Notifying the participant when a quota or screen out is exceeded
You can decide what happens when a participant exceeds a quota or triggers a screen out. You can either: These can be set for the Setting a message Setting the web page URL When there are multiple quotas and an overall target quota, the participant will be shown the message of the first quota that […]
Setting up Screen Outs
Screening questions are designed to either include or exclude participants from taking the survey. A common screening question excludes participants who work in the marketing industry. First, assess the characteristics that are required to give the desired sample for the survey. Then create a series of questions that select these participants. Define these as screening […]
Setting up Quotas
There are three steps in the process of creating a quota based on a variable: Identify the quota variable First, decide which question or combination of questions should be used as the basis of the quota. This can be: Place the quota question near the start of the questionnaire so the quota can be checked […]
Setting an overall target
The overall target is a quota that sets a limit on the total number of responses submitted for a survey. This stops responses being submitted once the target number has been reached. An overall target can be set when offering an incentive for each response submitted making sure costs are kept within budget. This quota […]
Introduction to Quotas and Screen Outs
When running a survey you can limit the number of responses submitted using quotas and screen outs. During each interview, the system will monitor responses to any quota and screen out questions and automatically close the interview if the participant falls into a category that has already reached its quota limit. Quotas can be set […]
Tenant Satisfaction Measures Survey guide
The Regulator of Social Housing is a UK Government body that regulates providers of social housing. They provide a set of standardised questions which social housing providers are required to use when they survey their tenants, asking their satisfaction with the housing and housing provider. The Tenant Satisfaction Measures Survey uses these standard questions to […]
Create a chart of positive responses to rating scale questions
Rating scale questions ask the participant to select a rating from a range of responses. These responses usually range from a negative to a positive rating or vice versa and often include 5 or more points. An analysis of the results can be hard to interpret if all the categories are charted. The responses can […]
Change category colours in charts
Charts play an important part in analysis and reporting, helping to make the response data easier to understand. You can create chart styles that reflect your organization’s branding, bringing a consistent look to your analysis and reports. Snap XMP Desktop provides a large number of predefined chart styles that you can use as supplied or […]
Summarise rating scale with Group Variables
Group variables are used to create a summary analysis of questions which share a common set of answer choices, making it easier to evaluate overall responses to questions in a grid, and make comparisons between separate question grids in your survey. This tutorial shows how to: This example uses the Crocodile Rock Cafe survey supplied with […]
Analysing data with crosstabs
You can find trends and patterns in your data by creating ordered crosstabs (cross tabulations) in Snap XMP Desktop. This is a quick way of analysing banded or coded variables. Crosstabs are also known as contingency tables (or pivot tables). This tutorial shows you how to produce and order crosstabs then convert them to charts. […]