How To Write Customer Survey Questions
It's easy to write customer survey questions - it's much harder
to write ones that you're able to draw conclusions from the answers
given.
For example, if you ask the question:
Please select the modes of transport you use regularly:
1) Car
2) Train
3) Cycle
4) Bike
5) Bus
You will be able to produce high level figures for how many people
selected each mode of transport.
However, if you ask the question:
Please select your primary mode of transport? This
is the mode of transport that you use the most.
1) Car
2) Train
3) Cycle
4) Bike
5) Bus
Not only do you have high level figures of how many people use
each mode of transport, but you also know that these figures represent
their primary mode of transport.
Unlike the first question, you know that the respondent (if they
have filled out the survey correctly) will only have selected
one mode of transport. In the first survey question, they could
have selected more than one mode of transport making it impossible
to conclude which is the most used primary mode of transport.
You could then ask the same question for their second and third
most used mode of transport. This would enable you to produce
conclusions such as:
23% of respondents who selected the car as their primary mode
of transport also selected the bus as their second mode of transport.
It would enable you to understand the relationship between the
various modes of transport given in the survey question - not
just show the high level figures.
When writing customer survey questions, you also have to think
from the respondents point of view.
You must never assume that they will know how to answer the questions.
Always give them help and explain what they need to do.
For example, here are two potential questions:
Please select your primary mode of transport?
Please select your primary mode of transport? This
is the mode of transport that you use the most.
Both are asking the same thing, but the second one is making
it absolutely clear what the word 'primary' means.
For more information on customer survey questions, please click
the link below:
customer survey questions sheffield
Sheffield is a city and metropolitan borough in South Yorkshire. It is so named because of its origins in a field on the River Sheaf that runs through the city.
Sheffield obtained world-wide recognition during the 19th century for its production of steel. Many innovations in the industry were developed locally, including crucible and stainless steel.
Historically a part of the West Riding of Yorkshire, the city has grown from its largely industrial roots to encompass a wide economic base.
New advanced manufacturing technologies and techniques are being developed on the Advanced Manufacturing Park by Sheffield's universities and other independent research organisations. Organisations currently located on the AMP include; the Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre (AMRC, a research partnership between The Boeing Company and The University of Sheffield), Castings Technology International (Cti) and TWI.
Sheffield has two universities, the University of Sheffield and Sheffield Hallam University. The two combined bring 55,000 students to the city every year. As a result of its large student population, Sheffield has many bars, cafes, clubs and shops as well as student housing to accommodate them.
Sheffield is linked into the national motorway network via the M1 and M18 motorways. The M1 skirts the north-east of the city, linking Sheffield with London to the south and Leeds to the north and crosses Tinsley Viaduct near Rotherham; the M18 branches from the M1 close to Sheffield, linking the city with Doncaster, Robin Hood Doncaster Sheffield Airport and the Humber ports.
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