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All CollectionsGetting Started: How Effective Experiments Works
103b - Read this if you have been invited to the account.
103b - Read this if you have been invited to the account.
Manuel da Costa avatar
Written by Manuel da Costa
Updated over 6 years ago

Ok. So you've been invited to Effective Experiments. 

What's this...yet another tool?!

Well, if you're involved in optimization and experimentation, let me show you what to do next (Assuming you've checked out the 101 & 102 intro articles)

Make a note of your role in the project

 If this says

Team user -  You can add new ideas, research, experiments, results, reports etc.

Team viewer - You essentially have read only rights but you can also do the following, take part in discussions, add to-dos, review progress etc.

Let's see whats been happening on this account

Assuming that there has been activity on the account, you will quickly get a view of that.

Look at the main dashboard of the project and you get a birds eye view of the experimentation pipeline as well as important project health metrics.


Let's look at historical experiments using the Query Engine

The Query Engine is like Siri (or Alexa ... you know the voice AI).

You ask it questions and it will give you answers. We're not at the point where we have a voice interface but for now we have an easy to use Query Builder

Here's a primer on how to use it.

Now to see what the team have been upto.

In the query engine do the following -
"Start date" is greater than 1st Jan 2018 and hit submit.

This will now show you all experiments that was run after that date.

You can add AND / OR queries to expand on your search.

Let's try another one.

Find all experiments tested on desktop that were successful

No Data? No problem. View the demo project

In the off chance you've been invited to empty project, you can always switch to a demo environment to see what the platform looks like with some data in it.

Here's how you access it.

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