Pre-Quiz Opt-in
A pre-quiz opt-in asks visitors for their contact details before they can start the quiz, capturing the lead up front rather than after they finish.
In depth
Placing the opt-in first guarantees you keep the lead even if someone abandons mid-funnel, which is valuable when paid traffic is expensive and every click must be monetized. The trade-off is friction: asking for an email before delivering any value lowers the perceived fairness of the exchange, so start rates drop compared with funnels that reveal the result first and ask for details afterward.
The most common pitfall is treating the pre-quiz form as a hard wall with too many required fields, which crushes both start rate and data accuracy as people enter fake addresses to get past it. In a lead-qualification workflow, a pre-quiz opt-in works best for warm audiences who already trust the brand, or when the quiz itself is positioned as the promised value; for cold traffic, a post-quiz capture usually yields more usable leads.
Example in practice
Frequently asked questions
Does a pre-quiz opt-in reduce quiz completion rates?
It usually lowers the start rate because people must commit before seeing value. However, those who do start often complete at similar rates, and you keep every captured email even from non-finishers.
When should I use a pre-quiz opt-in instead of capturing leads at the end?
Use it for warm, brand-aware traffic or when the quiz result itself is the promised reward. For cold paid traffic, capturing contact details after delivering the result generally produces higher-quality leads.
How many fields should a pre-quiz opt-in have?
Keep it to one or two fields, ideally just an email. Each additional required field measurably reduces start rate and increases the share of fake or low-intent submissions.