There are several popular scales used in questionnaire design including Likert and semantic differential scales.
In this article:General guidelines
Google Surveys lets you choose from 5, 7, 10, or 11 stars. There has been a long-lasting debate between 5-pt vs. 7-pt and odd vs. even (see presentation). As our surveys are easy to copy and easy to deploy, a good practice is to run the same question with a couple alternative scales. This lets you validate and cross-tabulate the results. It also lets you test a couple dimensions at the same time (e.g., both affective and cognitive responses to content).
Use this scale to measure a user’s stated inclination to engage in a certain behavior (e.g., the likelihood of purchasing a product, paying attention to an ad).
The above scale is one of the most popular, but there are alternatives. It is good practice to include 2-3 alternates in your survey with the same question wording. This lets you validate your data and distributions. Sometimes the alternates represent some nuance to the dimension under investigation. Using alternates will let you aggregate scores into an index.
For behavioral intention, alternatives include:
This scale measures source credibility and is popular in advertising research. Examples of use include credibility of a nutrition claim in an ad, trustworthiness of a company, or a website’s reputation.
Alternatives include:
There are a couple options for measuring how often a user reports on using a product, feature, or technology. A popular scale in marketing literature is:
Alternates include:
This scale assesses a person’s general agreement with a statement you provide.
You might want to gauge a user’s concern with privacy or some other policy (e.g., how do you feel about your privacy with regard to XXX?). This scale gauges the user's concern.
This scale gauges the importance.