element14 Community
element14 Community
    Register Log In
  • Site
  • Search
  • Log In Register
  • Community Hub
    Community Hub
    • What's New on element14
    • Feedback and Support
    • Benefits of Membership
    • Personal Blogs
    • Members Area
    • Achievement Levels
  • Learn
    Learn
    • Ask an Expert
    • eBooks
    • element14 presents
    • Learning Center
    • Tech Spotlight
    • STEM Academy
    • Webinars, Training and Events
    • Learning Groups
  • Technologies
    Technologies
    • 3D Printing
    • FPGA
    • Industrial Automation
    • Internet of Things
    • Power & Energy
    • Sensors
    • Technology Groups
  • Challenges & Projects
    Challenges & Projects
    • Design Challenges
    • element14 presents Projects
    • Project14
    • Arduino Projects
    • Raspberry Pi Projects
    • Project Groups
  • Products
    Products
    • Arduino
    • Avnet & Tria Boards Community
    • Dev Tools
    • Manufacturers
    • Multicomp Pro
    • Product Groups
    • Raspberry Pi
    • RoadTests & Reviews
  • About Us
  • Store
    Store
    • Visit Your Store
    • Choose another store...
      • Europe
      •  Austria (German)
      •  Belgium (Dutch, French)
      •  Bulgaria (Bulgarian)
      •  Czech Republic (Czech)
      •  Denmark (Danish)
      •  Estonia (Estonian)
      •  Finland (Finnish)
      •  France (French)
      •  Germany (German)
      •  Hungary (Hungarian)
      •  Ireland
      •  Israel
      •  Italy (Italian)
      •  Latvia (Latvian)
      •  
      •  Lithuania (Lithuanian)
      •  Netherlands (Dutch)
      •  Norway (Norwegian)
      •  Poland (Polish)
      •  Portugal (Portuguese)
      •  Romania (Romanian)
      •  Russia (Russian)
      •  Slovakia (Slovak)
      •  Slovenia (Slovenian)
      •  Spain (Spanish)
      •  Sweden (Swedish)
      •  Switzerland(German, French)
      •  Turkey (Turkish)
      •  United Kingdom
      • Asia Pacific
      •  Australia
      •  China
      •  Hong Kong
      •  India
      •  Korea (Korean)
      •  Malaysia
      •  New Zealand
      •  Philippines
      •  Singapore
      •  Taiwan
      •  Thailand (Thai)
      • Americas
      •  Brazil (Portuguese)
      •  Canada
      •  Mexico (Spanish)
      •  United States
      Can't find the country/region you're looking for? Visit our export site or find a local distributor.
  • Translate
  • Profile
  • Settings
RoadTests & Reviews
  • Products
  • More
RoadTests & Reviews
RoadTest Forum When Is A RoadTest Review Too Much or Too Little?
  • Blogs
  • RoadTest Forum
  • Documents
  • RoadTests
  • Reviews
  • Polls
  • Files
  • Members
  • Mentions
  • Sub-Groups
  • Tags
  • More
  • Cancel
  • New
Join RoadTests & Reviews to participate - click to join for free!
Actions
  • Share
  • More
  • Cancel
Forum Thread Details
  • Replies 22 replies
  • Subscribers 2560 subscribers
  • Views 3297 views
  • Users 0 members are here
  • roadtest reviews
  • writing a roadtest review
  • too much or too little
Related

When Is A RoadTest Review Too Much or Too Little?

rscasny
rscasny over 2 years ago

I have been spending more time reading (including proofreading) roadtest reviews. Some of our suppliers are reading your reviews and providing me feedback on them as well. One of the main reasons why a sponsor participates in the RoadTest program is to get feedback about the product, documentation, design tools, and so on. So, your reviews could be read by a variety of stakeholders within the sponsor's organization (engineers, business managers, marketing, etc.). Your reviews are highly visible. (So, make sure you do a spell check before you publish them, please!) While I have always said you don't be a superior writer to be a roadtester, roadtesters should try to spot basic errors and correct them. If you need help, please contact me.

One thing I have noticed recently as I read reviews is that some reviews cover a lot of things. Some have indexes to separate blogs that function as tutorials. I have also noticed that some are fairly short and don't "tell the story behind the review" visually to make a reader think "Wow" this is cool, incredible, etc."

So, when is a review too much or too little?

I do not desire to establish stringent max-word-count guidelines. I never will. After I choose you as an official roadtester, I need you to "take ownership" of the roadtest. I fully understand that people will write reviews differently. In fact, that is something I ponder when I go through the roadtest applications. I want to obtain different kinds of reviews, which in my mind represents different kinds of engineering minds and, yes, different kinds of customers.

But back to my core question: When is a review too much or too little?

There are some experienced roadtest reviews who can juggle gads and gobs of information and, like a conductor at a symphony, produce a multi-faceted, "perfect" review. These are great productions.

