Published on October 8, 2009
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This PickFu is Public. Anyone can view and comment on it. View Comments

Which banner do you like better?

http://joshuawaldman.net/finding.html http://joshuawaldman.net/seeking.html

Survey says: A! (27 of 50 answers)

A: 27 votes - 54% B: 23 votes - 46%
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Comments Comments
A1. looks better
A2. They both looked the same to me except that B had some dragging on the letters. A seemed a little bit clearer.
A3. It took me to identical pages for pick fu
A4. The difference is minimal, so either is fine. I narrowly prefer finding.
A5. I answered A because I have to pick something, but these two are identical; I can't tell the difference between them after looking for several minutes.
A6. I think it is better to advertise yourself as a job "finder" rather than a job "seeker" because it sounds like you get results.
A7. i like "A" better because it says "finding" in the http//joshuawaldman.net/finding.html
A8. The word finding relates to the actual url, finding to seeking does not.
A9. seeking seems kinda creeper or stalkerish
A10. THE WORD 'FINDING' CONVEYS A MORE POSITIVE ATTITUDE
A11. I like the word finding more than seeking. The "seeking" seems more like seeking a girlfriend or something.
A12. The banners are identical.
A13. They both seem almost the same
A14. Indicates finding, not just seeking - more positive statement
A15. I chose option A because it is slightly more compact than option B.
A16. "Finding" just sounds better than "seeking". It is more definitive.
A17. I like job seeking better, it just sounds more fun.
A18. Which banner do you like better
A19. I like option A better. It appears more "clean". In option B the g has a flaw.
A20. "Finding" seems like a much more positive, results-oriented word than "seeking," which implies looking for but not necessarily attaining.
A21. more positive
A22. Banner A looks better.
A23. Seeking is a bit open-ended - finding implies that you are not just seeking but also successful in your search
A24. its a little darker
A25. more attractive
A26. Job "finding" is a more clear phrase than job "seeking" is.
A27. They are almost the same.
B1. it is looking more spicy
B2. If we seek for anything we need we will achieve it.without seeking we cannot find anything.
B3. I actually don't see much difference in them other than Optin B has a little more space between the lightning picture and the text.
B4. seems easier to remember
B5. Hard to explain, Seeking just seemed to fit better in the logo
B6. Clear and consie.
B7. Seeking is a more active term than finding. Seeking implies actively looking, while finding is after the fact.
B8. I like the job-seeking better than the job-finding.
B9. it is a seeking web site.
B10. They look identical to me, so I chose the first one I opened.
B11. The heading is more centered. I like centered better than off centered.
B12. I think seeking better explains the purpose. You are seeking a job not finding one.
B13. "Seeking" is a much better word than finding.
B14. They are pretty much identical but I like the spacing here better.
B15. This actually attracts`` seekers``!
B16. I like Option B because the text looks more centered than Option A.
B17. they loooked the same to me
B18. it is more centered than the other option. not a big difference though...
B19. Sounds correct...Job FINDING doesnt sound right
B20. I just feel as though no one can guarantee I'll find a job but seeking is definitely something we?re all doing!
B21. I like the the way that Job Seeking sounds better
B22. I like the red and green color combo.
B23. I think this one is more appealing

Who responded to your question?

A Votes by demographic segment B
Gender
50%
 
Male (18)
50%
56%
 
Female (32)
43%
Age
 
 
3-17 (None)
 
48%
 
18-34 (29)
51%
56%
 
35-49 (16)
43%
80%
 
50+ (5)
20%
Ethnicity
54%
 
White (42)
45%
100%
 
Black (1)
0%
40%
 
Asian (5)
60%
0%
 
Hispanic (1)
100%
100%
 
Other (1)
0%
Education
70%
 
High School (10)
30%
48%
 
College (33)
51%
57%
 
Grad School (7)
42%
Income
47%
 
$0-30k (21)
52%
55%
 
$30-60k (20)
45%
57%
 
$60-100k (7)
42%
100%
 
$100k+ (2)
0%
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