Once you have piloted the test, you will likely have found some minor things to change, and perhaps even a few major ones. The great part of this is that you get to fix your test before your real audience sees those mistakes.

Depending on your testing tool, you may be able to edit the existing test, or you may need to duplicate it and edit the new copy.

 

Editing the test and deleting pilot results

If your tool lets you edit the existing test, you can make your changes right there.

Most changes can be done without consequences, but be careful about two things:

Duplicating and editing the new copy

Some tools don’t let you edit a test that has been launched. So if you launched your test for purposing of piloting, you’ll need to duplicate it first, then edit the newly created duplicate.

This has the advantage of keeping a revision history (of sorts) in case you want to go back to a previous version to check something or to grab an older version of a task’s wording (for example).

Because you’re revising (and eventually launching) the newly created duplicate, you don’t have to worry about deleting pilot results; they’ll be attached to the previous copy, not the new one.

 


Next: Chapter 10 - key points