{"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":"2026-06-20T16:08:32.257Z"},"content":[{"type":"documentation","id":"7ebcfe18-7566-4965-b9ab-d8ea2b966a84","slug":"customer-satisfaction-survey-questions","title":"50+ Customer Satisfaction Survey Questions (with Examples)","url":"https://www.koji.so/docs/customer-satisfaction-survey-questions","summary":"A practical bank of 50+ customer satisfaction survey questions organized by question type (scale, open-ended, single choice, multiple choice, ranking, yes/no) and by journey stage (onboarding, post-purchase, post-support, renewal, churn), with rules for writing unbiased questions. Explains why static surveys miss the \"why\" and how Koji turns every rating into an AI-moderated conversation with automatic thematic analysis.","content":"# 50+ Customer Satisfaction Survey Questions (with Examples)\n\nThe best **customer satisfaction survey questions** are specific, unbiased, tied to a single touchpoint, and short enough to actually get answered. Below is a ready-to-use bank of 50+ questions — organized by question type and by journey stage — that you can copy directly into a study. But the questions are only half the job: a 4-out-of-5 rating tells you *how* satisfied someone is, never *why*. This guide gives you the questions, the rules for writing them, and the modern way to capture the reasoning behind every score.\n\n**Bottom line up front:** Average CSAT scores land between **75% and 85%**, with 80%+ considered excellent (QuestionPro; Retently, 2025–2026). But the typical customer satisfaction survey earns just a **20–30% response rate** (Survicate; Clootrack, 2025), and most of the value — the *why* — hides in open-ended answers people rarely write. Koji solves both problems by turning each rating into a short AI-moderated conversation that probes for the real reason.\n\n## How to Write Good Customer Satisfaction Survey Questions\n\nBefore the question bank, five rules that separate signal from noise:\n\n1. **Ask one thing at a time.** Avoid double-barreled questions like \"How satisfied are you with our speed and support?\" — split them.\n2. **Stay neutral.** Leading questions (\"How great was our world-class support?\") inflate scores and poison the data.\n3. **Anchor to a specific experience.** \"How satisfied were you with your recent support chat?\" beats a vague \"How satisfied are you with us?\"\n4. **Pair a rating with a reason.** Every scale question should be followed by an open-ended \"why\" — that is where the actionable insight lives.\n5. **Keep it short.** Long surveys crater completion. Let conversational follow-up replace a wall of questions.\n\nAs David Ogilvy put it, *\"people don't think what they feel, they don't say what they think, and they don't do what they say.\"* That gap is why a single number is never enough — you have to probe.\n\n## Customer Satisfaction Survey Questions by Type\n\nKoji supports six **structured question types**, and every one has a place in a satisfaction survey. Here is the bank, organized by type.\n\n### Scale Questions (rate intensity)\n1. On a scale of 1–5, how satisfied were you with your overall experience?\n2. How satisfied were you with the speed of our response? (1–5)\n3. How would you rate the quality of the support you received? (1–5)\n4. How easy was it to get your issue resolved? (1 = very difficult, 7 = very easy) — *Customer Effort Score*\n5. How likely are you to recommend us to a friend or colleague? (0–10) — *NPS*\n6. How well did our product meet your expectations? (1–5)\n7. How satisfied are you with the value for the price you paid? (1–5)\n8. How would you rate your most recent interaction with our team? (1–5)\n\n### Open-Ended Questions (capture the \"why\")\n9. What is the primary reason for your score?\n10. What is the single most important thing we could improve?\n11. What did you enjoy most about your experience?\n12. What almost stopped you from completing your goal today?\n13. If you could change one thing about our product, what would it be?\n14. Describe how our product fits into your daily workflow.\n15. What were you hoping to accomplish, and did you succeed?\n16. What nearly made you choose a competitor instead?\n\n### Single-Choice Questions (pick one)\n17. How would you describe your overall satisfaction? (Very satisfied / Satisfied / Neutral / Dissatisfied / Very dissatisfied)\n18. Which best describes how often you use our product? (Daily / Weekly / Monthly / Rarely)\n19. How long have you been a customer? (Less than 1 month / 1–6 months / 6–12 months / 1+ year)\n20. Which channel do you prefer for support? (Chat / Email / Phone / Self-serve)\n\n### Multiple-Choice Questions (select all that apply)\n21. Which of these did you find most valuable? (list features)\n22. Which areas need the most improvement? (Speed / Pricing / Support / Reliability / UX)\n23. Where did you first hear about us? (list channels)\n24. Which of the following frustrated you recently? (list friction points)\n\n### Ranking Questions (force trade-offs)\n25. Rank these factors by how much they affect your satisfaction: price, quality, support, speed, reliability.\n26. Rank the features you use most often.\n27. Rank what you would most like us to invest in next.\n\n### Yes/No Questions (clean qualification)\n28. Did we resolve your issue today?\n29. Would you purchase from us again?\n30. Did the product do what you expected?\n31. Would you recommend us to a colleague?\n\n## Customer Satisfaction Survey Questions by Journey Stage\n\nContext matters more than any single question. Match the question to where the customer is.\n\n### Onboarding / First Experience\n32. How easy was it to get started? (1–5)\n33. What was the most confusing part of setup?\n34. Did onboarding give you everything you needed to succeed? (Yes/No)\n35. What would have made your first week easier?\n\n### Post-Purchase\n36. How satisfied are you with your purchase so far? (1–5)\n37. Did the product match what you expected when you bought it? (Yes/No)\n38. What convinced you to buy?