Blind voting for honest decisions
Remove social pressure from your group's decisions. Loomio's blind voting and anonymous poll features help people vote based on their own judgement — not on what everyone else is doing.
What is blind voting?
Blind voting (sometimes called a secret ballot or anonymous vote) is when participants can't see how others have voted. Results are hidden until the poll closes — or until each person casts their own vote.
This prevents bandwagon effects, where people follow the majority rather than thinking independently. It also reduces social pressure, especially in groups where power dynamics or seniority might influence how people vote.
The result is more honest, independent input from every member of your group.
When to use blind voting
Board elections
Elect board members, officers, or representatives without the influence of seeing who's ahead. Loomio supports STV (single transferable vote) elections with anonymous ballots.
Sensitive decisions
Budget priorities, personnel matters, or contentious proposals — when the topic is sensitive, anonymous voting lets people express their real position without fear of judgement.
Honest feedback
Get genuine opinions on proposals, strategies, or performance reviews. When votes are anonymous, people are more likely to raise concerns early rather than going along with the group.
Reducing power dynamics
In groups with senior and junior members, blind voting ensures that a manager's early vote doesn't anchor everyone else's response.
Prioritization
Use blind dot voting or score polls to surface the group's real priorities. Without seeing others' allocations, each person distributes their points based on genuine preference.
Compliance and governance
Some constitutions or bylaws require secret ballots for certain decisions. Loomio provides the audit trail and anonymity that formal governance processes demand.
How blind voting works in Loomio
Loomio gives you two independent settings that you can combine for the level of anonymity your decision requires:
Anonymous votes
Voter identities are hidden. The group sees the results and any written reasons, but not who voted which way. Useful when you want transparency of reasoning without attribution.
Hidden results
Results are hidden from everyone until the poll closes. This prevents anchoring — nobody can see the running tally and adjust their vote to match. Combine with anonymous votes for a fully blind ballot.
These settings work with every poll type in Loomio:
- Simple polls (single or multiple choice)
- Score polls
- Dot voting
- Ranked choice
- Proposals (consent and consensus)
- STV elections
Blind voting vs open voting
Neither approach is always better — the right choice depends on the decision. Loomio supports both, so your group can choose the right mode for each situation.
Use blind voting when:
- Power dynamics could influence votes
- The topic is sensitive or contentious
- You need to comply with secret ballot requirements
- You want honest prioritization
Use open voting when:
- Accountability matters — you want to know who stands where
- The group is building shared understanding through dialogue
- You want to follow up with individuals about their reasoning
- Trust is high and social pressure isn't a concern
Try blind voting with your group
Start a free trial and create your first anonymous poll in minutes. No credit card required.