Practise the standard verbs for running a genuinely useful beta program.
0 / 5 completed
1 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ a genuinely representative group of beta users, not just our most enthusiastic power users, since they rarely hit the same friction as everyone else.'
We 'recruit a user' — the standard, simple collocation for bringing testers into a beta program. The other options are less idiomatic here.
2 / 5
Fill in: 'Testing only with enthusiastic power users instead of a representative group can ___ an ordinary new user's real confusion completely unseen before launch.'
We say a skewed beta group will 'leave' real confusion unseen — the standard, natural collocation for the resulting blind spot. The other options aren't idiomatic here.
3 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ the beta build with real usage tracking, since what testers actually do often differs sharply from what they later report in a survey.'
We 'instrument a build' — the standard, simple collocation for adding tracking to observe actual usage. The other options are less idiomatic here.
4 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ structured feedback at regular intervals, rather than waiting for the beta period to quietly end with only scattered, unsolicited comments.'
We 'gather feedback' — the standard, simple collocation for collecting input on a regular cadence. The other options are less idiomatic here.
5 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ genuinely actionable beta feedback into the release plan, rather than collecting it dutifully and then shipping the original design regardless.'
We 'incorporate feedback' — the standard, simple collocation for actually acting on collected input. The other options aren't idiomatic here.