 Arnie asks, is there a simple way to see how many people started to fill out a form? I'm trying to figure out, so how many to started to fill out a form? That's the pertinent information. I'm trying to figure out if I get too few responses from an evaluation form because it is too long or if the participants don't even start filling out the form. That's a great question because I know in other more expensive, more robust tools, thinking like Qualtrics, you can actually go and you know how many people have clicked the link to get to the form, never filled it out. How many people started filling forms out but didn't get to the next page? How many people got to the next page? Like you've got that granular data. So you know when you've lost them. How many questions, if you got 20, how many they filled out before the, so, hey, what's wrong with question 15 where everybody bails? That is the highest number, the bail rate. So what can you do with forms? Can't do that. Not that. No, I mean, if you've got Dynamics customer voice, you know where you're doing the pro version of forms, that's a little different, but on the standard, no, we can't mind you. There's the new functionality around a saved form that's coming out. So then you could have it resubmit but the problem is ultimately it submits but then they can go back and adjust it and needs to be turned. You can turn it on or off inside an organization but I still don't think, I mean, if it was saved, at least you'd know where they got up to but you wouldn't know how many people started. Well, it depends though, right? Because you could do a form and it depends on if you make the fields required or optional. If you make them required and they can't save, they hit cancel, you get nothing, right? But if they like your first couple are optional or some of them are optional and they get through those and they actually hit save, right? Then you're gonna get, but anything that's required, if you got anything required on the form, you're not gonna get information if they cancel, right? But if everything is optional and they only get down through four and they hit save, then you're gonna only see that they answered four. The one thing that I do now on all the forms, two best practices I would give, if you're thinking maybe they think that forms are too long, break them into sections, only have like four or five questions, have another section, four or five questions and have another section. The other thing I do is I show the amount of time it's really gonna take them to answer it. If you don't, they're assuming, right? So if you tell them, hey, this is only gonna take you three minutes and like, okay, so it can't be too many, three minutes is fine, right? But if you don't put that information and break them up that way, then that feels it's really long. And if they're open questions too, the more open, and especially if you make it required, exactly, but all those open questions, you need to limit, one, how long it is, two, how many open questions you ask, is it, can it be asked in a different way? Could you break it down and have it that it's more multiple choice and quick and easy for them to work with? I didn't think I was gonna have to write an essay here. Right. Yeah, that's it, exactly. And the other thing is a lot of people make the mistake when it comes to doing, whether it's qualitative or quantitative type analysis, they often don't break a question out and down. They've got too many in one field and then have it open. And they find that really overwhelming because it's not just a sharp and sharp. It's only if you've got something, if you said no to this and then it might have a branching and then it asks them and then they kind of go, oh, I don't have time to do all of that. But if you make that a required, then you're gonna have some problems. People are going to go, it's too much. So it's usually, it's because it's too overwhelming, but you know. There's definitely a science to form creation. Without a doubt. And there are people that do that for a living and write tests and put those things together. One other thing I was gonna add though, I think it's also a best practice that because it is very limited, but you are trying to identify, let's say you have off of a website, off of your site, whatever it is, to point people to that form in the first place. You can also put a tracking URL on that so you can track how many people clicked on it to get to the form. Does it tell you whether they, if they clicked through over to the form and then never started? Cause I know, hey, a hundred people clicked on the form, but only 25 people filled it out. It doesn't tell you what happens in between, but at least you, that's another data point you can look at. I've got a few links, having done lots of forms training, what I'll do is I'll put a couple of different links of different things and why the different types of survey questions, why you use them, why you would use, yeah. That's great. I do a session on how to put a form together so it does not seem like it's a, you know, overwhelming. So it seems like it's very quick and brief, even though maybe you asked 20 questions, but it doesn't seem like you're asking 20 questions. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. I mean, they gotta keep their language really simple and specific is a big one. They should avoid a leading question, cause then it's gonna come out a little wrong. One question, one idea, which I've kind of touched on, try not make it long and make them mobile friendly. Cause a lot of times they get to them on their mobile and they'll start it from their mobile phone. If it's not mobile friendly, you'll often really lose them on a mobile phone. So, you know, double check in forms and have a look at it on a mobile phone and yeah, you know, split the ideas, multiple questions, split them out, maybe make it simple and open-ended sparingly. One of them, yeah, one of the biggest ones I have found, and I don't know if you've experienced this too, but you know, when you have the option for other, and if someone selects other, then you can write in the other. People don't realize that that's how it works. So they leave off the other and then they ask another question. If you answered this or wobble, you know, whatever, type of scenario, I, there was a form that I did for a client. They had me review it and I removed 10 questions just because they could use the other option. Yeah, I mean, the other thing is... It's like we watchers for MS forms. Yes, yeah, yeah, that's it. It really, it really is. And things like photos and logos and all that, they take up a lot of space, so it makes it look much bigger than it is. So try and avoid lots of the images and things that take it, you know, and make sure you're testing it first before you even send it out and know the limitations too, you know, because that can make a... If you don't know the limitations of forms, then you're gonna have some problems as well. I think question order is also very important. So that goes with testing too, it's going through it like, oh, hey, this makes more sense here, you know. And also when you do that, when you really analyze the questions themselves and then the order, you realize, I didn't really need this question because ultimately if they answered this and this, then I know this, so. Yeah, repeating yourself too, a lot of the times. I see a lot of that repeat type questions where it's, I mean, it's fine if you're doing a psychological, you know, kind of behavioral where you're asking the same thing in different ways, but on a standard, you know, business type survey, you too.