Loading...
Answers
MenuWhat is the best software to use for adding a poll into a newsletter?
This question has no further details.
Answers
There are multiple survey software platforms. There maybe one that is better than another based on your specific needs. See below link to review the Top 10 survey software.
Some email marketing software have polling capabilities built in! I would suggest you look for that or ask the email marketing software provider. Also, SurveyMonkey is a great free/inexpensive tool! https://www.surveymonkey.com/
For surveys I like survey monkey or typeform. For live polling I like poll everywhere.
I'd suggest using www.Fieldboom.com to create beautiful surveys, forms and polls. It walks you through the steps in minutes, and you don't need any other experience to be successful with it. Fieldboom tracks and reports your responses, keeping your info all in one place and easy to find.
I will suggest GetResponse. They have a very nice user interface and I had a good success there. See this: https://www.getresponse.com/features/online-surveys.html
You can also use MailChimp. See following link on how to add poll on MailChimp: http://www.emailmonks.com/blog/email-design/embed-polls-surveys-emails-via-mailchimp/
Related Questions
-
How to price conversion rate optimization?
I provide conversion optimisation services on a price per day on a rolling monthly basis. I did it this way, because my background is in software development consultancy and everything was estimated and billed out on a daily basis. I also provide one off services which is normally priced based on how long it would take to complete. I prefer to work with customers on a rolling monthly basis because I can have an impact on many aspects of their digital marketing and business processes. It means I'm also not tied to only creating split tests but have the freedom to advise and have a positive impact on multiple areas of a business.KM
-
What are good restaurant related questions that I can ask in a survey for the purpose of exemplifying the market to investors?
I think it is a good start. From my experience, people don't really know what they want -- they only think they do. An example of this is when Steve Jobs announced the iPad. There was collective confusion (more so than any other time Apple has done something). Now, we couldn't imagine our world without it. That said, the participants of your survey will likely answer within their comfort zone or what they are familiar with. This is what they *think* they want. If you base your entire business model on what people think they want, you will end up duplicating what they are already accustom to (your competition). Getting a sense of your market is a good thing, but you most have the "secret sauce" that will woo your potential customers away from their routine. I don't know what type of restaurant you are aiming for, be it fast food, causal sit down, unique and interesting, or 5-star quality. Based on that, price becomes very subjective. There is a very unique, one-off restaurant I enjoy visiting when I am traveling in Southern California. It is priced higher than any other restaurant in the area, but I am not paying for the food or even the service. I am paying for the way it makes me feel and the environment they maintain. The participants of your survey will likely not be considering intangibles like this when they answer. Keep this in mind, but don't build your entire business around it. Questions to validate your business model may include: - How important is the selection of adult beverages? - How important is the selection of healthy choices? - How important is a family-friendly environment? - How important is the quality of food (we don't always go where the food is best) - How important is the speed of service? Based on your question, I am guessing you are going for a family-friendly, speedy, inexpensive alternative to McDonalds, Burger King, or Carl Jr's. These companies have deep pockets to fend off upstarts. Your value proposition will need to be rock solid to defend against the giants of the industry.SN
-
How does my startup hire an affordable marketing expert?
I don't even know how to answer this. Do you know what the difference between McDonalds and the local burger joint that is filing for bankruptcy is? It's marketing. McDonalds is worth billions of dollars not because of the quality of their food, but because of their marketing. Marketing is not an expense. A janitor is an expense. Your computer is an expense. Marketing is an INVESTMENT. Would you shop around for the cheapest heart surgeon? Of course not. Because you would likely end up dead. Why, then, do you shop around for a marketing expert? Are you ok with your company going bankrupt? Is that worth the small savings to you? No. Of course not. Hire someone who is good at marketing. Hire someone who knows what they are doing. Buy yourself a Lamborghini with your profit the first quarter. Get a beach house in hawaii. Grab a yacht. Or, try to find your business the cheapest heart surgeon you can and then spend the next five years wondering why such a solid business idea failed in the first 6 months. I'm passionate about this exact topic because all those statistics you read about "70% of businesses failing in two years" are solely because of horrible marketing.AM
-
What should I do to have my first client on Clarity.fm?
I started on Clarity just by answering questions last summer. I used to love Quora but really disagreed with a number of changes they made and so when Clarity launched answers, I started answering questions. I'm incredibly busy but let's face it: we all have extra time. We spend it looking at our phones, on Facebook, socializing with friends, whatever way each person does it, we all spend time on non mission critical stuff. Because I genuinely enjoy helping others, I treated Quora as a way of relaxing the same way others would read news sites or blogs. And so I switched all that time to Clarity by answering questions. I don't recall the exact specifics but by providing real answers (not just, "call me, I can help you), I had my first call request within about a month of my first answer. And I got a nice review. And some more questions answered, and a couple more calls, and a couple more reviews. And from that point, the call volume increased. Simultaneously, I started referring all "can I pick your brain" requests on LinkedIn and email to my Clarity account. And so some calls initiated that way. More reviews. Now, a year later, I have done over 200 calls, with the majority of it inbound from Clarity. Take it from me, if you make the time, and provide genuine help to people, you will get rewarded for it. But like anything in life, if you're not willing to invest the time and resources, you're unlikely to see any return.TW
-
What are great examples of successfully launching digital two sided marketplaces other than the Airbnb example people always quote?
Here's an evernote file of things I've found and liked around the internet re: 2 sided marketplaces. All digital, although not sure exactly how "successful" they are - but more for reference. Quality / Copywriting https://www.yourmechanic.com/works#mechanics https://www.airbnb.ca/?locale=en http://powhow.com/ Community Engagement http://www.houzz.com/ideabooks https://www.healthtap.com/ https://www.airbnb.ca/wishlists/popular https://www.wello.com/class/set/Yoga/ Categories / Search http://www.etsy.com/ http://fiverr.com/ https://www.airbnb.ca/s/moncton?source=hdr http://takelessons.com/search?q=4gq30T Deliver of Service www.hotelstonight.com www.uber.com https://www.medicast.co/ www.wello.com www.takelessons.com www.taskrabbit.com How it works https://www.taskrabbit.com/how-it-works https://www.zaarly.com/howzaarlyworks http://takelessons.com/students/how-it-works https://www.wello.com/how-it-works/ https://www.medicast.co/how-it-works https://www.healthtap.com/#how_it_works https://www.wello.com/how-it-works/ https://www.odesk.com/info/howitworks/client/ http://www.guru.com/emp/takeTour.aspx The Why http://nest.com/smoke-co-alarm/why-we-made-it/#nobody-ever-looks-up Supply Side https://www.elance.com/q/find-work http://www.guru.com/pro/index.aspx https://www.odesk.com/info/howitworks/contractor/ http://takelessons.com/teachers https://www.zaarly.com/selling http://www.skillshare.com/teach https://www.udemy.com/teach/ www.powhow.com/open-your-own-studio https://www.airbnb.ca/rooms/new Conversions http://www.justanswer.com/ http://www.skillshare.com/ Referals http://www.powhow.com/open-your-own-studio uber.com/invite/rjif2 Subscriptions http://www.powhow.com/open-your-own-studio http://premium.docstoc.com/subscribe/plans http://www.rocketlawyer.com/plans-pricing.rl Help Center http://help.zaarly.com/ https://www.airbnb.ca/help Pricing http://www.rocketlawyer.com/plans-pricing.rl http://www.powhow.com/open-your-own-studio http://premium.docstoc.com/ http://mixergy.com/premium/ http://wistia.com/pricing https://teamtreehouse.com/subscribe/plansDM
the startups.com platform
Copyright © 2025 Startups.com. All rights reserved.