\n39. What, if anything, gave you doubts before purchasing?\n\n### Post-Support Interaction\n40. How satisfied were you with how we handled your request? (1–5)\n41. How much effort did you have to put in to get help? (1–7)\n42. Was your issue fully resolved? (Yes/No)\n43. What could have made that interaction better?\n\n### Ongoing Relationship / Renewal\n44. How likely are you to renew? (0–10)\n45. How well are we helping you reach your goals? (1–5)\n46. What would make you a more enthusiastic advocate?\n47. What is the one thing keeping you with us?\n\n### Churn / Cancellation\n48. What is the main reason you are leaving?\n49. What could we have done to keep you?\n50. Where are you going instead, and why?\n51. How likely would you be to return if we fixed that? (0–10)\n\n## Why a Static Survey Leaves Insight on the Table\n\nYou can ask all 51 questions above in a traditional form — and most respondents will give you the rating and skip the open-ends. That is the core weakness of survey tools: the *why* is optional, so it usually goes uncaptured. Response rates compound the problem. CSAT surveys average just 20–30% completion, and channel matters enormously — SMS surveys see 45–60% response rates versus 6–8% for email (Clootrack, 2025).\n\n## The Modern Approach: Turn Every Rating into a Conversation\n\nInstead of hoping customers write a thoughtful paragraph in a text box, **Koji asks them.** When a respondent gives a 2-out-of-5, Koji's AI immediately follows up — \"Sorry to hear that. What specifically went wrong?\" — and keeps probing until it reaches an actionable reason. When someone gives a 5, it captures testimonial-quality praise.\n\nWhat Koji adds on top of your question bank:\n\n- **AI-moderated follow-up** on every rating, so the \"why\" is never optional.\n- **Voice or text** responses, capturing tone and nuance a checkbox can't.\n- **Automatic thematic analysis** that clusters hundreds of responses into ranked drivers of satisfaction and dissatisfaction.\n- **Score-segmented insights** that connect your CSAT, NPS, and CES numbers to the reasons behind them.\n- **Real-time reporting** so you see emerging issues as responses arrive, not weeks later.\n\nCompared with legacy tools like SurveyMonkey or Delighted that collect a score and a rarely-filled text box, Koji delivers 3–5x more qualitative depth per response — and you don't need a research background to set it up. That is what closes the loop between a satisfaction number and a product or service decision.\n\n## CSAT vs. NPS vs. CES: Which Question Anchors Your Survey?\n\nThree metrics dominate customer satisfaction surveys, and each answers a different question:\n\n- **CSAT (Customer Satisfaction Score)** — \"How satisfied were you with [specific experience]?\" on a 1–5 scale. Best for measuring a touchpoint right after it happens (a support chat, an onboarding step, a purchase).\n- **NPS (Net Promoter Score)** — \"How likely are you to recommend us?\" on a 0–10 scale. Best for overall relationship loyalty, tracked over time.\n- **CES (Customer Effort Score)** — \"How easy was it to get what you needed?\" Best for service and support, where friction predicts churn.\n\nUse CSAT for moment-to-moment experiences, NPS for the broad relationship, and CES wherever effort matters. Many programs run all three at different points in the journey — and in every case, the open-ended follow-up is what makes the number actionable.\n\n## Best Practices for Higher Response Rates\n\n- **Match the channel to the moment.** SMS surveys see 45–60% response rates versus 6–8% for email — meet customers where they already are.\n- **Trigger in context.** Ask right after the experience, while it is fresh, not in a delayed batch email.\n- **Lead with the rating.** A single tap to start lowers the barrier; conversational follow-up does the rest.\n- **Keep the core short.** Promise (and deliver) a one-minute experience.\n- **Close the loop.** Tell customers what you changed because of their feedback — it lifts future participation.\n\n## Related Resources\n\n- [CSAT Survey Guide](/docs/csat-survey-guide) — the methodology behind the Customer Satisfaction Score\n- [NPS Survey Guide](/docs/nps-survey-guide) — measure loyalty and the \"why\" behind it\n- [Customer Effort Score (CES) Guide](/docs/customer-effort-score-guide) — quantify friction in the experience\n- [Survey Design Best Practices](/docs/survey-design-best-practices) — write questions that produce clean data\n- [Customer Feedback Analysis](/docs/customer-feedback-analysis) — turn responses into decisions\n- [Structured Questions Guide](/docs/structured-questions-guide) — combine all six question types with AI-powered conversational follow-up\n\n*Want every rating to come with a reason? Koji turns your customer satisfaction survey into an AI-moderated conversation that captures the \"why\" automatically — at scale.*","category":"Survey & Study Templates","lastModified":"2026-06-20T03:18:16.059671+00:00","metaTitle":"50+ Customer Satisfaction Survey Questions (with Examples) | Koji","metaDescription":"A ready-to-use bank of 50+ customer satisfaction survey questions by type and journey stage, how to write them well, and how AI-moderated follow-up captures the reason behind every score.","keywords":["customer satisfaction survey questions","satisfaction survey questions","csat survey questions","customer satisfaction questions","customer feedback survey questions","customer satisfaction survey examples"],"aiSummary":"A practical bank of 50+ customer satisfaction survey questions organized by question type (scale, open-ended, single choice, multiple choice, ranking, yes/no) and by journey stage (onboarding, post-purchase, post-support, renewal, churn), with rules for writing unbiased questions. Explains why static surveys miss the \"why\" and how Koji turns every rating into an AI-moderated conversation with automatic thematic analysis.","aiDifficulty":"beginner","aiEstimatedTime":"12 min read"}],"pagination":{"total":1,"returned":1,"offset":0}}