{"site":{"name":"Koji","description":"AI-native customer research platform that helps teams conduct, analyze, and synthesize customer interviews at scale.","url":"https://www.koji.so","contentTypes":["blog","documentation"],"lastUpdated":"2026-06-10T10:39:49.754Z"},"content":[{"type":"documentation","id":"bb25d314-6a35-4571-8675-e7d983222112","slug":"abandoned-cart-survey-guide","title":"Abandoned Cart Survey: Questions to Recover Lost Sales","url":"https://www.koji.so/docs/abandoned-cart-survey-guide","summary":"An abandoned cart survey asks shoppers who did not complete checkout why they left, surfacing fixable friction like unexpected costs, forced account creation, long checkout, payment concerns, or comparison shopping. With ~70% average abandonment, recovery is high-value. Keep the survey to 3-5 questions, trigger it close to the event, and always include one open-ended question. Koji adds AI follow-ups that turn vague reasons into specific fixes, aggregates reasons into ranked charts, and runs voice or text interviews without a moderator.","content":"**An abandoned cart survey asks shoppers who added items but did not complete checkout why they left — surfacing the specific friction (unexpected costs, forced account creation, payment issues, or simple hesitation) that is quietly costing you revenue.** With cart abandonment rates averaging roughly 70% across e-commerce, even a small recovery is meaningful. The most effective approach is a short, well-timed survey backed by AI follow-ups, which is exactly what a platform like Koji automates — turning a flat drop-off rate into a ranked list of fixable reasons.\n\nA high abandonment rate is not one problem; it is a stack of them. Some shoppers were never going to buy (browsing, comparison shopping). Others were ready to buy and hit a wall. The job of the survey is to separate the two and quantify the walls.\n\n## The most common reasons carts get abandoned\n\nResearch across the industry consistently surfaces the same culprits. Your survey should be designed to detect each:\n\n- **Unexpected extra costs** (shipping, taxes, fees) — routinely the #1 reason.\n- **Forced account creation** at checkout.\n- **A long or confusing checkout** process.\n- **Payment security concerns** or missing payment methods.\n- **Comparison shopping** — the shopper was never ready to buy yet.\n- **Delivery cost or speed** not meeting expectations.\n- **Technical errors** during checkout.\n\nIf you do not know which of these dominates *your* funnel, you are optimizing blind.\n\n## Abandoned cart survey questions (template)\n\nKeep it short — three to five questions maximum. Abandoners have already shown they will not invest much time, so respect it.\n\n- **Primary reason (single_choice):** \"What stopped you from completing your purchase today?\" with options covering the culprits above, plus \"Other.\"\n- **Cost sensitivity (yes_no or scale):** \"Were the shipping costs higher than you expected?\"\n- **Intent (single_choice):** \"Were you planning to buy today, or just browsing?\" — this segments serious abandoners from window shoppers.\n- **Open-ended reason (open_ended):** \"In your own words, what would have made you complete the purchase?\" — the single most valuable question, because it surfaces reasons your option list missed.\n- **Recovery hook (yes_no):** \"If we resolved that, would you complete your order?\"\n\nThese map cleanly onto Koji's six structured question types — open_ended, scale, single_choice, multiple_choice, ranking, and yes_no — so you can mix the quantitative \"what\" with the qualitative \"why\" in one short flow. See the [structured questions guide](/docs/structured-questions-guide).\n\n## Why timing and follow-up decide everything\n\nTwo factors make or break an abandoned cart survey:\n\n**Timing.** Trigger it close to the abandonment event, while the experience is fresh — an exit-intent prompt, or an email within a few hours. Memory of *why* fades fast.\n\n**Follow-up depth.** This is where static survey tools fail. A shopper picks \"unexpected costs\" and the survey ends — but you still do not know whether it was the shipping fee, the tax, or a surprise service charge, or how much would have been acceptable. Koji's AI interviewer probes automatically: \"You mentioned unexpected costs — which charge surprised you, and what would have felt reasonable?\" That one follow-up turns a useless aggregate (\"costs\") into an actionable fix (\"free shipping over $50 would recover most of this segment\").\n\nKoji delivers this without a moderator, in voice or text, running every conversation in parallel — so you can hear from hundreds of abandoners without lifting a finger after setup.\n\n## How to run an abandoned cart study with Koji\n\n1. **Reach the right shoppers.** Trigger a Koji interview link from your exit-intent flow or recovery email, so you are only surveying genuine abandoners.\n2. **Keep it short and neutral.** Use the template above. Koji can draft neutral wording so you do not accidentally lead shoppers toward a convenient excuse.\n3. **Let the AI probe.** Every \"what stopped you\" answer gets a tailored follow-up, capturing the specific, fixable detail.\n4. **Read the automatic report.** Koji aggregates the single_choice reasons into a frequency chart (so you can see that, say, 41% cite cost) and summarizes the open-ended answers into themes with verbatim quotes. See [generating research reports](/docs/generating-research-reports).