Also analyzed in: 86 other industries
Analyzed: 2026-04-22
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
49
/ 100
Present

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
100
/ 100
Product-Strong

What the model believes about Microsoft without web search.

LLM Authority?
31
/ 100
Marginal

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
38
/ 100
Specialty-Recall

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Mentions of Microsoft include: WindowsXboxSurfaceOfficeMicrosoft 365Office 365TeamsOneDriveOneNoteOutlookAzureBingEdgeVisual StudioGitHubSkypeLinkedInHotmailCortanaCopilotPowerPointExcelWordSharePointPower BIDynamics 365HoloLensYammer why?

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Microsoft from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
100/100
Product-Strong
Quality?
0.68
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.98
Top associations for Microsoft
dominant enterprise software ecosystem 4 Windows PCs and Office 3 deep business and government ties 3 Azure cloud platform 3 Windows operating system 3 Azure cloud services 3 Microsoft 365 and Teams 2 strong recurring revenue 2 intense cloud and AI competition 2 deep product integration 2 Windows and Office dominance 2 Xbox gaming 2 Microsoft Office productivity software 2 strong recurring subscription revenue 2 dependence on legacy products 2
Control prompt (category baseline)
analyzing survey responses 2 market research questionnaires 1 creating questionnaires 1 gathers feedback and opinions 1 analyzes survey responses 1 distributes surveys to respondents 1 creates surveys and questionnaires 1 customer research platform 1 feedback collection tools 1 questionnaire management 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Microsoft is firmly in the model's "survey platform" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Microsoft known for?

Microsoft is known for Windows, Microsoft Office, Azure cloud services, and its Xbox gaming platform.

Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Microsoft known for?

Microsoft is known for software like Windows and Microsoft Office, its Azure cloud platform, the Xbox gaming ecosystem, and its enterprise tools like Teams, Windows Server, and LinkedIn.

Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
31/100
Marginal
Recall mode (no web)?
32

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
29

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best survey platforms for employee engagement surveys? #3 not mentioned
discovery Which survey platform is best for student surveys? #3 #2
discovery What are the best survey platforms for nonprofit feedback collection? #6 not mentioned
discovery Which survey platforms work well for event feedback? #5 not mentioned
discovery What survey platforms are best for product research surveys? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best survey platforms for healthcare patient surveys? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which survey platforms are good for website feedback forms? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What survey platforms are best for creating mobile-friendly surveys? #7 not mentioned
discovery Which survey platforms are easiest for nontechnical users? #5 #2
discovery What are the best survey platforms for academic research? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which survey platforms are best for multilingual surveys? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What survey platforms are best for collecting NPS feedback? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which survey platforms are good for anonymous surveys? #6 #3
discovery What are the best survey platforms for embedded website surveys? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which survey platforms are best for internal company surveys? #3 #3
discovery What are the best survey platforms for getting higher response rates? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which survey platforms are best for advanced branching logic? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What survey platforms are best for quick survey creation? #5 #2
discovery Which survey platforms are best for social media polls and surveys? #3 not mentioned
discovery What are the best survey platforms for collecting user insights? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to enterprise survey tools for small teams? #6 #6
comparison Which survey platforms are better than basic form builders for research surveys? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to premium survey software for startups? #6 #4
comparison How do survey platforms compare with spreadsheet-based feedback collection? #7 not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to high-cost survey tools for nonprofits? #4 #2
comparison Which survey platforms are better for analytics than simple polling tools? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to complex research platforms for customer surveys? #8 #6
comparison Which survey platforms offer better customization than basic survey apps? #8 not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to manual email surveys for feedback collection? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which survey platforms are better for team collaboration than solo survey tools? #6 #5
problem How do I improve low survey response rates? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I create surveys with branching logic? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I analyze survey results more easily? #8 #1
problem How can I send surveys to customers and track responses? not mentioned #5
problem How do I make a survey that works on mobile devices? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I collect anonymous survey responses? not mentioned #5
problem How do I build a survey without coding? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I share surveys with a team for review? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I create a survey with templates? not mentioned #4
problem How can I get better reporting from survey data? #4 not mentioned
transactional What is the best free survey platform? #2 #3
transactional How much do survey platforms cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there survey platforms with a free plan? #5 not mentioned
transactional What survey platform offers the best value for money? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which survey platforms have affordable monthly pricing? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What are the cheapest survey platforms for small businesses? #2 not mentioned
transactional Which survey platforms offer unlimited responses? #6 not mentioned
transactional Do survey platforms have free trial options? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What survey platforms are worth paying for? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which survey platform plans include reporting and analytics? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses
Prompt: What are the best survey platforms for employee engagement surveys? · discovery · recall mode

Top employee engagement survey platforms:

  1. Qualtrics EmployeeXM

Best for large organizations needing deep analytics, benchmarking, and action planning.

  1. Culture Amp

Best overall for employee engagement, pulse surveys, and manager-friendly insights.

  1. Microsoft Viva Glint

Best for companies already on Microsoft 365 / Teams.

  1. Leapsome

Best for combining engagement surveys with performance reviews, goals, and learning.

  1. 15Five

Best for SMBs wanting simple engagement surveys plus manager check-ins.

  1. SurveyMonkey Enterprise

Best for flexibility and easy survey creation at a lower complexity level.

  1. Peakon by Workday

Best for enterprise HR teams already using Workday.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Culture Amp
  • Best enterprise: Qualtrics EmployeeXM
  • Best Microsoft option: Viva Glint
  • Best budget-friendly: SurveyMonkey Enterprise or 15Five

If you want, I can also give you a side-by-side comparison by price, features, and company size.

Prompt: Which survey platform is best for student surveys? · discovery · retrieval mode

Best overall for most student surveys: Google Forms — it’s free/low-friction, easy to build, supports branching, templates, real-time charts, and Sheets export. (workspace.google.com)

Best if your school uses Microsoft 365/Teams: Microsoft Forms — it’s built into the Microsoft ecosystem, supports surveys/quizzes, branching, real-time results, Excel export, and assignment through Teams for Education. (support.microsoft.com)

Best for advanced academic research: Qualtrics — stronger if you need complex logic, deeper analytics, and enterprise-style survey controls. (qualtrics.com)

If you want one simple pick: Google Forms for most teachers/students; Microsoft Forms if you’re already in Teams.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
38/100
Specialty-Recall
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best survey platforms for businesses? 210 3/5 8, 6, 4
What are the top survey platform options for customer feedback? 30 0/5
What are the most popular survey platforms right now? 0 5/5 5, 5, 6, 5, 5
Which survey platforms are most recommended for teams? 0 5/5 6, 2, 5, 2, 2
What survey platform should I use for online surveys? 0 0/5
What are the best survey platforms for collecting responses? 0 5/5 6, 6, 6, 7, 6
Which survey platforms are best for small businesses? 0 4/5 7, 6, 5, 7
What are the best survey platforms for market research? 0 0/5
What survey platform is best for customer satisfaction surveys? 0 0/5
What are the best survey platforms with analytics? 0 2/5 7, 8
Which survey platforms are easiest to use? 0 1/5 5
What are the best survey platforms for teams? 0 5/5 6, 5, 6, 7, 9
What survey platforms are best for feedback collection? 0 5/5 6, 6, 6, 6, 8
What are the best survey platforms for researchers? 0 1/5 7
Which survey platforms are best for creating custom surveys? 0 3/5 7, 7, 7
Sample recall responses
Prompt: What are the best survey platforms for businesses? (no web search)

Here are some of the best survey platforms for businesses, depending on your needs:

  • Qualtrics — Best for enterprise-grade research, advanced analytics, and customer experience programs.
  • SurveyMonkey Enterprise — Best all-around choice for teams that want easy setup, strong templates, and broad business use.
  • Typeform — Best for sleek, conversational surveys and higher completion rates.
  • Google Forms — Best free/basic option for simple internal surveys and quick data collection.
  • Jotform — Best for highly customizable forms with payments, workflows, and integrations.
  • Alchemer — Best for organizations that need flexible survey logic and more control than basic tools.
  • Zoho Survey — Best value for businesses already using Zoho products.
  • Microsoft Forms — Best for companies using Microsoft 365 and Teams.
  • QuestionPro — Best for robust market research and employee/customer feedback.
  • Delighted — Best for NPS, CSAT, and quick customer feedback loops.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey Enterprise
  • Best enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Best design/UX: Typeform
  • Best free: Google Forms
  • Best for workflows: Jotform

If you want, I can also give you the best survey platforms by business size or by use case (employee feedback, market research, NPS, etc.).

Iteration: 3 of 5
Prompt: What are the best survey platforms for businesses? (no web search)

Here are the best survey platforms for businesses, depending on what you need:

  • Qualtrics — Best for enterprise research and advanced analytics

Strongest for complex surveys, employee/customer experience programs, branching logic, and reporting.

  • SurveyMonkey — Best all-around for SMBs

Easy to use, good templates, solid distribution options, and quick setup.

  • Typeform — Best for beautiful, high-response surveys

Great if you want conversational, mobile-friendly forms that feel more engaging.

  • Google Forms — Best free/basic option

Simple, reliable, and good for lightweight internal surveys.

  • Jotform — Best for form-heavy workflows

More flexible than many survey tools, with lots of integrations and payment/approval features.

  • Microsoft Forms — Best for Microsoft 365 teams

Simple and convenient if your business already lives in Teams/Excel/SharePoint.

  • Alchemer — Best for customizable business surveys

Strong logic, branding, and data collection features for mid-market teams.

  • Zoho Survey — Best value for Zoho users

Affordable and integrates well with the Zoho ecosystem.

If you want the short answer:

  • Best overall for businesses: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Best for engagement/design: Typeform

If you want, I can also give you a best-by-use-case shortlist (employee surveys, customer feedback, NPS, market research, internal HR, etc.).

Iteration: 4 of 5

Also analyzed in Microsoft in 86 other industries

This page covers Microsoft in Survey Platforms. The model also evaluates it against the industries below, with their own prompts and competitor sets. Click any industry for the matching report.

Industry
Enterprise Video Conferencing Platforms
100 /100
Dominant
LBA
100
Authority
100
TOM
100
Industry
Enterprise BI Platforms
100 /100
Dominant
LBA
100
Authority
100
TOM
100
Industry
Managed DevOps and CI/CD Platforms
100 /100
Dominant
LBA
100
Authority
100
TOM
100
Industry
Enterprise Collaboration Suites
100 /100
Dominant
LBA
99
Authority
100
TOM
100
Industry
CI/CD Platforms
99 /100
Dominant
LBA
97
Authority
100
TOM
100
Industry
Endpoint Protection Platforms
99 /100
Dominant
LBA
97
Authority
100
TOM
100
Industry
XDR Solutions
99 /100
Dominant
LBA
97
Authority
100
TOM
100
Industry
Code Review and Collaboration Tools
99 /100
Dominant
LBA
96
Authority
100
TOM
100
Industry
Device Encryption and Data Loss Prevention
98 /100
Dominant
LBA
95
Authority
100
TOM
100
Industry
Self-Service Analytics Tools
98 /100
Dominant
LBA
93
Authority
100
TOM
100
Industry
SIEM Platforms
97 /100
Dominant
LBA
93
Authority
100
TOM
100
Industry
Team Chat Apps
97 /100
Dominant
LBA
95
Authority
100
TOM
97
Industry
Video Conferencing Platforms
97 /100
Dominant
LBA
100
Authority
97
TOM
95
Industry
Enterprise Source Code Management Platforms
97 /100
Dominant
LBA
92
Authority
100
TOM
100
Industry
Enterprise CRM Platforms
97 /100
Dominant
LBA
99
Authority
95
TOM
97
Industry
Data Visualization Software
96 /100
Dominant
LBA
92
Authority
97
TOM
100
Industry
Endpoint Detection and Response
96 /100
Dominant
LBA
89
Authority
100
TOM
100
Industry
Security Analytics Platforms
95 /100
Dominant
LBA
88
Authority
98
TOM
100
Industry
2-in-1 Tablets and Convertibles
95 /100
Dominant
LBA
100
Authority
85
TOM
100
Industry
Internal Communications Tools
95 /100
Dominant
LBA
92
Authority
92
TOM
100
Industry
Team Collaboration Platforms
93 /100
Dominant
LBA
84
Authority
96
TOM
100
Industry
Collaborative Document Editors
93 /100
Dominant
LBA
96
Authority
86
TOM
96
Industry
Managed Endpoint Security Services
92 /100
Dominant
LBA
85
Authority
92
TOM
100
Industry
Search Advertising Platforms
92 /100
Dominant
LBA
98
Authority
81
TOM
97
Industry
Small Business Video Meeting Apps
91 /100
Dominant
LBA
96
Authority
85
TOM
92
Industry
Video Collaboration and Hybrid Work Tools
89 /100
Dominant
LBA
83
Authority
86
TOM
98
Industry
Note-Taking Apps
86 /100
Dominant
LBA
92
Authority
80
TOM
88
Industry
Mid-Market ERP Accounting Suites
85 /100
Dominant
LBA
92
Authority
67
TOM
99
Industry
Embedded Analytics Solutions
83 /100
Dominant
LBA
99
Authority
62
TOM
93
Industry
Managed Kubernetes & Container Services
81 /100
Dominant
LBA
100
Authority
62
TOM
87
Industry
Project Communication Tools
81 /100
Dominant
LBA
94
Authority
61
TOM
91
Industry
API Management Suites
80 /100
Strong
LBA
97
Authority
59
TOM
88
Industry
Managed Detection and Response Services
78 /100
Strong
LBA
87
Authority
59
TOM
90
Industry
Enterprise Wiki Platforms
74 /100
Strong
LBA
86
Authority
63
TOM
76
Industry
Data Lakehouse Platforms
74 /100
Strong
LBA
94
Authority
52
TOM
82
Industry
Container Deployment Platforms
74 /100
Strong
LBA
93
Authority
55
TOM
78
Industry
Calendar Scheduling Tools
72 /100
Strong
LBA
93
Authority
49
TOM
82
Industry
Meeting Scheduling Tools
71 /100
Strong
LBA
91
Authority
45
TOM
87
Industry
Release Orchestration Tools
71 /100
Strong
LBA
86
Authority
54
TOM
76
Industry
API Gateways
70 /100
Strong
LBA
90
Authority
54
TOM
72
Industry
Cloud Database Platforms
70 /100
Strong
LBA
89
Authority
47
TOM
79
Industry
Platform-as-a-Service Providers
69 /100
Strong
LBA
93
Authority
43
TOM
80
Industry
Professional Certification Providers
69 /100
Strong
LBA
97
Authority
40
TOM
81
Industry
Digital Game Stores
68 /100
Strong
LBA
97
Authority
45
TOM
72
Industry
Meeting Coordination Suites
68 /100
Strong
LBA
80
Authority
42
TOM
91
Industry
Task Management Apps
65 /100
Strong
LBA
85
Authority
59
TOM
55
Industry
Relational Databases
63 /100
Strong
LBA
100
Authority
30
TOM
82
Industry
Session Replay & Heatmap Tools
61 /100
Strong
LBA
69
Authority
57
TOM
57
Industry
Cloud Data Warehouses
60 /100
Strong
LBA
93
Authority
32
TOM
72
Industry
Data Integration Platforms
58 /100
Present
LBA
100
Authority
22
TOM
84
Industry
Cloud Data Integration Services
58 /100
Present
LBA
95
Authority
25
TOM
80
Industry
Zero Trust Network Access Providers
56 /100
Present
LBA
92
Authority
33
TOM
57
Industry
CRM Software
55 /100
Present
LBA
97
Authority
24
TOM
71
Industry
Streaming ETL Services
55 /100
Present
LBA
98
Authority
26
TOM
63
Industry
Consumer Laptops
51 /100
Present
LBA
100
Authority
30
TOM
43
Industry
Business Laptops
49 /100
Present
LBA
95
Authority
17
TOM
67
Industry
Employee Feedback & Engagement Tools
45 /100
Present
LBA
90
Authority
26
TOM
37
Industry
Marketing Analytics Platforms
45 /100
Present
LBA
93
Authority
23
TOM
39
Industry
Email Deliverability Tools
44 /100
Present
LBA
87
Authority
28
TOM
34
Industry
NoSQL Databases
43 /100
Present
LBA
90
Authority
17
TOM
48
Industry
Engagement Survey Platforms
40 /100
Present
LBA
79
Authority
15
TOM
50
Industry
Invoice and Receipt Capture Tools
40 /100
Present
LBA
92
Authority
12
TOM
48
Industry
Log Management Services
37 /100
Present
LBA
85
Authority
16
TOM
34
Industry
Online Video Platforms
36 /100
Present
LBA
78
Authority
18
TOM
31
Industry
Cloud Telephony Services
35 /100
Weak
LBA
80
Authority
8
TOM
53
Industry
Identity Provider Services
33 /100
Weak
LBA
0
Authority
100
TOM
100
Industry
Appointment Booking Platforms
32 /100
Weak
LBA
89
Authority
9
TOM
35
Industry
Industry-Specific Accounting Systems
32 /100
Weak
LBA
84
Authority
16
TOM
22
Industry
Webinar and Virtual Event Platforms
32 /100
Weak
LBA
83
Authority
8
TOM
37
Industry
Classroom Assessment Platforms
32 /100
Weak
LBA
78
Authority
8
TOM
42
Industry
1:1 Meeting & Coaching Apps
32 /100
Weak
LBA
82
Authority
8
TOM
38
Industry
Project Management Software
30 /100
Weak
LBA
90
Authority
12
TOM
21
Industry
Forecasting Platforms
29 /100
Weak
LBA
75
Authority
10
TOM
30
Industry
Template-Based Design Services
28 /100
Weak
LBA
77
Authority
8
TOM
28
Industry
Learning Management Systems
26 /100
Known but Invisible
LBA
91
Authority
9
TOM
17
Industry
Knowledge Base Software
24 /100
Known but Invisible
LBA
89
Authority
9
TOM
13
Industry
Password Managers
24 /100
Known but Invisible
LBA
100
Authority
10
TOM
10
Industry
Enterprise Firewalls
24 /100
Known but Invisible
LBA
100
Authority
10
TOM
10
Industry
Gaming Laptops
23 /100
Known but Invisible
LBA
97
Authority
10
TOM
10
Industry
Time-Series Databases
23 /100
Known but Invisible
LBA
93
Authority
9
TOM
11
Industry
Sales Engagement Analytics
21 /100
Known but Invisible
LBA
87
Authority
9
TOM
9
Industry
Transactional Email Services
20 /100
Known but Invisible
LBA
82
Authority
8
TOM
8
Industry
OKR Software
19 /100
Known but Invisible
LBA
78
Authority
8
TOM
8
Industry
Foldable Smartphones
19 /100
Known but Invisible
LBA
78
Authority
8
TOM
8
Industry
Wiki Platforms
10 /100
Invisible
LBA
0
Authority
14
TOM
31
Industry
Knowledge Bases
4 /100
Invisible
LBA
0
Authority
4
TOM
11

What to do next Recommendations for Microsoft

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Close the gap on broad category queries

Your TOM is solid on specialty queries but weaker on broad category questions. Seed content that frames your brand in the exact phrasing users use in broad queries, not just your specialty sub-category.

+5 to +15 on TOM

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Smoothed geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Authority and TOM are floored at LBA × 0.1 before the geometric mean (the same floor used in the per-metric cards above, so brand cards and the composite tell the same story). Formula: composite = ((LBA + 5)(Authority + 5)(TOM + 5))^(1/3) - 5. The floor keeps brands the model clearly recognises but doesn't yet recommend from collapsing to zero, while a single genuinely weak metric still pulls the composite down. Full methodology.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 22, 2026 at 9:12 PM

All 210 AI responses for Microsoft

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6 prompts)

What is Microsoft known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is known for Windows, Microsoft Office, Azure cloud services, and its Xbox gaming platform.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is known for software like Windows and Microsoft Office, its Azure cloud platform, the Xbox gaming ecosystem, and its enterprise tools like Teams, Windows Server, and LinkedIn.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is known for its Windows operating system, Microsoft Office productivity software, Azure cloud services, Xbox gaming, and its role in personal computing and enterprise software.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is known for software like Windows and Office, its Azure cloud platform, the Xbox gaming brand, and products and services like Teams, Surface, and Bing.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is known for its Windows operating system, Microsoft Office productivity software, Azure cloud services, Xbox gaming, and enterprise software and tools.

What are Microsoft's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft's main strengths are its dominant enterprise software ecosystem (especially Windows, Office, and Azure), strong recurring revenue, deep integration across products, and a highly trusted position with businesses and governments. It also has major strengths in cloud, developer tools, and AI partnerships.

Its main weaknesses include dependence on legacy products like Windows and Office, periodic criticism over software complexity and security issues, slower consumer hardware/consumer-brand momentum than some rivals, and regulatory scrutiny due to its market power. It can also be seen as less innovative in some consumer-facing areas compared with Apple, Google, or newer AI-native companies.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft’s main strengths are its dominant enterprise software ecosystem, especially Windows, Office/Microsoft 365, Azure, and strong recurring revenue from subscriptions and cloud services. It also has huge brand recognition, deep relationships with businesses and governments, and strong cash flow to invest in AI and cloud. Its weaknesses include dependence on legacy products, exposure to intense competition in cloud, AI, and productivity software, and a history of antitrust/regulatory scrutiny. It can also be seen as less innovative or more complex than some competitors, and some consumers still associate it with older, less user-friendly software experiences.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft’s main strengths are its dominant enterprise software position, especially Windows, Office, and Azure; strong recurring revenue from subscriptions; deep relationships with businesses and governments; and a very large cash flow that supports R&D and acquisitions. It also benefits from broad ecosystem integration across cloud, productivity, gaming, and developer tools.

Its main weaknesses are heavy dependence on enterprise and cloud markets, slower innovation perception in some consumer areas, and legacy baggage from older products and antitrust history. It also faces intense competition from Amazon, Google, Apple, and open-source alternatives, and some users view its products as complex or costly.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft’s main strengths are its dominant enterprise software ecosystem (Windows, Office/Microsoft 365, Azure), strong recurring revenue, deep integration across products, huge installed base, and major cloud/AI capabilities. It also has strong brand trust in business settings and broad distribution through partners.

Its weaknesses are dependence on legacy Windows/Office markets, exposure to intense competition in cloud, AI, and collaboration tools, occasional perception of being less innovative or more bureaucratic than faster-moving rivals, and antitrust/regulatory scrutiny due to its market power. Consumer hardware and some consumer services are also less central to its business than enterprise offerings.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft's main strengths are its dominant enterprise software ecosystem (Windows, Office/Microsoft 365, Teams), strong cloud business with Azure, deep relationships with businesses and governments, huge cash flow, and a broad product portfolio that spans software, cloud, gaming, and devices. It also has strong brand trust in enterprise IT and a large developer ecosystem.

Main weaknesses include dependence on mature legacy products like Windows and Office, occasional user frustration with product complexity and frequent integration changes, slower consumer-brand excitement compared with some rivals, and heavy competition in cloud, AI, gaming, and productivity from companies like Amazon, Google, Apple, and Salesforce. It also faces regulatory scrutiny because of its size and market power.

Who should use Microsoft? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is a good fit for individuals and organizations that want widely supported, mainstream tools: Windows PCs, Office/Microsoft 365, Teams, Azure, Xbox, and strong enterprise compatibility. It’s especially useful for businesses that need standardization, security, admin controls, and easy hiring/support.

People may want to avoid or minimize Microsoft if they strongly prefer open-source software, want maximum privacy control, dislike subscriptions and vendor lock-in, or need a very lightweight/customized workflow. Also, users who are fully invested in Apple/Linux ecosystems may not benefit much from Microsoft’s products.

In short: use Microsoft if you want broad compatibility and polished, standard business tools; avoid it if you want more openness, portability, or control.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is a good fit for most people and organizations that want a familiar, broadly supported ecosystem: Windows PCs, Office/Microsoft 365, Teams, Azure, Xbox, and strong enterprise tools. It’s especially useful for businesses, schools, and users who value compatibility, productivity, and IT support.

You may want to avoid or minimize Microsoft if you prefer:

  • a more privacy-focused or less data-driven ecosystem
  • open-source or highly customizable software
  • lightweight, low-bloat systems
  • Apple/Linux-centered workflows
  • avoiding subscription-based software like Microsoft 365

In short: use Microsoft if you want mainstream compatibility and productivity; avoid it if you prioritize privacy, minimalism, or open-source-first choices.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is a good fit for people and organizations that want broad compatibility, strong productivity tools, and enterprise-ready software—especially Windows PCs, Office/Microsoft 365, Azure, and Xbox. It’s often best for businesses, schools, office workers, developers, and gamers in the Xbox ecosystem.

People may want to avoid Microsoft if they strongly prefer open-source software, minimal telemetry/data collection, Apple-style simplicity, or a fully Linux-based workflow. It can also be less ideal for users who dislike vendor lock-in or frequent ecosystem prompts and subscriptions.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is a good fit for people and organizations that want widely supported software, strong business tools, good Windows PC compatibility, and easy collaboration through Office/Microsoft 365, Teams, and Azure. It’s especially useful for businesses, schools, and users who value mainstream support and integration.

People who may want to avoid it include those who prefer open-source alternatives, want a very lightweight or minimal software ecosystem, strongly dislike vendor lock-in, or are committed to Apple/Linux-first workflows. Also, users who want the simplest possible setup and don’t need Microsoft’s broad feature set may find it more than they need.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is a good fit for people and organizations that want a broad, reliable, widely supported software ecosystem—especially Windows PCs, Office/Microsoft 365, Teams, Azure, and enterprise IT tools. It’s often best for businesses, schools, government, and users who value compatibility, security features, and integrated productivity tools.

People who may want to avoid Microsoft are those who strongly prefer Apple or Linux ecosystems, want very lightweight or highly customizable systems, dislike subscription software, or want to minimize dependence on one large vendor. Also, privacy-focused users may prefer alternatives with less account integration and telemetry.

How does Microsoft compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is generally one of the strongest tech giants, and it competes differently depending on the market:

  • Cloud: It’s a top rival to Amazon (AWS) and Google (Cloud). AWS is still the leader in cloud scale, but Microsoft Azure is very strong in enterprise adoption and hybrid cloud.
  • Productivity software: Microsoft 365 is the benchmark against Google Workspace and Apple’s ecosystem. Microsoft usually wins in enterprise depth, while Google is simpler and more web-native.
  • Operating systems: Windows remains the dominant desktop OS, ahead of Apple’s macOS and far ahead of Linux in consumer use.
  • Business software: Microsoft is a leader in enterprise tools, competing with Salesforce, Oracle, SAP, and Google.
  • AI: Microsoft is especially strong because of its partnership with OpenAI, putting it near the front alongside Google and Amazon.

Overall, Microsoft is seen as a more enterprise-focused, broad-platform company than most competitors, with especially strong positions in software, cloud, and AI.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is generally strongest in enterprise software, cloud, and productivity, and weaker in consumer hardware and search compared with some rivals.

  • vs Apple: Microsoft is more dominant in business software and cloud; Apple is stronger in premium hardware, consumer ecosystem, and brand loyalty.
  • vs Google: Microsoft has a stronger enterprise stack, Windows/Office, and Azure; Google leads in search, ads, and some AI/consumer services.
  • vs Amazon: Microsoft competes closely with Amazon in cloud (Azure vs AWS); AWS is usually seen as the cloud leader, while Microsoft is very strong in enterprise adoption and hybrid cloud.
  • vs Salesforce/Oracle: Microsoft is broader and more integrated across productivity, cloud, and collaboration; Salesforce is stronger in CRM specifically, and Oracle in certain database/enterprise workloads.

Overall: Microsoft’s advantage is breadth + enterprise trust + recurring software revenue. Its biggest challenge is keeping pace with AWS in cloud, Google in AI/search, and Apple in consumer hardware.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is generally one of the strongest tech companies, especially versus its main competitors:

  • Apple: Microsoft is stronger in enterprise software, cloud, and productivity tools; Apple is stronger in consumer hardware, ecosystem loyalty, and premium devices.
  • Google (Alphabet): Microsoft leads in enterprise software, Windows, Office, and Azure; Google leads in search, online advertising, Android, and consumer services.
  • Amazon: Microsoft competes closely in cloud with Azure vs. AWS. AWS is often seen as the cloud leader, but Microsoft is very strong in enterprise relationships and hybrid cloud.
  • Salesforce/Oracle/IBM: Microsoft is usually broader and more integrated, offering a larger platform across productivity, cloud, AI, and business software.

Overall, Microsoft’s biggest advantage is its deep position in enterprise software and cloud, plus a strong AI and productivity ecosystem. Its main weakness is that it is less dominant in consumer hardware and search/ads than Apple and Google.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is generally strongest in enterprise software, cloud, and productivity. Compared with Apple, Microsoft is less consumer-lifestyle focused but better positioned in business tools and platforms. Compared with Google, Microsoft has a broader enterprise stack and stronger paid software relationships, while Google leads in search and advertising. Compared with Amazon, Microsoft is typically the more balanced software-and-cloud player, while Amazon Web Services is usually seen as the cloud infrastructure leader. Compared with Salesforce, Microsoft offers a wider suite across productivity, cloud, and collaboration, often at more competitive bundle value. Overall, Microsoft competes best as an integrated platform company rather than a single-product leader.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Microsoft is generally strongest in enterprise software, cloud, and productivity. Compared with Apple, Microsoft is less focused on premium consumer hardware and design, but much stronger in business software and cross-platform tools. Compared with Google, Microsoft has deeper enterprise relationships and a broader paid software ecosystem, while Google is stronger in search, ads, and consumer internet services. Compared with Amazon, Microsoft competes closely in cloud, with Azure being a top rival to AWS; Amazon is stronger in e-commerce and retail, while Microsoft is stronger in software and enterprise integration. Compared with Oracle, Microsoft offers a broader modern cloud and productivity stack, while Oracle remains especially strong in databases and certain enterprise systems. Overall, Microsoft’s advantage is its diversified platform across Windows, Office, Azure, LinkedIn, and enterprise services.

What do people typically complain about with Microsoft?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

People often complain about Microsoft’s Windows updates, software bugs, forced reboots, bloatware, licensing/subscription costs, and occasional confusing settings or account integration. Some also criticize heavy telemetry/privacy concerns, product support quality, and the complexity of its ecosystem.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Microsoft’s software being buggy or bloated, frequent updates causing issues, Windows forced reboots and telemetry/privacy concerns, Office licensing/subscriptions, and occasional lock-in or compatibility problems across devices and versions.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Microsoft for a few recurring reasons: Windows updates that feel disruptive or buggy, software bloat and preinstalled apps, frequent prompts to use Microsoft services, licensing/subscription costs (especially Office/Microsoft 365), account/sign-in hassles, and occasional compatibility or stability issues. Some also criticize its privacy defaults and the complexity of its products.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Microsoft’s software being buggy or bloated, frequent updates causing disruptions, intrusive prompts/telemetry, aggressive bundling of apps and services, licensing/subscription complexity, and sometimes confusing or inconsistent design across Windows and Office products.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Microsoft for a few recurring reasons: Windows updates causing bugs or restarts, bloatware and built-in apps, licensing/subscription costs, occasional intrusive prompts or defaults pushing Microsoft services, compatibility issues with older software or hardware, and perceived complexity or inconsistency across products. Some also dislike privacy/data-collection concerns and customer support experiences.

What is a typical survey platform known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical survey platform is known for creating, distributing, and analyzing questionnaires to collect feedback, opinions, and customer insights.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical survey platform is known for creating, distributing, and analyzing surveys and questionnaires to collect feedback, opinions, and customer insights.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical survey platform is known for creating, distributing, and analyzing surveys or questionnaires to gather feedback, opinions, and market research data.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical survey platform is known for creating, distributing, and analyzing surveys or questionnaires to collect feedback, opinions, and data from people.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical survey platform is known for creating, distributing, and analyzing online surveys and questionnaires to collect feedback, opinions, and market research data.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best survey platforms for employee engagement surveys? discovery 140/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Top employee engagement survey platforms:

  1. Qualtrics EmployeeXM

Best for large organizations needing deep analytics, benchmarking, and action planning.

  1. Culture Amp

Best overall for employee engagement, pulse surveys, and manager-friendly insights.

  1. Microsoft Viva Glint

Best for companies already on Microsoft 365 / Teams.

  1. Leapsome

Best for combining engagement surveys with performance reviews, goals, and learning.

  1. 15Five

Best for SMBs wanting simple engagement surveys plus manager check-ins.

  1. SurveyMonkey Enterprise

Best for flexibility and easy survey creation at a lower complexity level.

  1. Peakon by Workday

Best for enterprise HR teams already using Workday.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Culture Amp
  • Best enterprise: Qualtrics EmployeeXM
  • Best Microsoft option: Viva Glint
  • Best budget-friendly: SurveyMonkey Enterprise or 15Five

If you want, I can also give you a side-by-side comparison by price, features, and company size.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are the strongest employee-engagement survey platforms right now:

  • Culture Amp — best for research-backed engagement programs and strong benchmarking. It offers 40+ templates, AI comment summaries, benchmarks across 1B+ responses, and action planning. (cultureamp.com)
  • Qualtrics EmployeeXM — best for enterprise-grade listening and analytics. Its EX25 program is a pre-built engagement system with annual baseline + quarterly pulses, and it tracks engagement, inclusion, well-being, and intent to stay. (qualtrics.com)
  • Workday Peakon Employee Voice — best if you want continuous, personalized pulse surveys tied to HR data. Workday says it recommends weekly automated pulses and has very large benchmark/comment datasets. (workday.com)
  • Lattice — best for teams that want engagement plus performance management in one place. It supports pulse, eNPS, onboarding, offboarding, exit surveys, plus heatmaps, sentiment tracking, and action plans. (lattice.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — best for simplicity and speed. It has employee-engagement templates, anonymity controls, segmentation, and its new “programs” feature is designed for continuous listening. (surveymonkey.com)
  • 15Five — worth a look if you want a manager-friendly engagement workflow with surveys as part of a broader people-management stack. (15five.com)

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Culture Amp
  • Best enterprise: Qualtrics or Workday Peakon
  • Best all-in-one HR suite: Lattice
  • Best easy/fast option: SurveyMonkey

If you want, I can turn this into a top 3 based on your company size, budget, and HR stack.

Which survey platform is best for student surveys? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best overall for student surveys: Qualtrics It’s the strongest choice for schools/universities because it handles:

  • anonymous surveys
  • branching logic
  • mobile-friendly forms
  • reporting/exports
  • FERPA-friendly institutional use

Best free/easy option: Google Forms Great for quick class surveys, simple feedback, and easy sharing.

Best if your school uses Microsoft 365: Microsoft Forms Very convenient for students and teachers already in the Microsoft ecosystem.

Best for nicer-looking, more engaging surveys: Typeform Good for short student feedback surveys, but less ideal for heavy academic survey work.

My recommendation:

  • University/research/student assessment: Qualtrics
  • Simple classroom feedback: Google Forms or Microsoft Forms

If you want, I can also give you the best platform by use case (anonymous surveys, research, class feedback, or student engagement).

retrieval Mentioned

Best overall for most student surveys: Google Forms — it’s free/low-friction, easy to build, supports branching, templates, real-time charts, and Sheets export. (workspace.google.com)

Best if your school uses Microsoft 365/Teams: Microsoft Forms — it’s built into the Microsoft ecosystem, supports surveys/quizzes, branching, real-time results, Excel export, and assignment through Teams for Education. (support.microsoft.com)

Best for advanced academic research: Qualtrics — stronger if you need complex logic, deeper analytics, and enterprise-style survey controls. (qualtrics.com)

If you want one simple pick: Google Forms for most teachers/students; Microsoft Forms if you’re already in Teams.

What are the best survey platforms for nonprofit feedback collection? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms for nonprofit feedback collection:

  1. SurveyMonkey
    • Best overall for easy nonprofit use
    • Strong templates, logic, and reporting
    • Nonprofit discounts available
    • Good for donor, volunteer, and event feedback
  2. Qualtrics
    • Best for advanced research and large organizations
    • Excellent analytics, branching, and integrations
    • More expensive, but very powerful for deep feedback programs
  3. Google Forms
    • Best free option
    • Simple, reliable, and easy to share
    • Great for basic event surveys or quick intake forms
    • Limited branding and reporting
  4. Typeform
    • Best for engaging, conversational surveys
    • Very user-friendly on mobile
    • Great when response rates matter
    • Pricier than basic tools
  5. Jotform
    • Best for flexible forms and nonprofit workflows
    • Strong form builder, payments, and automation
    • Good for registrations plus feedback in one platform
    • Nonprofit pricing available
  6. Microsoft Forms
    • Best if your nonprofit already uses Microsoft 365
    • Simple and clean
    • Works well for internal staff or program feedback
    • Less advanced than SurveyMonkey/Qualtrics
  7. Zoho Survey
    • Best budget-friendly paid alternative
    • Good logic, reporting, and integrations
    • Often a solid value for smaller nonprofits

Top pick by use case:

  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey
  • Best free: Google Forms
  • Best for advanced insight: Qualtrics
  • Best for polished donor experience: Typeform

If you want, I can also narrow this down by budget, team size, or whether you need donor/volunteer/client feedback.

retrieval Not mentioned

For most nonprofits, I’d shortlist these:

  1. SurveyMonkey — best all-around for nonprofit feedback, especially if you want strong analysis, exports, and a nonprofit discount. SurveyMonkey has a nonprofit discount program, nonprofit-focused templates, and plans with advanced reporting and sharing. (help.surveymonkey.com)
  2. Google Forms via Google Workspace for Nonprofits — best free/low-cost option if your team already lives in Google. Google Workspace for Nonprofits is $0/user/month and includes Forms. (google.com)
  3. Jotform — best for flexible forms plus donations/volunteer workflows. Jotform offers a 50% nonprofit discount on paid plans. (jotform.com)
  4. Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys that may get higher completion rates. Typeform offers nonprofit/NGO discounts and a free plan. (help.typeform.com)
  5. Tally — best budget choice for simple nonprofit forms and surveys. Tally offers 99% of features free and a nonprofit discount on Pro. (tally.so)

My pick:

  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey
  • Best free: Google Forms
  • Best for beautiful UX: Typeform
  • Best value/flexibility: Jotform
  • Best ultra-budget: Tally

If you want, I can narrow this to the best 3 for donor surveys, volunteer feedback, or program evaluation.

Which survey platforms work well for event feedback? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Good options for event feedback:

  • Typeform — best for polished, mobile-friendly post-event surveys
  • SurveyMonkey — strong all-around choice with solid analytics and templates
  • Qualtrics — best for large conferences or deeper enterprise-level feedback
  • Google Forms — simplest free option if you just need basic responses
  • Microsoft Forms — great if your team uses Microsoft 365
  • Jotform — flexible, with lots of form design and embedding options
  • Slido — good if you want live polls plus follow-up event surveys
  • Whova — strong for conferences and attendee engagement, including feedback collection

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your event type: small meetup, corporate event, conference, or webinar.

retrieval Not mentioned

Good options for event feedback:

  • Slido — best for live, in-the-moment feedback during sessions: polls, Q&A, quizzes, and short end-of-session surveys. (slido.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — strong for post-event surveys and practical logistics: QR codes, offline/kiosk mode, SMS, email, and multi-event analysis. (surveymonkey.com)
  • Typeform — great if you want a more polished, conversational survey with good mobile/share options and event-specific templates. (typeform.com)
  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise-level analysis and more advanced event feedback workflows/templates. (qualtrics.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to:

  1. best free option,
  2. best for conferences, or
  3. best for collecting feedback via QR code.
What survey platforms are best for product research surveys? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best survey platforms for product research depend on whether you need simple questionnaires, advanced logic, or respondent panels:

  • Qualtrics — best overall for serious product research. Strong logic, conjoint/maxdiff, robust analytics, and enterprise-grade reporting.
  • SurveyMonkey — best easy-to-use option. Good for quick concept tests, feature surveys, and NPS-style research.
  • Typeform — best for high-response, conversational surveys. Great for brand/UX-friendly questionnaires, but weaker for advanced research methods.
  • Alchemer — best mid-market choice for flexible survey design. More customizable than SurveyMonkey, often cheaper than Qualtrics.
  • QuestionPro — strong for product research and market research, with good advanced question types and panel options.
  • Attest — best if you want fast consumer feedback and access to audience panels.
  • UserTesting — better for qualitative product feedback than traditional surveys, but excellent for validating concepts and experiences.
  • Prolific — great for recruiting high-quality respondents for academic-style or targeted product studies.

