Chapter 7

Previewing a test

yourself

Trying it out in almost-real conditions

Running a pilot test

Who should participate, online vs. in person, getting feedback

Checking for technical problems

Dealing with spam blockers, mobile devices, old browsers, and firewalls

Revising the test

Editing vs. duplicating, deleting pilot results

 Key points