Thursday, 26 March 2009

How to add a 'Thank You' page after survey submission

We often get asked how to set up an end page to a survey so that we can confirm that a respondent's survey has been successfully submitted and their answers have been received.



In a standard survey, a respondent will either see a 'Submit' button or a 'Close' button on the final page ('Submit' if there is a question on the last page, 'Close' if there isn't). When the respondent hit's this button, Clicktools attempts to close the survey window. This can sometimes leave the respondent unsure if the response has bee received, especially if they have disabled JavaScript on their browser as the window will not close and may just go to a blank page.



So, to combat this, we suggest the creation of a separate thank you and confirmation page (basically just a survey with some text and no questions) which is used as an exit page for your main survey. An exit page is a feature that allows you to direct a respondent to any webpage when they submit a survey. For example, build your survey as normal:






Now build an end page by creating a separate survey, with text element:







Take the survey URL from your end page survey, and add it as the Exit Page for your actual survey:






And this is what you get:

http://www.clicktools.com/survey?iv=b51203e8e8dac36

NOTE: You could create one generic end page and apply it as an exit page on multiple surveys

How to add a progress bar to your survey

Progress bars are a great addition to any survey that extends over more than one or two pages. They clarify to the respondent where they are in a survey, and how far they've got to go. We've seen numerous occurrences of people dropping out part way through a survey as they have no indicator of how much of it they've completed.

Progress bars are a feature of a 'Presentation Template' and can be switched on (or off!) and applied to every page of your survey.

Go to 'Templates' in the main menu bar. Now go to the 'Presentation' tab. Now either 'Create New' to create a new template or hit the 'edit' link on the right-hand-side to edit an existing template. In the edit screen, on the left-hand-side is a 'Progress bar' option. Select yes, and then choose the progress bar colour.

Remember to hit the 'Apply' button to save the changes.





Your progress bar will now be automatically applied to your survey:




NOTE: Making changes to a presentation template will affect the look and feel of any survey instance that uses that template.

Wednesday, 25 March 2009

How to contact support & your training options


Support and Training
Clicktools offers a number of help and support options. This document outlines what these are so you know how you can learn about the application and what to do if you get stuck! Here are your options:




Search the Online Help Documentation
This is your first port of call and contains functional help for the whole application. It can be accessed 24/7/365 by clicking the ‘Help’ link in the top right hand corner of the application:



Use the Contents menu to navigate around, or click on the ‘Search’ tab, type a topic into the text box and hit ‘Go’. Related search results will show as a list to the right of your search topic.



Ask Our Support Team a Question
Our application support team is on hand to answer any of your technical questions. The level of support you have will determine your options for contacting us and how we prioritise cases:


*With our very best endeavours and under reasonable circumstances, but some things can take longer!

For basic support, the quickest way to raise a support ticket is via the ‘Still need help’ link in the online help:



This takes you to a form where you can provide details of your question or problem and get a support ticket raised for you automatically the moment you submit the form (if you didn’t guess, the form is all built and managed using Clicktools).
You can also email support@clicktools.com - once we receive your email, it will go into a queue where an agent will raise the case for you with the details you provide.

In addition to this, Premium support customers will be provided with a dedicated phone number and named contact.



Attend a Web-based Training Session
Led by a Clicktools instructor, these free to attend sessions are perfect for new Users or as a refresher course and are designed to demonstrate essential Clicktools skills without taking you away from your desk. The web-based sessions incur no travel costs and each session only takes up to an hour of your time. Web sessions are run on a Regular schedule as detailed below:



To join any of the sessions, email us at
training@clicktools.com



Session Outline

Building surveys
How to build web based surveys, forms and landing pages:


  • Creating a new surveys from scratch
  • Adding question content and the three key survey elements
  • Adding question for automatic answering
  • Editing and managing survey content
  • Question conditions, piping, formatting tools, adding content from Word
  • Creating a branded look and feel template
  • Creating and testing a live survey instance

