How did you go about implementing progressive profiling? Was it an all or nothing approach or did you "test" with a couple forms first?
I use a new form for every landing page, so it was easy to not only test, but on an ongoing basis decided whether a form uses progressive profiling. We've agressively implemented PP, but still have some applications where it doesn't work.
Were there any gotcha's or major Ah-Ha's after you began using PP?
The biggest was the user experience with unusual combinations of fields--for example, if we had the name, but not the courtesy title, the user would see a dropdown for Mr./Mrs.Ms./Dr. etc, but no place for their name. Similar if we had a street address but not a suite number. We overcame by listing related fields as always-show when using them on a form.
Did you see the expected results, ie increase in downloads?
Yes. The shorter the form, the greter the conversion. With enough data, you can get to one field forms. We've done webinar signups with email only--because over time we've collected the rest of the information. .
Did you see an improvement in the quality of the information that you were receiving from the PP form fill out?
Not really--we got better response rates, but the tough fields to gather were still tough, For example, getting accurate employee size or company revenue data. We've stopped asking (except in very broad ranges) because people don't know, don't want to state, or mismatches in perspective (single location vs. all locations; one division vs. corporate; etc).
Any other suggestions or best practices around implementing PP that we should take into consideration?
PP really works well with an investment in a data append provider (we used ReachForce) Let them fill in company addresses, main phones, revenue, employee size, SIC code, etc. Use your PP for qualfication questions.