Has Facebook asked you recently if youd like to take a survey, giving feedback about your Facebook experience?
Facebook has recently started asking users to take a survey about their user experience. However, it soon becomes clear the survey is more about making Facebook feel good about itself than actually improving its service (Sample question: How much fun is Facebook overall?).
The questions are extremely general, and make no reference to any specific features or recent changes.
Forget the focus-grouped questions about feelings, fun and control over privacy lets get to the hard stuff. Here are the questions Facebook should have asked in its survey.
1. Should Facebook increase the size of photos in shared links?
- Nah, photos are a fad.
- Only for users who like looking at things.
- Well, it would seem like youre copying Pinterest, so wait a while and do it on a Friday.
2. How bad was that idea to ask people to pay $7 to promote posts in their friends news feeds?
- Facepalm bad.
- Napalm bad.
- When did Zynga start running your business development? bad.
3. Facebooks IPO: Whats the first thing that comes to your mind?
- A huge star collapsing into a black hole.
- The end of Raiders where that guys face melts off.
- An exquisite vision of the future filled with awesomeness (CEO of Instagram only).
4. How much less respect do you have for Facebook after that ridiculous ad with all the chairs?
- A bit less.
- Astronomically less.
- You know that ocean trench near Puerto Rico? Keep going.
5. Should Facebook just admit that Google+ schooled it with Hangouts?
- Probably.
- Not at all one-to-one Skyping is amazing. Its 2008, right?
- I wouldnt worry too much. Hangouts are a feature I only use all the time.
6. And dude, how drunk with power is Twitter right now?
- I know, right?!
- Twitter is so lame. Tagged is totally the future!
- Twitter is the new Instagram, if Instagram were a spam-filled mess you couldnt find photos in if you tried.
What other questions should the Facebook survey have asked? Shout out your suggestions in the comments.
From Mashable.







