{"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":"2026-07-05T12:20:28.528Z"},"content":[{"type":"blog","id":"6f2b604d-fa48-4b4c-8a86-80ac7c2fe999","slug":"customer-onboarding-survey-questions","title":"Customer Onboarding Survey Questions: 35+ Examples to Cut Early Churn (2026)","url":"https://www.koji.so/blog/customer-onboarding-survey-questions","summary":"Customer onboarding survey questions should measure time to first value and whether the customer reached it, because 70% of SaaS churn happens in the first 90 days and over 20% of voluntary churn is linked to poor onboarding. This guide provides 35+ questions across four stages (signup/expectations, activation, first-value, 30-day) and explains how AI-moderated interviews probe each answer to reveal exactly where new users stall.","content":"**Quick answer:** The best customer onboarding survey questions measure one thing above all — **time to first value**, and whether the customer actually reached it. Below are 35+ field-tested questions organized by onboarding stage (signup/expectations, activation, first-value, and the 30-day check-in), ready to copy. But onboarding is where churn is decided: **70% of SaaS churn happens in the first 90 days**, and a static survey only tells you *that* a user stalled, not *why*. The teams that cut early churn in 2026 pair these questions with AI-moderated interviews that probe every answer in real time — turning \"the setup was confusing\" into the exact step that lost the customer.\n\n## Why onboarding surveys are your highest-leverage research\n\nOnboarding is not a nicety — it's the single biggest predictor of retention. The data is blunt:\n\n- **Over 20% of voluntary churn** is linked directly to poor onboarding.\n- Roughly **70% of new users churn within the first three months**, and users who don't engage within the first **three days have a ~90% chance of churning**.\n- Companies whose customers reach first value in **under 7 days see about 50% lower churn**, and users who complete an onboarding checklist are **3× more likely to become paying customers**.\n- Top-quartile onboarding teams achieve **2.5× higher customer lifetime value** than bottom-quartile peers.\n\nEvery one of those numbers is a research opportunity. If you can measure where onboarding breaks — and *why* — you're fixing the most expensive leak in the funnel. (For the wider picture, see our [SaaS customer research playbook](/blog/customer-research-for-saas-companies-2026).)\n\n## The 4 stages of onboarding questions\n\nAsk different questions depending on where the user is in their first 30 days. Match the question type to the answer you need — Koji supports six ([open_ended, scale, single_choice, multiple_choice, ranking, yes_no](/docs/customer-satisfaction-survey-questions)) so each question is measured the right way.\n\n### 1. Signup & expectations (day 0)\n\nCapture intent *before* the product shapes it.\n\n1. What is the main problem you're hoping [product] will solve?\n2. What made you sign up today specifically — what changed?\n3. What were you using before, if anything?\n4. What does success with [product] look like for you in 30 days?\n5. How did you first hear about us?\n6. On a scale of 0–10, how confident are you that [product] will solve your problem? (scale)\n\n### 2. Activation & setup (days 1–3)\n\nThis is the highest-risk window. Find friction fast.\n\n7. How easy or difficult was it to get started? (0–10 scale)\n8. Was there any point during setup where you felt stuck or confused?\n9. Which step took the longest or felt unnecessary?\n10. Did anything not work the way you expected?\n11. What almost made you give up during setup?\n12. Is there anything you expected [product] to do that it didn't?\n13. Who else on your team needs to be involved to get full value? (single-buyer accounts churn faster)\n\n### 3. First value / \"aha moment\" (days 3–14)\n\nConfirm they reached the moment that predicts retention.\n\n14. Have you accomplished what you came here to do yet? (yes_no)\n15. What was the first thing that made you think \"okay, this is useful\"?\n16. What feature have you found most valuable so far?\n17. Which feature did you expect to use but haven't yet?\n18. How much time or effort is [product] saving you so far?\n19. Rank these features by how important they are to you. (ranking)\n20. On a scale of 0–10, how likely are you to still be using [product] in 3 months? (scale)\n21. What's the one thing that would make [product] indispensable for you?\n\n### 4. The 30-day check-in\n\nDiagnose the accounts that stalled — before renewal.\n\n22. Looking back at your first month, what went well?\n23. What was the most frustrating part of getting started?\n24. Is [product] delivering the outcome you signed up for? Why or why not?\n25. What nearly stopped you from continuing?\n26. How does the reality of using [product] compare to what you expected at signup?\n27. What would have made your first two weeks easier?\n28. Which resource (docs, support, onboarding call) helped you most — and which was missing?\n29. How likely are you to recommend [product] to a colleague? (0–10 NPS scale)\n30. What's the single biggest improvement we could make to onboarding?\n\n### Bonus: deeper \"why\" probes (use as follow-ups to anything above)\n\n31. Can you tell me more about that?\n32. What do you mean by \"confusing\" — where exactly did it happen?\n33. Can you walk me through what you were trying to do at that moment?\n34. Was that a dealbreaker, or just an annoyance?\n35. If that hadn't happened, would your first week have gone differently?\n\n## The problem with static onboarding surveys\n\nQuestions 31–35 are where the real insight lives — and a static form *can't ask them*. A survey records \"setup was confusing\" and stops. There's no one to ask \"confusing where?