We've provided default text for your messages and instructions. If you want to change this text, or add more information, use the text editors.
How to write an effective welcome message
Your welcome message is the first thing your participants will see. This message is meant to prepare participants for what to expect in the study, and to tell them why you're running the study. Keep it short and friendly, and include:
a friendly hello and thanks
an estimate for how long the study will take to complete (like “10 to 15 mins”)
a short explanation of what your participant's response will help you with
a hint that they'll find instructions on the next page
You can also include any other information you think is suitable for the study and your organization. For example, your organization might have a policy that requires participants to accept a privacy policy so that you can use their data. Or you might want to give participants some background information about your website to help them complete the study.
We recommend keeping it as brief as possible. This welcome page gives participants their first impression of your study. If they are faced with a complex wall of text, they may assume that your study will be difficult as well, and be less likely to complete it.
What your welcome message looks like to participants:
How to write clear instructions
We've included default instructions for you to use in your study. Check that the default instructions make sense for your study. You may want participants to do something slightly different than what we've written.
If you want to make changes to the text, keep it simple, and make sure the instructions stay in the correct order.
What your instructions look like to participants:
How to write an effective thank you message
Keep your thank you message short and friendly. As you can see in our default message below, all you need to do is:
thank your participants (of course!)
tell your participants they can now close the window or navigate to another webpage
advise that they can now close the window or navigate to another webpage
If there's any other information you'd like your participants to have, or any other impression you'd like to make, then use this space to do so.
What your thank you message looks like to participants:
How to set a thank you redirect URL
In a paid account, you can add a thank you redirect URL to your studies. When your participants click the answer to their last task, they'll be taken to your URL instead of the thank you message.
You can also use a redirect URL to integrate with a participant panel. See this article for more information about doing this.
How to write an effective closed message
The closed message will be seen by participants who attempt to access your study after it has closed.
Keep your closed message friendly and to the point. All you need to do is:
thank your participants for their interest in your study, they were willing to give you their time after all
advise them the the study is now closed and is no longer available
if you intend to redirect them to another study using the optional redirect URL, let them know that this will happen automatically after 10 seconds.
How to set a closed redirect URL
In a paid account, you can add a closed redirect URL to your studies. Should a participant attempt to take a study after it has closed they will see the closed message then, after ten seconds, will be automatically redirected to your specified URL. This can be useful if you wish to send participants to an alternative study or to your own website.
How to hide instructions and welcome messages
Welcome messages and instructions are optional for your first-click testing study. In the Messages tab, you can select the checkboxes ‘Skip Welcome message’ and/or ‘Skip Instructions message’. However, we suggest you keep these enabled so your participants can learn how to carry out their card sort.
Hiding the instructions and welcome messages comes in handy if you’re chaining multiple studies together. For example, if you chained together an card sorting study and a first-click testing study, you might show the instructions and welcome messages for card sorting, then only show the instructions for first-click testing.