I've been an online community grrrl for a long time, and I've been a software development person (in one role or another) for even longer. So when I told a client I'd help out with a market research study examining the tech adoption trends for PHP developers, I was sure that the community would cheerfully participate. Especially since anyone who did the 30-minute phone survey would get a $25 Amazon gift certificate AND a summary of the results; that's worth somethin', I figured.<p>I was wrong.<p>Despite posting a "help on a survey" message on several forums, people have stayed away in droves.<p>To some degree, I'm sure, it's because I'm looking for people with a specific background: in the US or Canada; regularly using one of {Joomla, SugarCRM, Drupal, WordPress, phpBB} for paying/outside work (not the company's own intranet); willing to talk to a charming geeky person on the phone. But I expected that the number of people meeting that criteria is far higher than the results would imply.<p>I realize that some people don't want to give out their email ID to ANYone, but if you're going to be interviewed by phone, how else can you be reached to say, "How about Tuesday at 2pm?" This isn't spam, dammit; it's real live market research asking about the tools and platforms you use and how you choose them.<p>If YOU are not shy, of course, I hope you'll participate in the survey ( http://www.marketsurveys.com/sb/sb_s.php?s=120&p=100121&g=4d4502a838 ). But really, I'm looking for input on why I've gotten such lousy response.