\" So you end up with a satisfaction score and a vague word cloud, and your onboarding flow never actually gets fixed. Worse, [survey fatigue](/blog/how-to-increase-survey-response-rates-2026) means new users — already unsure about your product — abandon a long form, so you lose exactly the at-risk accounts you most need to hear from. In-app microsurveys ([the best tools here](/blog/best-in-app-survey-tools-2026)) improve reach, but they still can't probe.\n\n## How AI-moderated interviews cut early churn\n\nKoji runs these exact questions as an **AI-moderated voice or text interview** instead of a dead form. Triggered inside your onboarding flow or sent as a link on day 3, day 14, and day 30, the AI moderator asks your onboarding questions and **probes each answer in real time** — automatically following \"the import felt confusing\" with \"which step, and what did you expect to happen?\" — with **no moderator bias** and no scheduling. It interviews every new user in parallel, 24/7.\n\nThen Koji does the synthesis that would otherwise eat a week: **automatic thematic analysis** clusters every response into the real friction points, sentiment scoring flags the users closest to quitting, and a **one-click report** hands your product and CS teams the verbatim quotes plus the distribution — so you know not just that 40% stalled at setup, but *exactly which step* and *why*. Pair a quantified activation score (question 7) with the story behind it in the same study, and feed the findings straight into your [customer feedback loop](/blog/customer-feedback-loop-guide-2026) and [product feedback workflow](/docs/product-feedback-survey-guide). Use [skip logic](/docs/skip-logic-surveys-guide) so activated users and stalled users each get the right follow-ups.\n\nThe result: you catch the churn signal in hours, not at renewal — with no research expertise required, and from question to insight in a single afternoon.\n\n## Put these questions to work\n\nCopy the questions above into your onboarding flow today — then let an AI moderator ask the follow-ups your form never could. **[Run your first AI onboarding study on Koji](https://www.koji.so)** and find out exactly where new customers stall — before they churn.","category":"Tutorial","lastModified":"2026-07-04T03:18:00.169351+00:00","metaTitle":"Customer Onboarding Survey Questions: 35+ Examples (2026)","metaDescription":"The best customer onboarding survey questions for 2026, organized by stage — signup, activation, first value, and 30-day. 35+ copy-ready examples plus how to turn them into AI-moderated interviews that cut early churn.","keywords":["customer onboarding survey questions","onboarding survey questions","user onboarding survey","onboarding feedback questions","saas onboarding survey","activation survey questions","onboarding survey examples"],"aiSummary":"Customer onboarding survey questions should measure time to first value and whether the customer reached it, because 70% of SaaS churn happens in the first 90 days and over 20% of voluntary churn is linked to poor onboarding. This guide provides 35+ questions across four stages (signup/expectations, activation, first-value, 30-day) and explains how AI-moderated interviews probe each answer to reveal exactly where new users stall.","aiKeywords":["onboarding survey questions","customer onboarding","early churn","activation","time to first value","SaaS retention","onboarding feedback"],"aiContentType":"listicle","faqItems":[{"answer":"The best onboarding survey questions measure time to first value and whether the customer reached it. Ask about their goal at signup, how easy setup was (0-10), where they got stuck, whether they hit their aha moment, and how likely they are to still be using the product in three months. Then probe each answer with follow-ups like 'confusing where exactly?' to find the real friction.","question":"What are the best customer onboarding survey questions?"},{"answer":"Trigger onboarding surveys at key moments in the first 30 days: right after signup to capture expectations, on day 1-3 to catch activation friction, around day 7-14 to confirm first value, and at day 30 to diagnose stalled accounts before renewal. Users who don't engage within the first three days have roughly a 90% chance of churning, so early touchpoints matter most.","question":"When should you send an onboarding survey?"},{"answer":"In-app onboarding surveys should be short — 2-4 questions per touchpoint — because new users abandon long forms. Reserve deeper diagnostic questions for a follow-up AI-moderated interview, where adaptive probing can do the heavy lifting without overwhelming the user.","question":"How many questions should an onboarding survey have?"},{"answer":"Onboarding is the biggest predictor of retention: about 70% of SaaS churn happens in the first 90 days, and over 20% of voluntary churn is linked directly to poor onboarding. Companies whose customers reach first value in under 7 days see roughly 50% lower churn, so measuring and fixing onboarding friction is the highest-leverage research a SaaS team can do.","question":"Why does onboarding matter so much for churn?"},{"answer":"Yes. Koji conducts the onboarding interview with an AI moderator, probes each answer in real time, then automatically clusters responses into themes, scores sentiment to flag at-risk users, and produces a one-click report with verbatim quotes — turning a week of manual synthesis into hours and pinpointing exactly which onboarding step loses customers.","question":"Can AI analyze onboarding survey responses automatically?"},{"answer":"An onboarding survey is a static form that captures only what the user types and stops at the first answer. An onboarding interview probes each response to reach the underlying reason a user stalled. Koji lets you run interviews at survey scale, combining the reach of a survey with the depth of an interview across every new customer.","question":"What is the difference between an onboarding survey and an onboarding interview?"}],"relatedTopics":["onboarding survey questions","customer onboarding","SaaS retention","activation","early churn prevention"]}],"pagination":{"total":1,"returned":1,"offset":0}}