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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
trial balloon
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A good cabinet officer will take a policy proposal, put a trial balloon out.
▪ It was Mr Florio, elected in 1989, who floated himself as a trial balloon for Clintonomics.
Wiktionary
trial balloon

n. (context idiomatic English) An idea, suggestion, or prospective action, product, etc. offered to an audience or group in order to test whether it generates acceptance or interest.

WordNet
trial balloon
  1. n. a test of public opinion

  2. a balloon sent up to test air currents

Wikipedia
Trial balloon

A trial balloon is information sent out to the media in order to observe the reaction of an audience. It can be used by companies sending out press releases to judge reaction by customers, or it can be used by politicians who deliberately leak information on a policy change under consideration. The term is of French origin.

In politics trial balloons often take the form of an intentional news "leak" to assess public opinion. An example was when the New York Times reported in mid-June 2012 that Governor Andrew Cuomo and his staff were deliberating on a plan to restrict hydrofracking to five counties in the Southern Tier of New York where the Marcellus shale is deepest and drilling is least likely to pollute well water supplies in those aquifers. Because the proposed change in New York energy law was highly controversial, the Albany Times Union the next day filed a front-page, above the fold story questioning the plan's leak as a "trial balloon" in the headline, which had quickly garnered both criticism and support.

In another example, a company might announce they are going to release a new computer program in a year, and then read the press coverage for hints on whether or not the product will have appeal in the marketplace. If the coverage is favourable the money will be spent on development, but if not the project can be cancelled before using up resources. A trial balloon under the company's own name is somewhat risky; if too many are "floated" the company risks becoming known as the company that cried wolf, and can find itself being ignored completely. In addition, the company can find that the product being planned is unworkable, leading to the phenomenon of vaporware.

Usage examples of "trial balloon".

While I was vacationing in Paris in November, Hillary had called for my take on media speculation that she might become her husband's chief of staff - a leak she may well have orchestrated herself as a trial balloon.

One trial balloon was attempted: the Reverend Jebediah Morse, a high Yellow Sign adept, openly accused Jefferson of being an Illuminatus and charged him and his party with most of the crimes that had discredited Weishaupt in Bavaria.

In reality they were sending him up as a trial balloon to see how Britain and the League would respond to unprovoked aggression.

Hesaid that last one as a sort of trial balloon, but a quick glance at Esperanzablew that particular old balloon out of the sky.

This article was a trial balloon that Cupertino had floated, to see if Meredith would be acceptable to run the technical divisions in Seattle.