Campaigns

Image slider survey

Respondents swipe through your images like a gallery and leave per-image feedback. Deeper than a binary vote, more qualitative than a round-robin.

Best for: rich feedbackMin 2 images

When to use it

Use a slider when you care about the why, not just the which. Each image gets its own free-text reaction, so you come away with narrative feedback you can actually quote in a meeting.

Qualitative gathering

Get real sentences from real people, one per image. Great for workshop readouts and creative direction.

Mood-board validation

Show a direction of 5–8 visuals, see which ones resonate and in what language.

Product-range testing

Walk respondents through a collection — each item gets its own reaction captured.
The upload flow

Images go from your browser, not the AI

Same three-step handoff as every media campaign.

  1. Step 1
    AI sends you an upload link
    Describe the campaign and the AI generates a private upload page for you.
  2. Step 2
    You upload your images
    Open the link, drag files onto the page, and click “Done — Return to chat” when it's all up.
  3. Step 3
    You tell the AI you're done
    Back in chat, say “uploaded”. The AI verifies and creates the campaign.
Prep

What you'll need

  • At least 2 images — PNG, JPEG, or WebP, up to 10 MB each.
  • A campaign title, description, tagline, and category.
  • Your feedback prompt— the question shown with each image (e.g., “What's the first thing you notice?”).
  • A reward amount.
  • A landing-page link.
How it works

Describe the feedback you want. Upload. Go live.

Example conversation
  1. I want to run a slider survey on our new look book — six images. Call it “Autumn look book — first reactions”. Feedback prompt: “In one sentence, how does this outfit make you feel?” Category: fashion. Reward: 60.
  2. Upload link ready. Drop your six images there and rename them so the results are readable (e.g., “terracotta-wrap”, “denim-coat”).
  3. All six uploaded and named.
  4. Confirmed. Each respondent will swipe through all six images and leave a sentence on each. Starting the campaign. Ping me when you want a thematic summary of the reactions.
Reading the results

Ask the AI to cluster reactions by theme.

With free-text feedback, the real value comes from patterns. Ask for an insight report and your AI will group the reactions by sentiment and theme — 'romantic', 'too busy', 'loved the color' — so you can act on them.

Try these prompts

Copy, paste, and tweak

Mood-board check

Create an image slider survey called 'Q3 mood board'. Prompt: 'What word comes to mind when you see this?'. Category: brand. Reward: 50. I have eight images to upload.

New product range

Set up a slider survey on our new bag collection. Feedback prompt: 'Would you carry this? Why or why not?'. Category: accessories. Reward: 70. Campaign name: 'Bag collection — first reactions'. Send me the upload link.

Packaging palette

Run an image slider on five color variants of our packaging. Prompt: 'Which occasion does this feel right for?'. Category: packaging. Reward: 45. Name: 'Packaging palette reactions'.

Summarize the feedback

My 'Q3 mood board' slider survey has been running a few days. Can you cluster the reactions by theme and tell me which images drew the strongest responses — positive or negative?

Good to know

A few things worth knowing

2+
Minimum images
10 MB
Max per image
PNG / JPEG / WebP
Accepted formats
Instant
Goes live after upload

Every image gets its own reaction

One feedback prompt, answered separately per image. You get rich, per-item qualitative data instead of a single collective opinion.

Name your images

In a slider survey, image names are critical — they're how you'll read the results. Rename on the upload page before you hit Done.

Live instantly

No processing wait. Flip it on and responses start coming in.

Not the right format for picking winners

If you want a ranked choice, use round-robin (pairwise) or binary (yes/no). Slider is about the why, not the which.
How many images is too many?
Slider surveys ask for real thought per image, so 5–8 is the sweet spot. Beyond 10, respondents start phoning it in — the quality of feedback drops. If you have more images than that, consider splitting into two shorter surveys.