Hi Nina,?
You could also have a go with ?- you can¡¯t see who gave inputs unless you use a form that collects that information.
People can give input via any range of devices that connect to the internet.?
We love using it, as there are a huge range of types of ways to capture the input (word bubble, 2 dimension sliders, 2 axis, 4 axis, dots, free text, word bubble etc¡)
hope this helps
best wishes
marion

Marion Adamson, Managing PartnerIngeniousPeoplesKnowledge
Skype: mazadamson
Mobile: +27 (82) 923 7954
'Why not unleash ingenuity within systems?'
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On 22 Jul 2020, at 18:29, Nancy Settle-Murphy <
nancy@...> wrote:
Hi Nina,
I use MeetingSphere, which I? license annually, for my surveys and for real-time conversations (meetings, training etc.) It allows me to set anonymity for each question, or for all. I can also sort responses by team affiliation, if I choose, so I know which team a response came from, but not the person. As the host, I can see who? participated in the survey, but I have no idea which response was made by which person.
In addition, I can make it possible that people can see and build on and respond to other's anonymous comments, or I can make it so that people can only see their own responses. (I almost always choose the former, so people can have an online conversation and idea exchange, but there are times it's important that people not see the other responses.)
I just finished a very sensitive employee sensing study using MeetingSphere, where all respondents saw each others' anonymous responses. People said they really appreciated hearing what others had to say and having a chance to build on other responses.
Hope this helps!
Regards,
Nancy
Nancy Settle-MurphyGuided Insights -
Tel: (01) 978.263.2545 ? ?
Skype: nsmurphy2545 ? ?Twitter: nsettlemurphy
Pronouns: She/her/hers
Helping organizations thrive in the virtual world since 1994