Duration: 1 hour approx.
Who should attend: New Users at Architect or Principle level


Deploying surveys using Clicktools

How to deploy web based surveys forms and landing pages form Clicktools:

  • Uploading and managing contact lists
  • Creating and managing participant lists
  • Creating and editing deployment templates
  • Anonymous surveys using a generic link
  • Deploying surveys to Clicktools contacts
  • Automatically answering questions using annotated URLs

Duration: 1 hour.
Who should attend: Users at Organiser level or above looking to deploy and manage surveys


Analysing Results in Clicktools

Looking at results for a survey instance:


  • Viewing results
  • Segmenting data using date, respondent and question filtering
  • Cross-tabbing question results
  • Exporting data and publishing results
  • Set-up options

Duration: 1 hour.
Who should attend: Users at User level or above


Salesforce Connector

Integrating Clicktools with your Salesforce CRM environment
  • Integration overview
  • Setting up surveys to allow integration with Salesforce
  • Mapping survey data to your Salesforce environment
  • Setting up deployment templates with annotated URLs and merge variables
  • Deployment of surveys using Ct4ae deployment wizard and communication templates
  • Managing synchronization

Duration: 1 hour.
Who should attend: Users at Organiser level or above looking to integrate Clicktools with Salesforce
Suggested prerequisites: Attendees should be familiar with Salesforce including setting up custom objects and fields, creating communication templates, building custom reports, Salesforce IDs and using the key features of Salesforce. Attendees should also be comfortable with the Clicktools application specifically editing survey content.




On-site Training
On-site training involves a Clicktools trainer visiting your work-place to cover Clicktools functionality and specific applications of Clicktools relevant to your organisation. In an in-house setting, Clicktools training has a real hands-on approach and is a great way to "kick-start" a new project by giving participants immediate, directly-relevant experience using Clicktools. Training courses can be tailored to meet your specific needs.


Please contact us to discuss your on-site training requirements via email - sales@clicktools.com

Tuesday, 10 March 2009

Creating Ideas with Clicktools..

This blog entry looks at how you can use Clicktools to create Ideas. If you don't know about Ideas, it's a great tool to capture and organize any suggestions from anyone whether they be internal users, customers, partners etc. One of our customers recently asked us to look at ways of capturing Ideas from a survey and this outlines what we came up with.

The use case is fairly simple. The customer loved using Ideas internally but didn't want to expose the Ideas interface to their customers. They wanted a way of enabling customer to capture ideas, suggestions or even praise following a survey and in support emails. They would then manage the Ideas, to share praise (and criticism!?) as well as vote within their product management team on features. Once, the product management team had voted they wanted to issue a survey with the top ten Ideas, collecting comments from customers (again added to Ideas) and then voting.

Sure, it's not a pure use of Ideas but some organizations are just not quite ready to put the whole of their product roadmap in the hands of customers!

This blog entry looks at the first element in the use case - capturing ideas.

1. The survey in Clicktools
You can see an example of a survey to capture Ideas here and is shown in the mini-screen shot:
http://www.clicktools.com/survey?iv=b411fb322c0d52c



click image to magnify

The area we are focusing on is an area at the bottom of the survey. A light bulb indicates that start of the 'Ideas' area and, in Clicktools, there are three questions used to create the Idea.

1) A text question asks for a summary of the idea. This will be used to capture the Idea 'Title'
2) A radio question alongside the text asks the user to categorize the idea (these should match the categories you want people to create)
3) An essay question collects the detail to create the 'Idea Body'.

2. The mapping
is quite simple. You simply create an Idea using the questions in the survey. Additionally you may want to consider adding a custom field to your Ideas object to capture a link to a Contact or Account. That way, you can easily see which ideas your customers are creating...

This is a very simple but exceptionally powerful application for Clicktools. Please let us know if you think of any ways to expand on this...

Clickthru agreements..

