I’ve seen “rate from 1 to 5, with 3 excluded”, which should be equivalent to “rate from 1 to 4″ but feels substantially different. But there are probably better ones.
In this category of tricks, somebody (I forget who) used a rating scale where you assigned a score of 1, 3, or 9. Which should be equivalent to “rate from 1 to 3”, but...
Then maybe “1 to 4, excluding 3” or “1 to 5, excluding 4″, to rule out the lazy answer “everything’s basically fine”. That might force people to find an explanation whenever they feel the thing is good but not perfect.
If you start getting 5s too frequently, then it’s probably not a good trick.
Why not go all the way and just use a plus-minus-zero system like LW ratings (and much of the rest of the internet)? Youtube had an interesting chart before they switched from 5 star rating systems to the like-dislike system showing how useless the star ratings were. But that’s non-mandatory so its very different.
I’ve seen “rate from 1 to 5, with 3 excluded”, which should be equivalent to “rate from 1 to 4″ but feels substantially different. But there are probably better ones.
In this category of tricks, somebody (I forget who) used a rating scale where you assigned a score of 1, 3, or 9. Which should be equivalent to “rate from 1 to 3”, but...
We weren’t getting a lot of threes, but maybe that works anyway.
Then maybe “1 to 4, excluding 3” or “1 to 5, excluding 4″, to rule out the lazy answer “everything’s basically fine”. That might force people to find an explanation whenever they feel the thing is good but not perfect.
If you start getting 5s too frequently, then it’s probably not a good trick.
Why not go all the way and just use a plus-minus-zero system like LW ratings (and much of the rest of the internet)? Youtube had an interesting chart before they switched from 5 star rating systems to the like-dislike system showing how useless the star ratings were. But that’s non-mandatory so its very different.