{"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":"2026-06-09T07:13:45.819Z"},"content":[{"type":"documentation","id":"47616e68-ec90-4abf-be40-6d10628beab9","slug":"survey-vs-poll","title":"Survey vs Poll: What's the Difference and When to Use Each (2026)","url":"https://www.koji.so/docs/survey-vs-poll","summary":"A poll is a single quick question that captures a fast pulse (one data point, seconds to answer, instant aggregate). A survey is a structured multi-question instrument for deep, segmentable insight (minutes to answer, cross-tabbed analysis). Use a poll for engagement and quick directional reads; use a survey for satisfaction tracking, segmentation, and anything you will cross-tabulate. Both are static and cannot follow up. AI-moderated interviews (e.g., Koji) are a deeper third option: chat-like ease lifts completion, six structured question types keep quantitative structure, adaptive follow-ups capture why, and analysis is automatic. Rule of thumb: poll for one number fast, survey for a dataset, AI interview when the decision hinges on why.","content":"**Short answer:** A *poll* is a single, quick question — usually one multiple-choice item — designed to capture a fast pulse from a large group. A *survey* is a structured questionnaire of many questions designed to measure attitudes, behaviors, and segments in depth. Use a poll when you need one number fast; use a survey when you need a fuller picture. And when you need to understand *why* people answer the way they do, an AI-moderated interview goes deeper than either — without the length that kills survey completion.\n\nPeople use \"poll\" and \"survey\" interchangeably, but choosing the wrong one wastes responses and produces shallow data. Here is how to tell them apart and pick correctly.\n\n## Poll vs Survey: The Core Difference\n\nThe simplest way to remember it: **a poll asks one question; a survey asks many.** A poll gives you a single, instantly aggregated data point — \"63% prefer Plan A.\" A survey gives you a structured dataset you can segment, cross-tabulate, and analyze across many dimensions.\n\n| Dimension | Poll | Survey |\n|-----------|------|--------|\n| Number of questions | One (occasionally a few) | Many, structured |\n| Goal | Fast pulse, single data point | Deep, multi-dimensional insight |\n| Time to complete | Seconds | Minutes |\n| Question types | Usually single-choice | Mixed: scale, choice, ranking, open-ended |\n| Analysis | Instant aggregate (% per option) | Cross-tabs, segments, statistics |\n| Typical placement | Social media, live events, in-app | Email, embedded link, panel |\n| Best for | Quick opinion, engagement, voting | Research, satisfaction tracking, segmentation |\n| Depth of insight | Shallow by design | Moderate — limited by length tolerance |\n\n## When to Use a Poll\n\nPolls win when **speed and participation** matter more than depth:\n\n- **Live engagement** — a one-tap question during a webinar, stream, or event.\n- **Quick directional reads** — \"Which feature should we build next?\" to your community.\n- **Social proof and reach** — polls on social platforms drive interaction and are frictionless to answer.\n- **In-product micro-checks** — a single thumbs-up/down after an action.\n\nThe tradeoff: a poll tells you *what* people picked, never *why*. It can't follow up, can't segment meaningfully, and is easily skewed by who happens to be online.\n\n## When to Use a Survey\n\nSurveys win when you need **structured, analyzable data** across multiple dimensions:\n\n- **Satisfaction and loyalty tracking** — CSAT, NPS, CES over time.\n- **Segmentation** — combining demographic, attitudinal, and behavioral questions.\n- **Concept and feature evaluation** — rating and ranking several options.\n- **Anything you'll cross-tabulate** — \"How does satisfaction differ by plan tier?\"\n\nThe catch: surveys pay for depth with length, and length is expensive. Average survey response rates hover around a third of recipients, and every extra question increases abandonment. Worse, even a well-built survey can't ask a follow-up — when a respondent writes \"the onboarding was frustrating,\" the form just moves on. To run surveys well, see [survey design best practices](/docs/survey-design-best-practices) and choose the right [survey question types](/docs/survey-question-types).\n\n## The Limits Both Share\n\nPolls and surveys are both **static**. They ask predetermined questions and record predetermined answers. Neither can probe an interesting response, clarify a confusing one, or chase the unexpected insight that turns data into a decision. That structural limit is why response quality has been declining and why teams increasingly hit a wall: they have plenty of *what* and almost no *why*.\n\n## The Third Option: AI-Moderated Interviews\n\nIn 2026 there's a better answer for depth: a conversational AI interview that adapts like a human researcher but scales like a survey. With a platform like Koji, you write a brief and the AI interviewer talks to each participant one-on-one — by voice or text, in their own language — asking adaptive follow-up questions in real time.\n\nIt keeps the best of both worlds:\n\n- **Poll-like ease for the respondent** — it feels like a chat, not a 30-field form, which lifts completion.