@adamslieb People are using it for lots of things! Team happiness is a common use case, but meeting feedback and product health tracking are really popular too. Some people obviously just want to test the bot out. And of course, our roots lie in being able to do one-off polls and that's always a hit!
Really interesting. Much like todo lists I've seen a number of these types of apps get some initial traction within companies and then peter out. Thoughts on how you might keep people engaging with Polly?
@kgdavis great question! With Polly, there is an ongoing data hook that keeps teams engaged. Since Polly tracks questions over time, the longer a team uses the bot, the more they get engaged since the data becomes more interesting.
You can scroll through the attached images to see a quick example of Polly tracking team motivation on a week-by-week basis.
@ashbhoopathy, thanks for the hunt!
Hi PH! I'm Samir, cofounder at Polly.ai - we're here to answer your questions, so feel free to chime in! We started as a simple polling solution, but the saw the opportunity to get more in-depth data by listening to requests from our users.
Polly automates feedback collection and analysis from your team through "smart polls". It's a simple concept - take a single question, and ask it on a schedule to get time-series data around a process for your team - track team happiness, meeting feedback, product health, and pretty much any other process at your company.
We'll feed you analytics, segmented by user groups, we'll even automatically detect new hires and tell you how they're doing compared to the rest of the team. We have other features built-in like anonymity, open-ended questions, commenting and much more as well.
To get started, simply strike up a conversation with Polly!
Used Polly on @buffer Slack community today, and it feels to be a lot comfortable as compared to similar counterparts. Beautiful visual dialogs instead of parameter based input.
@buffer Well, I love this on Slack mobile apps. For Slack on the desktop though, I will prefer text-based parameter inputs for creating polls. That feels faster.
@dontcallmepanda That's a tough one! It's a balance between keeping the conversation on-topic and having fun. Still, we snuck in some good stuff: try asking Polly if it wants a cracker!