Showing posts with label registration questions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label registration questions. Show all posts

Friday, 17 July 2015

Simon on: ITCM - Are the questions essential?

When we read about successful registration strategies we often either have to overlook the hidden agendas subtly (and sometimes not so subtly) dropped into the article, or ignore the bandwagon trend that is the sudden must-have.

In this article I divulge the non-agenda answer to registration success – and I’ll give you a clue, it has nothing to do with the latest bit of shiny, game-changing gadgetry.

It is simply common sense – stick to the necessities.


To find out what these are, read the whole article featured on ITCM, by clicking here.

Tuesday, 17 December 2013

Simon on: Online registration questions

Online registration has become so easy that it’s now available as a DIY service. That’s obviously a great advantage but it carries potential pitfalls. 
The most obvious is that it’s tempting to go on adding questions until the form is so long that registrants lose the will to live.
Yet how much of the information collected is of any real use? For example, how many meeting planners really need a postal address for registrants if nothing is being sent by post? Maybe the marketing department wants to know where the registrants come from but a town or even a postcode will be enough for that. 
The difficulty is that, the longer the form, the less accurate the answers. Some questions seem almost designed to give misleading information. The most obvious is ‘How did you hear about this event?’, especially when somebody who clicks ‘Magazine’ is then faced with a list of titles. The chance of getting an accurate response is marginally above zero because, as with all forms asking too many questions, registrants will probably click the first box they see.
So what is needed? First and last name and email, definitely. Organisation name, probably. Beyond that, a question should only to be on the form if the answer is useful.
Originally published in Conference News