Using our Projoint Survey Design Tool, you can easily:
The following instructions are taken directly from the Projoint Survey Design Toolâs Tutorial section.
The most important part of a discrete choice experiment is setting the attributes and levels: these are the features that are getting randomized. Add attributes by clicking on the âAdd Attributeâ button, and add levels by clicking on the âAdd Levelâ button.
There are two advanced options on the page where users add attributes and levels. The first controls the order in which attributes appear to respondents. By clicking on the padlock icon to the right of each attribute, the user can control where they appear. A locked icon will always appear in the indicated position, so if the second attribute is locked, that attribute will always appear second in the list of attributes shown to respondents.
The second advanced option controls randomization weights, and can be accesed by clicking on the âEdit Weightsâ button. This allows researchers to set how frequently each level should appear. Most choice experiments set each level to equal frequency, but this is not necessarily preferred.
After you have set the attributes and levels, we recommend going to the Preview screen to preview your study. This produces a single task, which can be refreshed, so the researcher can see what the respondents will see.
There are two types of restrictions we discuss: cross-attribute restrictions and cross-profile restrictions. Cross-attribute restrictions prevent a profile from being logically inconsistent. For example, in a conjoint study comparing potential immigrants, if an immigrant has only a middle school education, their career cannot be neurosurgeon. Cross-profile restrictions produce dependencies across the different profiles of one task. For example, in a conjoint study comparing political candidates in a two-party, if one candidate is polling at 60%, the other must be polling at 40% or less.
There are four options for exporting a survey, and we recommend users do at least three of them: