Post-purchase surveys let you investigate how satisfied your customers are with the purchasing process and collect ideas on how to improve it.
Here are a few ideas for post-purchase survey questions.
“How would you rate your shopping experience?”
With this question, you’ll discover if your customers are generally satisfied with the purchasing process or not.
Let your clients rate their experience with your survey on a 1-5 or 1-7 scale. This close-ended question is a good icebreaker – it’s easy to answer and gives context to any follow-up questions that might come after. The answers are easy to track, measure, and turn into a success metric.
“What did you like/dislike most about the purchasing process?”
This open-ended question will uncover the “why” behind the respondent’s rating.
Ask the clients that rated you above average what they liked the most about their shopping experience. And ask the less satisfied one about what they disliked.
You’ll easily set a conversational flow like this in Survicate surveys with the help of skip logic.
Open-ended questions will let your customers speak from the heart and give you an opportunity to collect valuable ideas.
If you’re worried that the effort to answer them might discourage the respondents from finishing the survey, don’t be. Survicate counts partial submissions, which means that even if the customer drops out before they finish the survey, their initial answers will still be included in your survey results.
“What can we do to improve your experience?”
This question lets both satisfied and unsatisfied customers share their ideas on how you can make the purchasing process smoother.
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If you’re running a longer post-purchase survey (for example, as a part of an email campaign), you can include a few additional closed-ended questions, such as:
“How easy was shopping at our store?”
“How fast was the shipping time?”
“How likely are you to recommend our store to your friends?”