Always Make Sure to Let Participants Not Know

In Austin Cityzen helped coordinate feedback on policies proposed by the Mayor. When asked their council district, nearly 30% of respondents to the survey didn’t know.

It reminds us that it’s always important to let the public not know something. This provides an opportunity for constructive feedback and learning — in the case of Austin, saying you didn’t know your council district took respondents to a lookup page on the City’s website.

Often when pulling together a survey the responses can seem so understandable and clear. For many, particularly those who are new to municipal engagement, options lack context or clarity. Remembering to offer an unsure or don’t know option can increase participation and provides an entry for follow up campaigns.

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Ever feel like you’re doing a lot to drive community engagement, but aren’t sure what’s working?

What if you could tell which specific outreach efforts were generating the most participation?

Or segment participants based on how they found you? 

Now you can do both using custom links in PublicInput.com…

Engage using standard survey question formats that you’re used to with consumer survey tools. From the single and multi-select, to Likert, slider, and text input formats, you’ve got the basics covered.

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