Score Rings

Learn how to set up Score Rings, score quiz answers, and record clips that match each person's results.

Introduction

Score Rings show one to four circular rings. Each ring fills up to a score you build from quiz answers, out of 100.

It's a lot like the radar chart, same scoring idea, but shown as rings instead of points on a chart. Each person sees their own rings based on what they answered.

How to set up Score Rings

Add the module, create your rings, and tell each ring which answers count toward it.

  • Step 1: Add the Score Rings module. You get one ring by default and can add up to four.
  • Step 2: Name each ring, the name shows next to it.
  • Step 3: Click the edit button to the right of a score's name.
  • Step 4: Toggle on the questions you want to feed into that score. You can pick one or many.
  • Step 5: Give points to each answer. Scores are out of 100.
  • Step 6: Open the test section to pick sample answers and see how the rings render.

Details

How points add up

When more than one question feeds a score, the points are added together. If answer 1A is worth 10 and answer 2B is worth 20, someone who picks both gets 30.

The score caps at 100. Anything over 100 still shows as 100.

Recording clips for each score

Open the recording plan and click the Score Rings segment on the left. By default, each score splits into two clips:

  • Low score: 0 to 50
  • High score: 51 to 100

So your talk track changes based on where someone lands.

Subgroups for finer control

Want more detail? Click the segment, then the gear icon, and make subgroups, say 0–24, 25–49, 50–74, and 75–100. There's no limit on how many you create.

Keep the clip count manageable

Multiple rings built from different answers can create a lot of clip combinations. In the Score Rings segment, pick which scores you want to talk about and skip the rest.

Tip , Deselected scores still show on the ring for each viewer. You just won't record custom clips for them.

Learn more

Use the test section often while you're building. It's the fastest way to check your points add up the way you expect before you start recording.