← Hook & Eye Collaboration tool · internal

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Thank you — this goes straight to Taylor. Nothing here is final; it just gives us a strong starting point to build from.

Help us shape your questionnaire

What should your questionnaire ask?

You don't have to have all the answers. Click what fits, skip what doesn't, and type anything that sparks.

This is the friction-free version of the "sit down and design the whole questionnaire" job — the one that's easy to keep putting off. ~10 minutes, and it autosaves, so you can close the tab and come back.

How this works → Your picks become the first draft of the real, branching questionnaire on your site. We'll take your selections, fill in the wording, and show it back to you. Everything is changeable later.
1The starting choices
"Cosplay, costume and theater should be three different things… and the wedding stuff should be separate."
When someone opens the questionnaire, which paths should they choose between? Check the ones you want as separate starting choices.
2The first smart question
"Maybe that starts as a question higher up and it changes your options on the way down." — "Exactly. More interactivity."
We want the questionnaire to adapt — the first answer changes what's asked next. Which opening split feels most useful? (Pick the strongest one.)
3Costume / cosplay / theater — what to offer
"More character-based things to click on… full character build, multiple full character builds, armor build… clarify whether this person has a design or doesn't."
For this path, which build options should we list? Check all that fit; add your own.
4Wedding / gowns — what to ask
"For the gowns… the silhouette would be useful, just to get them on the same page." (The wedding path can ask different things.)
For the wedding/gown path, which questions matter? Check all that apply.
5Beginners vs. pros
"It gives a course for the beginner that expands into vocabulary… and for the professional, something that's more 'feed us what you have.'"
For beginners, what should we gently explain as they go? (Check terms worth a tooltip; add reassurances.)
6Qualifying & politely turning away bad fits
"Enough information to set Samantha and I up for success in client meetings — and to weed out." (The TCU-Rangers embroidery email.)
What should the questionnaire learn so a first conversation starts well — and so you can redirect work you don't do?
7Anything else
A spot for anything the questions didn't cover — half-formed ideas welcome.
Autosaves as you go