> Honestly a really cool solution, though what I like about the solution I began building is that it doesn't require the time to setup each item and outline them well. Can be applied directly to existing multiple choice questions with minimal effort, and in theory can be made more and more responsive to device type over time. Yeah - having this set up in a column, as you did, would make the setup very straightforward and easy to change/pop in new products - I'd also assume you could randomize the locations of each item on the shelves - something the Hot Spot method couldn't do. I suppose one advantage of the Hot Spot method is being able to click what you like and what you dislike (your method, you could just copy the question and instruct how you want, though). Hot Spot can also deal with oddball shapes... and should work just as well on mobile devices. Depending on what kind of shelf test you'd want to do - telling someone to 'find' the product on the shelf to give a 'findabi
re: Shelf test I'd think the 'hot spot' question type would be perfect for shelf tests. You could create a picture using any picture editing tool (with or without prices) - then highlight all of the products. Data comes out nicely based on your definitions. You could instruct respondents to click 'next' without selecting anything if they "wouldn't select any" - and make sure the validation allows people to skip. OR - when you edit your shelf, you could create a button. I did a very, very hacky and quick job just to show how it could work. https://peapod.az1.qualtrics.com/jfe/preview/SV_daLFSPtRqFf2bfn?Q_CHL=preview ...and you can even use custom validation to force people to answer one of the selections.
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