\n- **Survey-like structure for you** — Koji supports six structured question types (open_ended, scale, single_choice, multiple_choice, ranking, and yes_no), so you still get chartable quantitative data. See the [structured questions guide](/docs/structured-questions-guide).\n- **Depth neither can reach** — when someone says \"the pricing felt confusing,\" the AI asks \"what specifically?\" and captures the real reason.\n- **Automatic analysis** — themes are coded across every conversation and assembled into a real-time report, so you skip the manual CSV crunch a survey leaves behind.\n\nA useful rule of thumb: reach for a **poll** when you need one number in the next hour; reach for a **survey** when you need a structured dataset; reach for an **AI interview** when the decision hinges on understanding *why*. For the full head-to-head, see [AI interviews vs. surveys](/docs/ai-interviews-vs-surveys) and [conversational surveys](/docs/conversational-survey-guide).\n\n## Quick Decision Guide\n\n- Need engagement or a fast directional read? **Poll.**\n- Need to measure and segment across many dimensions? **Survey.**\n- Need to understand motivations, reactions, or churn reasons? **AI interview.**\n- Survey response rates falling, or open-text answers too thin to act on? **AI interview.**\n\nPolls and surveys aren't obsolete — they're just narrower than most teams realize. Match the tool to the depth of decision in front of you, and use an AI interview whenever \"why\" is the thing you actually need to know.\n\n## Common Mistakes When Choosing\n\nEven teams that know the definitions pick the wrong tool. A few patterns to avoid:\n\n- **Using a poll to make a real decision.** A single social-media poll showing \"70% want dark mode\" feels like data, but it's skewed by who happened to be online and tells you nothing about intensity or tradeoffs. For a real prioritization call, you need structure and depth, not one tap.\n- **Bloating a survey to \"get it all in one go.\"** Every added question raises abandonment and lowers quality, as fatigued respondents straight-line through the back half. If your survey has crept past 15 questions, it's a sign the decision actually needs a conversation, not a longer form.\n- **Treating open-text survey boxes as qualitative research.** A free-text field can't follow up, so you get short, surface-level answers that still leave you guessing at the why. An AI interview probes each response and turns the same effort into a usable theme.\n- **Confusing response volume with insight.** A thousand poll votes look impressive but may carry less decision-grade signal than 40 well-probed interviews. Match the method to the *depth* of the decision, not the size of the audience.\n\n## A Quick Worked Example\n\nA product team debating two onboarding flows runs a 24-hour poll and learns 58% prefer Flow B. Useful for a directional read — but they still don't know why the other 42% balked. So they follow up with a short AI interview study: same audience, three structured questions plus adaptive probes. The interviews reveal that Flow B \"wins\" only for power users, while newcomers find it overwhelming. The poll picked a winner; the interview prevented a costly mistake. That sequence — poll to narrow, interview to decide — is often the smartest use of both.\n\n## Related Resources\n\n- [AI Interviews vs. Surveys: Complete Comparison](/docs/ai-interviews-vs-surveys)\n- [Survey vs. Interview: How to Choose](/docs/survey-vs-interview)\n- [Survey vs. Questionnaire: What's the Difference](/docs/survey-vs-questionnaire)\n- [Survey Question Types: The Complete Guide](/docs/survey-question-types)\n- [Conversational Surveys: How AI Interviews Replace Forms](/docs/conversational-survey-guide)\n- [Structured Questions Guide: The 6 Question Types](/docs/structured-questions-guide)","category":"Research Methods","lastModified":"2026-06-09T03:24:44.229944+00:00","metaTitle":"Survey vs Poll: Differences and When to Use Each (2026)","metaDescription":"A poll asks one quick question; a survey asks many structured ones. Compare polls vs surveys, when to use each, their shared limits, and why AI interviews offer a deeper third option.","keywords":["survey vs poll","poll vs survey","difference between poll and survey","online poll vs survey","when to use a poll","survey methods"],"aiSummary":"A poll is a single quick question that captures a fast pulse (one data point, seconds to answer, instant aggregate). A survey is a structured multi-question instrument for deep, segmentable insight (minutes to answer, cross-tabbed analysis). Use a poll for engagement and quick directional reads; use a survey for satisfaction tracking, segmentation, and anything you will cross-tabulate. Both are static and cannot follow up. AI-moderated interviews (e.g., Koji) are a deeper third option: chat-like ease lifts completion, six structured question types keep quantitative structure, adaptive follow-ups capture why, and analysis is automatic. Rule of thumb: poll for one number fast, survey for a dataset, AI interview when the decision hinges on why.","aiPrerequisites":["None — beginner friendly"],"aiLearningOutcomes":["Define the difference between a poll and a survey","Choose the right tool for engagement, measurement, or motivation","Understand why static formats cannot capture the why behind answers"],"aiDifficulty":"beginner","aiEstimatedTime":"9 minutes"}],"pagination":{"total":1,"returned":1,"offset":0}}