By Isla Arabanoo. Erin Pell. Sean Wainewright. Christian McDonald. Sam Frewer. Katie Summerville. Benjamin Pryke. Bianca Caird. Natasha Parkinson. Brayden Streeton. Skye Jerger. Flynn McDowell. Abbey Haylen. Sienna Alfred. Charli Cowley. Mikayla Primrose. Nathan Wang. Owen Baile. Rebecca Ellis. Madeline Chalmers at December 22 2018 06:43:50
When designing forms make sure the response mechanism is appropriate to each question. Having gone to all the trouble of filling in your form, the least you can do is provide users with information about what happens next. Customer communication is key, and since you have made the form so easy to fill in and return, processing it could also be a breeze!
Use appropriate response mechanisms. Paper forms have the disadvantage that users can miss, or simply disregard, an instruction. For example, only tick/check one box from a list of 15 or 20 options. In this context interactive forms can be programmed so that the user can only tick/check one (known as a radio button as distinct from check-boxes), or presented with the options in a drop-down menu from which the user can only select one.