It's been a while but it's back - the blog that is. We have been including more and more hints and tips in the help but we decided it was time to bring the blog back. This is simply because there are so many good ideas and uses of Clicktools with Salesforce - we just have to tell everyone about them.

Ok, for the first new entry we are going to talk about using Clicktools for clickthrough (click-sign) agreements.

The use case is quite simple. You need to get a customer or partner (or someone) to agree to your terms and conditions before proceeding with the relationship. Usually, this involves sending a word document or pdf to the customer/partner. them printing, signing and returning. It's a simple but potentially lengthy process that can, using Clicktools and Salesforce be completely automated...

1. Decide how to record agreements in Salesforce.
There are several options here. The most obvious would be to use the standard Contract object in Salesforce. However, there are some alternatives that other Clicktools customers use. Some record the fact the agreement was signed, the date is was signed and by whom - all against the Account. Others record agreements against the Contact or Opportunity. Or perhaps you have a custom object called "Agreements" and link to both the Account and Contact. You may of course consider a combination of the above. For the purposes of this example, we are going to create a new Contract and link it to an Account and a Contact.

2. Build form in Clicktools.
The form in Clicktools is quite simple and consists of three main elements. a) Hidden text questions to connect the form back to Salesforce. b) The agreement text and c) a checkbox question so the individual can confirm the agreement. Here is some more detail:

a) You will require hidden text questions for each of the elements you wish to link back to in Salesforce. As we are creating a Contract and linking to an Account and Contact, we need two hidden text questions. One for Account and one for the Contact.

b) Entering the agreement text can be done in many ways. You can display the whole text as a standard text element. However, this could take up a lot of screen real estate. The standard approach appears to be to use a 'window' with a scroll bar with only a small amount of the agreement visible at any one time. There are two approaches to this. One, use an iFrame. An iFrame enables you to reference text on another web page which eases potential maintenance however the downside is that iFrames are not particularly well supported in all browser environments (e.g. Safari). The other option (and the one used in the example) is to use a 'textarea'. You will need to enter this html directly in to the 'Source' of a Clicktools text block. To do this, create a text element, show the formatting bar and click the 'Source' button. Then, enter the code below, replacing the text with your own:

-- sample code begins --
<textarea cols="80" rows="10" readonly="readonly">Your agreement text in here.</textarea>"
-- sample code ends --

You can change the number of rows and columns to show more (or less) of the agreement whilst the readonly setting ensure the text cannot be changed. Please see http://www.w3schools.com/TAGS/tag_textarea.asp for more help on this html.

c) The final element is perhaps some thank you text but, importantly, a single checkbox which the user has to check to complete the form. Make this question 'Required' which forces this.

You can see an example here or, click on the mini-screenshot:
http://www.clicktools.com/survey?iv=b411feffe4d65dc



click to magnify screenshot

3. Define mapping from Clicktools to Salesforce.
Obviously, the mapping will depend entirely upon what you want to do with the information in Salesforce. In our example, we are creating a Contract, then using the answers to the two hidden questions to populate the links to the Account and Contact. We can then use some additional items like the date completed to record and use some fixed text to record the status of Draft, the length of the contract term and place a link to the completed form in the Description.

4. The email to send.
The final element is to create an email in Salesforce to send to the contact to sign. Obviously, each person will use their own text but the important element will be the link to the survey. It is important because the link must pass across information to Clicktools. We do this by appending two merge fields on to the end of the survey link like this:

http://www.clicktools.com/survey?iv=b411feffe4d65dc&q1={!Account.Id}&q2={!Contact.Id}

The bold element at the end of the link is what you would need to add. So, when you send the email the values {!Account.Id} and {!Contact.Id} will be replaced by the real values in Salesforce which allows Clicktools to link the newly created contract to the correct people. You could hide this URL behind some other text or an image using Salesforce's html email editor to produce a very smooth email.

That completes the example - it's a fairly simple process and can vastly reduce the amount of effort involved in getting click-thru's implemented!