Very nicely done. Nice and fairly clean looking site. Your animations upon answering are nice.
I wasn't familiar with PollDaddy, so know nothing about this market, but on their homepage, they don't have a poll. They don't show me what it is like from a user perspective.
I think you've done a nice job with the social sharing aspect. The widget is key with many brands, as is either a good look, or the ability for them to style it. The easier it is for them to set-up a poll and stick it onto their site, the better.
I think you need to find a place that isn't using polls, yet where they would be a great fit.
Engadget is always doing these "how would you change" http://www.engadget.com/2010/12/31/how-would-you-change-webo... posts. The content fits into a poll, but they need the ability for their audience to suggest what the polling options should be.
I never read those posts because it is just going through a bunch of comments, and you don't get any idea of what the cons are of the device. That could be very valuable information to the manufacturer. Of course, they'd still need comments, so hooking up with the disqus api would be a good idea.
> I wasn't familiar with PollDaddy, so know nothing about this market, but on their homepage, they don't have a poll. They don't show me what it is like from a user perspective.
gopollgo doesn't have one on their homepage either. The link is actually one to an existing poll. Try http://gopollgo.com and you'll see.
I do think you should add a poll on the homepage or at least a screenshot of one to draw users in.
I love the site though. The UX is fun and engaging.
I wasn't familiar with PollDaddy, so know nothing about this market, but on their homepage, they don't have a poll. They don't show me what it is like from a user perspective.
I think you've done a nice job with the social sharing aspect. The widget is key with many brands, as is either a good look, or the ability for them to style it. The easier it is for them to set-up a poll and stick it onto their site, the better.
I think you need to find a place that isn't using polls, yet where they would be a great fit. Engadget is always doing these "how would you change" http://www.engadget.com/2010/12/31/how-would-you-change-webo... posts. The content fits into a poll, but they need the ability for their audience to suggest what the polling options should be.
I never read those posts because it is just going through a bunch of comments, and you don't get any idea of what the cons are of the device. That could be very valuable information to the manufacturer. Of course, they'd still need comments, so hooking up with the disqus api would be a good idea.
Just an idea.