\n5. **Fix, then re-measure.** Ship the change that addresses your top reason, then re-run the study to confirm the rate moved.\n\nCompared to bolting a one-question popup onto your store and guessing at the rest, this is a 10x richer picture — and far faster than manually reading and tagging open-ended responses.\n\n## Abandoned cart vs. churn vs. post-purchase research\n\nThese are three different moments in the customer lifecycle, and each deserves its own study:\n\n- **Abandoned cart** — why a first purchase did not complete (this guide). For the broader research-method view, including AI exit interviews and deeper diagnostics, see the [cart abandonment research guide](/docs/cart-abandonment-research-guide).\n- **Churn** — why an existing customer stopped paying. See the [churn survey guide](/docs/churn-survey-guide).\n- **Post-purchase** — how the buying experience felt for those who *did* convert. See the [post-purchase survey guide](/docs/post-purchase-survey-guide).\n\nRun all three and you have visibility into every leak in your revenue funnel.\n\n## Best practices\n\n- **Three to five questions, no more.** Abandoners have little patience.\n- **Trigger fast.** Survey close to the event while the reason is fresh.\n- **Always include one open-ended question.** Your option list will miss reasons; the open box catches them, and Koji turns those into themes.\n- **Segment browsers from buyers.** A \"just browsing\" answer should not count against your checkout.\n- **Close the loop.** Use the recovery-hook question and follow up with the offer that resolves the objection.\n\n## Turning findings into a recovery playbook\n\nA survey that names the top reason is only half the work — the value is in the fix you ship next. Map each common reason to a concrete move:\n\n- **Unexpected costs** → show shipping, taxes, and fees earlier in the flow, or set a free-shipping threshold. Koji can tell you the price point that would feel reasonable, so the threshold is informed rather than guessed.\n- **Forced account creation** → add a guest checkout. This is one of the highest-ROI fixes because it removes a hard wall, not just friction.\n- **Long or confusing checkout** → cut steps, add a progress indicator, and support autofill. Use the open-ended answers to find the exact step where people stall.\n- **Payment concerns** → add trust signals and more payment methods (wallets, buy-now-pay-later).\n- **Just browsing** → these are not failures. Move them into a nurture or remarketing flow rather than counting them against checkout.\n\nThe discipline that ties it together: after you ship a fix, re-run the same Koji study and watch whether that reason shrinks in the ranked report. Because the AI captures both the structured \"what\" and the probed \"why,\" you can confirm not just that abandonment fell, but that it fell *for the reason you targeted* — closing the loop between insight and revenue. That feedback cycle, run continuously, is how high-performing e-commerce teams steadily compress their abandonment rate instead of guessing at it once a year.\n\n## Related Resources\n\n- [The Complete Guide to Structured Questions](/docs/structured-questions-guide) — build a tight cart-recovery flow\n- [Churn Survey Guide](/docs/churn-survey-guide) — understand why existing customers leave\n- [Post-Purchase Survey Guide](/docs/post-purchase-survey-guide) — measure the experience of shoppers who converted\n- [Writing Effective Screener Questions](/docs/screener-questions-guide) — reach genuine abandoners, not browsers\n- [Customer Quotes Guide](/docs/customer-quotes-guide) — turn verbatim reasons into persuasive evidence\n- [Generating Research Reports](/docs/generating-research-reports) — see the top abandonment reasons ranked automatically\n","category":"Use Cases","lastModified":"2026-06-10T03:21:10.489456+00:00","metaTitle":"Abandoned Cart Survey: Questions to Recover Lost Sales | Koji","metaDescription":"Nearly 70% of carts are abandoned. Use this abandoned cart survey template and timing guide to find out why shoppers leave — and how Koji's AI follow-ups turn drop-offs into recovered revenue.","keywords":["abandoned cart survey","abandoned cart survey questions","cart abandonment survey template","exit survey for abandoned carts","abandoned cart survey best practices","recover sales abandoned cart survey"],"aiSummary":"An abandoned cart survey asks shoppers who did not complete checkout why they left, surfacing fixable friction like unexpected costs, forced account creation, long checkout, payment concerns, or comparison shopping. With ~70% average abandonment, recovery is high-value. Keep the survey to 3-5 questions, trigger it close to the event, and always include one open-ended question. Koji adds AI follow-ups that turn vague reasons into specific fixes, aggregates reasons into ranked charts, and runs voice or text interviews without a moderator.","aiPrerequisites":["None — beginner friendly"],"aiLearningOutcomes":["Identify the most common reasons shoppers abandon carts","Build a short abandoned cart survey from a template","Time the survey and probe for fixable detail","Use Koji to rank abandonment reasons and recover revenue"],"aiDifficulty":"beginner","aiEstimatedTime":"9 min read"}],"pagination":{"total":1,"returned":1,"offset":0}}