But there are also some reviewers who can easily perform the testing but when one reads the review it doesn't flow so smoothly and makes it a bit harder to read.

I personally think: don't forget the basics.

A review should (a) explain what you are going to do and why, (b) provide a background on the product because not all readers will be familiar with it, (c) conduct and describe the results of your tests (this can include an unboxing), (d) go through how you experienced the product and (e) draw some conclusions.

For some roadtesters, too much is when there are side information that bogs down the basics, so they never get to the basics. But for other roadtesters, they can add the side information to explain things that perhaps are not explicitly stated in the sponsor's documentation; these are skilled roadtesters. 

When is a roadtest review too little? The comments are a guide. If our members ask the roadtester a lot of questions, then maybe your review lacks something.

People learn a lot visually. Take a cartesian grid. One can learn more from a graph of a sensor temperature vs Time than just a table of temp data. When a review has no visuals that support what is being stated in the text of your narrative, it is probably too little. Finally, a just-the-right-length review is persuasive. Read the comments of a bunch of reviews. When you see comments like "nice review," you know you have hit a homerun.

Thank you for your time.

Randall Scasny

RoadTest Program Manager

  • Sign in to reply
  • Cancel

Top Replies

  • shabaz
    shabaz over 2 years ago in reply to Gough Lui +4
    I'd forgotten about that! : ) There was always inevitably one random reader who would feel the review was totally not for them*, and would rate it 1 star.. and then others would vote at 5 stars to try…
  • Fred27
    Fred27 over 2 years ago +4
    It's always a tricky one. I try to target my road tests towards what I think a potential purchaser might want to know. For a microcontroller / FPGA boards that's roughly "does this do what I need and…
  • wolfgangfriedrich
    wolfgangfriedrich over 2 years ago +3
    rscasny said: So, your reviews could be read by a variety of stakeholders within the sponsor's organization (engineers, business managers, marketing, etc.). Your reviews are highly visible. I think it…
Parents
  • dang74
    dang74 over 2 years ago

    Please forgive me as I am playing devil's advocate here but If you were to measure the time and effort that goes into producing some of the better RoadTests against what it would cost to produce the equivalent material internally you would probably find that the manufacturer is getting thousands of dollars worth of 'copy' and exposure in exchange for a free sample of their product.

    Sometimes though, due to a variety of factors, a RoadTest doesn't live up to the applicant's original intentions.  I don't think this is any great sin.  Furthermore I think the manufacturers have to be willing to accept this gamble.  It's a reasonable risk for the level of reward they sometimes receive.

    As far as length goes my impression is that RoadTests have gotten longer over time.  Don't get me wrong I will not fault anyone for writing a long RoadTest.  I suspect, however,  that a subconscious bar has developed where authors feel they have to make a lengthy review.  If this bar keeps moving towards unattainable levels fewer people will have the time and energy to tackle a RoadTest and of course fewer people will read through the reviews as well.  So while there is some concerns about RoadTests not being long enough I think we have to worry about the other side of the coin as well and make sure they aren't too long.

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up +3 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • Cancel
Reply
  • dang74
    dang74 over 2 years ago

    Please forgive me as I am playing devil's advocate here but If you were to measure the time and effort that goes into producing some of the better RoadTests against what it would cost to produce the equivalent material internally you would probably find that the manufacturer is getting thousands of dollars worth of 'copy' and exposure in exchange for a free sample of their product.

    Sometimes though, due to a variety of factors, a RoadTest doesn't live up to the applicant's original intentions.  I don't think this is any great sin.  Furthermore I think the manufacturers have to be willing to accept this gamble.  It's a reasonable risk for the level of reward they sometimes receive.

    As far as length goes my impression is that RoadTests have gotten longer over time.  Don't get me wrong I will not fault anyone for writing a long RoadTest.  I suspect, however,  that a subconscious bar has developed where authors feel they have to make a lengthy review.  If this bar keeps moving towards unattainable levels fewer people will have the time and energy to tackle a RoadTest and of course fewer people will read through the reviews as well.  So while there is some concerns about RoadTests not being long enough I think we have to worry about the other side of the coin as well and make sure they aren't too long.

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up +3 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • Cancel
Children
No Data
element14 Community

element14 is the first online community specifically for engineers. Connect with your peers and get expert answers to your questions.

  • Members
  • Learn
  • Technologies
  • Challenges & Projects
  • Products
  • Store
  • About Us
  • Feedback & Support
  • FAQs
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal and Copyright Notices
  • Sitemap
  • Cookies

An Avnet Company © 2025 Premier Farnell Limited. All Rights Reserved.

Premier Farnell Ltd, registered in England and Wales (no 00876412), registered office: Farnell House, Forge Lane, Leeds LS12 2NE.

ICP 备案号 10220084.

Follow element14

  • X
  • Facebook
  • linkedin
  • YouTube