If you want a quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best simple/fast: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design/engagement: Typeform
  • Best budget-flexible: Alchemer
  • Best for respondent access: Attest or Prolific

If you tell me your budget, audience (B2B/B2C), and whether you need panels, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

retrieval Mentioned

For product research surveys, the best picks are usually:

  1. Qualtrics — best for serious product research and advanced methods like concept testing, conjoint, MaxDiff, pricing, and broader product lifecycle research. It’s the strongest all-around option if you need depth. (qualtrics.com)
  2. SurveyMonkey — best for teams that want something easier/faster, with strong support for MaxDiff and market-research-style surveys. Good when you want practical research without a big setup. (surveymonkey.com)
  3. QuestionPro Research Edition — best for research teams that want a more budget-conscious platform with advanced techniques like conjoint, MaxDiff, TURF, heatmaps, and price sensitivity. (questionpro.com)
  4. Typeform — best for simpler, more polished surveys where response experience matters more than advanced research analytics. It’s better for lightweight product feedback than heavy methodology. (qualtrics.com)
  5. YouGov Surveys / Survey Direct — best when you need access to a panel and want self-serve audience targeting for product testing. (corporate.yougov.com)

My quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best easy option: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for advanced research on a tighter budget: QuestionPro
  • Best for simple feedback forms: Typeform

If you want, I can also give you a best platform by budget or by use case (concept test, feature prioritization, pricing, naming, etc.).

What are the best survey platforms for healthcare patient surveys? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For healthcare patient surveys, the best platforms are usually the ones with HIPAA support, BAA availability, EHR/CRM integrations, and strong patient-experience reporting.

Best overall options
  1. Qualtrics Patient Experience
    • Best for: large health systems, enterprise patient experience programs
    • Strengths: powerful analytics, workflow automation, omnichannel surveys, dashboarding
    • Good if you need: post-visit, NPS, HCAHPS-style workflows, service recovery
  2. Press Ganey
    • Best for: hospitals and health systems focused on patient experience and quality improvement
    • Strengths: healthcare-native benchmarks, reputation management, analytics
    • Good if you need: industry benchmarks and patient experience reporting
  3. SurveyMonkey Enterprise
    • Best for: teams that want ease of use and broad survey capabilities
    • Strengths: simple to deploy, good logic, integrations, enterprise controls
    • Good if you need: general patient satisfaction surveys with lighter IT overhead
    • Note: confirm HIPAA/BAA support for your plan
Strong healthcare-focused options
  1. Medallia
    • Best for: enterprise CX and patient experience
    • Strengths: journey analytics, feedback capture, closed-loop service recovery
    • Good if you need: multi-department patient experience management
  2. Luma Health
    • Best for: patient engagement + survey workflows tied to appointments
    • Strengths: texting, reminders, intake, post-visit surveys
    • Good if you need: automated survey delivery from patient interactions
  3. PatientTrak
    • Best for: patient experience and clinic/hospital workflow surveys
    • Strengths: in-visit and post-visit feedback, reputation tools
    • Good if you need: practical patient satisfaction collection
Best for simpler, lower-cost survey needs
  1. REDCap
    • Best for: research, clinical studies, internal healthcare surveys
    • Strengths: secure, flexible, widely used in healthcare and academia
    • Good if you need: consent forms, research data collection, custom surveys
  2. Formstack
    • Best for: small-to-mid healthcare practices
    • Strengths: easy forms, workflow automation, integrations
    • Good if you need: intake forms and patient feedback in one tool
My quick picks
  • Best enterprise patient experience: Qualtrics
  • Best healthcare-native benchmarking: Press Ganey
  • Best simple business-friendly option: SurveyMonkey Enterprise
  • Best for research/clinical studies: REDCap
What to check before buying
  • HIPAA support + BAA
  • EHR integration (Epic, Oracle Health/Cerner, athenahealth, etc.)
  • SMS/email survey delivery
  • Closed-loop case management
  • Role-based access and audit logs

If you want, I can also give you a shortlist by clinic size (small practice vs hospital system) or by budget.

retrieval Mentioned

My short list for healthcare patient surveys:

  1. Qualtrics — best overall for large health systems and patient-experience programs. It says it meets HIPAA, HITRUST, and FedRAMP, is an HCAHPS-approved vendor, and supports EMR integrations. (qualtrics.com)
  2. Medallia — best for enterprise patient-experience management and omnichannel feedback. Medallia says it has a healthcare solution for CAHPS/HCAHPS, and its trust center lists HIPAA and HITRUST. (medallia.com)
  3. SurveyMonkey Enterprise — best if you want something simpler and faster to roll out. SurveyMonkey says it offers HIPAA-compliant forms and surveys for healthcare teams, including patient intake and post-visit feedback. (surveymonkey.com)
  4. Formstack — best for patient satisfaction surveys plus workflows/intake. Formstack’s healthcare pages highlight HIPAA-supporting features, BAA support, and patient-satisfaction templates. (formstack.com)
  5. Alchemer — best if you want flexibility and strong customization. Alchemer has healthcare-specific survey pages, but note it says the platform itself is not HIPAA-compliant; instead, it’s designed to let customers create HIPAA-compliant surveys. (alchemer.com)

My pick by use case:

  • Best enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Best patient-experience suite: Medallia
  • Best simpler/affordable option: SurveyMonkey Enterprise
  • Best for intake + surveys + forms: Formstack
  • Best customization: Alchemer

If you want, I can also give you a top 3 by budget, or a HIPAA-only comparison table.

Which survey platforms are good for website feedback forms? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Good options for website feedback forms:

  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational forms
  • SurveyMonkey — solid all-around choice, easy to deploy
  • Jotform — very flexible, lots of templates and embeds
  • Hotjar — great for on-site feedback widgets and behavior insights
  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise-level feedback and analytics
  • Userback — strong for visual website feedback and bug reports
  • Tally — simple, lightweight, and affordable
  • Google Forms — free and easy, but basic

If you want, I can narrow these down by budget, ease of use, or best for embedded website forms.

retrieval Mentioned

Good picks for website feedback forms:

  • Hotjar — best if you want on-site feedback widgets like popovers/bubbles plus quick analysis. Hotjar’s Surveys now includes the old Feedback tool, with multiple display types and AI-powered analytics. (help.hotjar.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — strong all-around choice for website-embedded surveys/popup collectors and easy templates. It supports embedding on your site and has a Website Feedback template plus website collector options. (surveymonkey.com)
  • Typeform — best if you care most about slick UX/design. Its website feedback template can be embedded as a popup, full-page embed, or standard embed. (typeform.com)
  • Qualtrics — best for larger teams / enterprise CX and deeper analysis. It offers website suggestion/satisfaction templates and text analytics tools. (qualtrics.com)

If you want, I can also narrow this down by budget, ease of setup, or best free option.

