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Survey: When Conversations Don't Add Up

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Introduction

Ever leave a conversation and spend the next three hours replaying it in your head?

We're building a tool for people who have found certain social interactions to be genuinely confusing, and we want your input before we launch.

It takes about 5 minutes, is completely anonymous, and there are no right or wrong answers.

And if this sounds like something you'd actually use, drop your email below and you'll be the first to know when it's ready.


Q1. How often do you find yourself confused or unsettled after a social interaction, thinking "what just happened?" or "why did that go wrong?"

Q1. How often do you find yourself confused or unsettled after a social interaction, thinking "what just happened?" or "why did that go wrong?"
A
B
C
D
E

Q2. Briefly describe a type of interaction that keeps going wrong for you.

(Optional - skip if not applicable. You don't need to share anything private - a general description of the dynamic is enough.)

Q3. After a confusing or difficult interaction, what do you typically do?

(Select all that apply)
Q3. After a confusing or difficult interaction, what do you typically do?

Q4. How do you currently feel about using AI for something as personal as processing a difficult social interaction?

Q4. How do you currently feel about using AI for something as personal as processing a difficult social interaction?
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B
C
D
E

Q4a. What's the main reason you're hesitant?

Q4a. What's the main reason you're hesitant?
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B
C
D
E

The concept

Imagine you just had an interaction that didn't go the way you expected. A conversation that ended strangely. A text thread that went sideways. A meeting that felt weirdly charged.

You open an app and describe what happened - a text thread, a meeting, a moment with a friend that landed wrong. 

Instead of advice, it starts asking you questions. It prompts you to notice more of what might have been happening / what you might have missed. What was going on right before that moment? What were you trying to accomplish? When exactly did the tone shift?

By the end of the conversation, you have a hypothesis about what was really going on - and one thing to try differently next time. Not a prescription. A starting point.

Q5. What's your immediate reaction to this concept?

Q5. What's your immediate reaction to this concept?
A
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C
D
E

Q6. Which part of this concept is most valuable to you, if any?

(Select up to 2)
Q6. Which part of this concept is most valuable to you, if any?

Q7. What concerns you about this concept, if anything?

Q8. If you had access to both a trusted person in your life and a tool like this, which would you turn to first after a difficult interaction?

Q8. If you had access to both a trusted person in your life and a tool like this, which would you turn to first after a difficult interaction?
A
B
C
D
E

Q9. What would make you more willing to trust a tool like this with something personal?

Q9. What would make you more willing to trust a tool like this with something personal?
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1
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1

Q10. Age

Q10. Age
A
B
C
D
E
F

Q11. Gender

Q11. Gender
A
B
C
D

Q12. Relationship status

Q12. Relationship status
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B
C
D
E

Q13. Primary work context

Q13. Primary work context
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H

Q14. Do you identify with any of the following?

(Select all that apply)
Q14. Do you identify with any of the following?

Q15. Where should we send your free guide, “5 Questions to Ask Yourself After a Conversation That Went Wrong”?

(Optional - leave blank to remain anonymous)