We are excited to announce a more efficient product experience that helps teams move faster and work more effectively.
Reads safe, polished, and a little distant.See a tweet test with real contrast.
This sample shows the kind of question SimAudience is built for: two messages with the same topic, but very different tone and clarity once they hit the audience.
This is a public example report, not a live customer result.
The more human version wins once the audience stops reading it like a launch announcement.
The winning version makes a stronger claim in the first line and sounds less like polished marketing.
The two tweet options
Both posts are trying to sell the same idea. The contrast comes from how fast they get to the point and how human the wording feels.
Most tools save time in the demo and steal it back in the workflow. We built ours to cut the drag after day one.
Sharper hook, stronger tension, clearer payoff.Sample report snapshot
Static example based on a two-variant tweet test for the same product launch message.
Variant A
Variant B
WinnerWhere the result moves
| Segment | A net | B net | Swing |
|---|---|---|---|
| All adults | +12 | +26 | +14 |
| Age 30-44 | +9 | +28 | +19 |
| Urban | +6 | +24 | +18 |
| College educated | +8 | +25 | +17 |
| Suburban | +11 | +23 | +12 |
Sample reactions
What the paid report adds
The sample is meant to show the shape of the report. The full version goes deeper on exactly where the winner changes.
Full demographic breakdowns
See the reactions by age, education, region, urbanicity, and political leaning instead of relying on the topline alone.
More sample reactions
Read the kinds of comments that explain why one version feels more human, more credible, or more polarizing.
CSV export and 30-day access
Download the report, share it with teammates, and revisit it during launch week instead of losing it after a day.
Use this sample to decide your next test
Sample Results FAQ
Is this a real customer report?
No. It is a public sample designed to show what the SimAudience output feels like before someone runs a paid test.
Why use a tweet in the sample?
Short posts make contrast easier to see. Small tone changes become obvious quickly, which makes the sample easier to understand.
Does every report look exactly like this?
The layout and output categories are similar, but the winning message, segment movement, and audience reactions depend on the actual variants you submit.
What is locked in the free preview?
The free preview gives you a smaller signal. Paid tests unlock the full demographic depth, more reactions, CSV export, and 30-day access.