After making the video I thought it would be extremely important to attain some feedback from some of the audience and viewers of our masterpiece. This was to find out whether we have successfully completed our music video and if people would enjoy it in general. To do this we needed to locate our audience and find out some things they liked/disliked about it and their overall opinion.
To receive feedback on our music video we approached the system in a way that would help us get alot of results in quick succession. We browsed websites and places that we could issue our music video on in the hope of attracting an audience to complete our questionnaire and give us feedback. Knowing that alot of users use the websites facebook , we decided on advertising our video on this. Furthermore, we decided on placing the links to Surveymonkey.com and Youtube.com in order to attract a wider audience and for fellow media students to take the questionnaire and provide us with feedback on what could be improved and whether they liked the video or not. Below are all of the audience feedback techniques we used.
To receive feedback on our music video we approached the system in a way that would help us get alot of results in quick succession. We browsed websites and places that we could issue our music video on in the hope of attracting an audience to complete our questionnaire and give us feedback. Knowing that alot of users use the websites facebook , we decided on advertising our video on this. Furthermore, we decided on placing the links to Surveymonkey.com and Youtube.com in order to attract a wider audience and for fellow media students to take the questionnaire and provide us with feedback on what could be improved and whether they liked the video or not. Below are all of the audience feedback techniques we used.
Survey
By creating a survey, it allowed me to see what people thought of my video which is important as we learn what the audience liked and disliked. We created roughly 5 or 6 questions that people were able to answer, this ranged from yes/no questions to essay boxes in which the audience could put however many thoughts/opinions that they desired. This information is helpful because, if we had the opportunity to do the video again or create another video we can use the feedback we received and interpret it in our next video. However we didn't get many responses to our survey, this was because there was a lack of promotion for the video and we only really showed it to our friends. Here are some of the questions we did for our survey:
By creating a survey, it allowed me to see what people thought of my video which is important as we learn what the audience liked and disliked. We created roughly 5 or 6 questions that people were able to answer, this ranged from yes/no questions to essay boxes in which the audience could put however many thoughts/opinions that they desired. This information is helpful because, if we had the opportunity to do the video again or create another video we can use the feedback we received and interpret it in our next video. However we didn't get many responses to our survey, this was because there was a lack of promotion for the video and we only really showed it to our friends. Here are some of the questions we did for our survey:
Focus Group
Focus Groups are arguably the best way to gather information, this is because we got together about 10 different people to sit around and discuss our video. We asked them questions similar to our survey but asked them to ellaborate on their answers some more so we could get a clearer view of what they were actually saying and avoided confusion like there could have been on a survey or any other feedback source.
During the focus group we asked questions like "What did you like about the video?", "What was your favourite part of the video?","If you could, what would you change?". These key questions alone sparked up a few big conversation between the different members of the group - with people agreeing and disagreeing with each other it meant we could get a clear view of what people were saying and allowed us to hear the reasoning behind peoples opinions.
Another thing we asked our focus group to do was to go onto 'wallwisher' and write a comment about our video - both a good and bad thing. Although we asked all 10 people to do it only 6 people ended up actually doing it which was disappointing but looking back 6 would be enough for us.
Focus Groups are arguably the best way to gather information, this is because we got together about 10 different people to sit around and discuss our video. We asked them questions similar to our survey but asked them to ellaborate on their answers some more so we could get a clearer view of what they were actually saying and avoided confusion like there could have been on a survey or any other feedback source.
During the focus group we asked questions like "What did you like about the video?", "What was your favourite part of the video?","If you could, what would you change?". These key questions alone sparked up a few big conversation between the different members of the group - with people agreeing and disagreeing with each other it meant we could get a clear view of what people were saying and allowed us to hear the reasoning behind peoples opinions.
Another thing we asked our focus group to do was to go onto 'wallwisher' and write a comment about our video - both a good and bad thing. Although we asked all 10 people to do it only 6 people ended up actually doing it which was disappointing but looking back 6 would be enough for us.
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