Guide users through text input like a pro
You’ve seen it happen: someone stares at an empty text box for 10 seconds, types something, deletes it, then types something completely different.
“What format do they want?” “How detailed should this be?” “What’s a good example?”
Empty text boxes can be intimidating. But with the right guidance, people fill them out confidently and give you exactly what you were asking for.
GuidedTrack’s *placeholder and *tip features solve this by putting helpful instructions exactly where users need them – right at the point of input.
Two Ways to Help Users
*placeholder – Gentle Hints Inside the Box
Placeholder text appears inside the text box and disappears as soon as the user starts typing. Perfect for showing format examples or quick hints:
The user sees the example format right in the text box, but it vanishes the moment they start typing their actual number.
*question: What's your phone number?
*placeholder: e.g., +1234567890
*save: phone_number
Use *placeholder for:
- Format examples (phone numbers, dates, email addresses)
- Quick hints that don’t need to be remembered
- Simple guidance that fits in one line
*tip – Persistent Instructions Above the Box
The *tip keyword displays helpful information below the question but above the input area, and it stays visible while users type:
*question: What was your most recent strange dream like?
*tip: For instance, you might say "I dreamt I turned into a toaster."
*save: dream_description
The tip stays put, so users can reference it while they’re writing their response.
Use *tip for:
- Complex instructions that are hard to memorize
- Examples that users might want to reference while typing
- Longer guidance/explanations
Why This Improves Your Data Quality
π More consistent formats: Placeholder examples show exactly how you want information formatted.
π‘ Richer detail: Tips that explain why you’re asking encourage more thoughtful responses.
π Less back-and-forth: Clear guidance upfront prevents the need to follow up for clarification.
Getting Started
Both features work with any *question that accepts text input:
*question: Your question here
*placeholder: Format hint that disappears when typing starts
*tip: Persistent guidance that stays visible while typing
*save: variable_name
Small Details, Big Impact
These aren’t flashy features, but they make a real difference in how people experience your forms.
The person filling out your survey shouldn’t have to guess what you want. A simple placeholder or tip can turn confusion into confidence, blank responses into useful data.
Your users will appreciate the guidance, and you’ll appreciate the better responses.


