Says the guy with a HCI doctorate. Paging doctors Dunning and Krueger :P. The crux of my argument, though, is that I'm uncomfortable with us saying "yes, let's build/standardise on a tool for qualitative analysis" when we're actively recruiting for several qualitative analysts: it's unfair for us to make decisions for them, unless a survey about MediaViewer really can't wait a couple of months.
On 29 April 2014 13:20, Jonathan Morgan <[email protected]> wrote: > > On Tue, Apr 29, 2014 at 12:30 PM, Oliver Keyes <[email protected]>wrote: >> >> Geneally speaking my advice to the multimedia team would be "don't go >> near surveys". I've done a lot of them in the last 3 years, and the one >> thing I've learned is that surveys are very, very difficult to get right. >> Another thing I've learned is that if you don't get them right, the results >> are meaningless and it's hard to tell when that happens. >> >> >>> > Oh, surveys aren't all that hard to get right ;) And I bet your surveys > were mostly fine, Oliver. I'm happy to help with survey design if anyone > has questions. > > - J > > > -- > Jonathan T. Morgan > Learning Strategist > Wikimedia Foundation > User:Jtmorgan <https://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/User:Jtmorgan> > [email protected] > > > _______________________________________________ > Analytics mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/analytics > > -- Oliver Keyes Research Analyst Wikimedia Foundation
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