What survey platforms are best for creating mobile-friendly surveys? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Top mobile-friendly survey platforms:

  • Typeform — best for polished, one-question-at-a-time surveys on phones.
  • SurveyMonkey — strong all-around option with responsive mobile layouts.
  • Google Forms — free, simple, and works well on mobile for basic surveys.
  • Qualtrics — best for advanced research and enterprise-level mobile surveys.
  • Jotform — very mobile-friendly with good form customization and app support.
  • Alchemer (formerly SurveyGizmo) — solid for business surveys with good mobile optimization.
  • Microsoft Forms — easy if you’re in the Microsoft ecosystem.

If you want the best for most teams: Typeform for user experience, SurveyMonkey for general use, and Qualtrics for advanced needs.

retrieval Not mentioned

If mobile-friendliness is the priority, my top picks are:

  1. Typeform — best for the smoothest mobile respondent experience; it emphasizes responsive, mobile-friendly designs and one-at-a-time question flow. (typeform.com)
  2. Jotform — best for all-around flexibility; its forms are mobile-responsive by default and it also supports offline collection and kiosk mode. (jotform.com)
  3. Qualtrics — best for enterprise / research-heavy surveys; it has a mobile-friendly taking experience plus mobile preview and optimization tools. (qualtrics.com)
  4. SurveyMonkey — best if you want a mainstream survey platform with mobile-optimized apps and offline collection options. (surveymonkey.com)

Quick pick:

  • Best overall mobile UX: Typeform. (typeform.com)
  • Best for field surveys / offline use: Jotform or SurveyMonkey. (jotform.com)
  • Best for complex enterprise surveys: Qualtrics. (qualtrics.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down by budget, team size, or use case (customer feedback, research, event check-ins, etc.).

Which survey platforms are easiest for nontechnical users? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

The easiest survey platforms for nontechnical users are usually:

  1. Typeform
    • Very polished, one-question-at-a-time format
    • Easy drag-and-drop builder
    • Great for simple forms, lead capture, feedback
  2. SurveyMonkey
    • Probably the most familiar all-around option
    • Simple templates and setup
    • Good for basic to mid-level surveys
  3. Google Forms
    • Free and extremely easy
    • Best if you want something fast and simple
    • Less polished, but very beginner-friendly
  4. Jotform
    • Easy form builder with lots of templates
    • More flexible than Google Forms
    • Good for people who want simple setup plus nicer design
  5. Microsoft Forms
    • Very easy if you already use Microsoft 365
    • Clean interface and quick sharing
    • Good for internal surveys, polls, and quizzes

Best pick by use case:

  • Easiest overall: Google Forms
  • Best-looking/easiest polished experience: Typeform
  • Best all-purpose business option: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for template-heavy forms: Jotform

If you want, I can also rank these by price, design quality, or best for small businesses.

retrieval Mentioned

For most nontechnical users, the easiest survey platforms are usually:

  • Google Forms — simplest overall; drag-and-drop, templates, and fast sharing. (workspace.google.com)
  • Microsoft Forms — very easy if you already use Microsoft 365; Copilot can draft surveys from a prompt. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Typeform — nicest “guided” experience for creating polished, conversational surveys. (typeform.com)
  • Jotform — easiest if you want lots of templates and a no-code drag-and-drop builder. (jotform.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — a good beginner-friendly choice, especially now that it offers an AI survey generator in its free tools hub. (surveymonkey.com)

Best pick by use case:

  • Absolute easiest: Google Forms
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Forms
  • Best-looking surveys: Typeform
  • Most template-rich: Jotform
  • Best for quick AI draft: SurveyMonkey

If you want, I can rank them for free plans, best mobile experience, or best for customer feedback.

What are the best survey platforms for academic research? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For academic research, the best survey platforms are usually:

  1. Qualtrics
    • Best overall for universities and serious research
    • Strong logic, randomization, embedded data, anonymous links, and IRB-friendly features
    • Great if your institution already licenses it
  2. REDCap
    • Best for clinical, health, and university research
    • Very secure, widely used in academia, excellent for consent forms and longitudinal studies
    • Usually free through an institution
  3. LimeSurvey
    • Best open-source option
    • Good if you want self-hosting, more control, and lower cost
    • Less polished than Qualtrics, but very capable
  4. SurveyMonkey
    • Good for simpler academic surveys
    • Easy to use, but weaker for advanced research designs than Qualtrics
  5. Google Forms
    • Best for very simple, low-stakes surveys
    • Free and easy, but not ideal for rigorous research or complex survey logic

If you’re also looking for participant recruitment, consider:

  • Prolific — best for academic subject pools and higher-quality respondents
  • CloudResearch — strong for survey research, especially online samples
  • MTurk — cheaper, but data quality is usually less reliable

Quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best for health/clinical research: REDCap
  • Best budget/open-source: LimeSurvey
  • Best participant panel: Prolific

If you want, I can also give you a best platform by use case (e.g., psychology, public health, anonymous surveys, longitudinal studies).

retrieval Not mentioned

For academic research, the best choices are usually:

  1. REDCap — best for institutional, clinical, longitudinal, and sensitive-data studies. It’s built specifically for research studies and supports online/offline data capture, surveys, and exports to stats packages. (project-redcap.org)
  2. Qualtrics — best all-around premium option if your university has access. It offers advanced question types, branching, quotas, analytics, and research-focused workflows. (qualtrics.com)
  3. LimeSurvey — best open-source / self-hosted option. It’s explicitly positioned for academic studies, offers research-grade exports, and gives you more control over data and hosting. (community.limesurvey.org)
  4. SurveyMonkey — best for quick, simple surveys and some research workflows, especially if you want easy setup, templates, and audience targeting. It has research-focused features, but it’s usually less robust than REDCap/Qualtrics for complex academic designs. (surveymonkey.com)

My short recommendation:

  • Most academic researchers: REDCap or Qualtrics
  • Need open-source/control: LimeSurvey
  • Need something fast and easy: SurveyMonkey (project-redcap.org)

If you want, I can also give you a best platform by use case (e.g. psychology, medical research, student surveys, multi-wave studies, anonymous surveys).

Which survey platforms are best for multilingual surveys? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best options for multilingual surveys:

  • Qualtrics — best overall for enterprise multilingual surveys; strong translation workflows, regional logic, and high-scale distribution.
  • SurveyMonkey — easy to use and good for quick multilingual surveys; supports multiple languages and respondent-facing language selection.
  • Alchemer — strong for custom, complex multilingual surveys; good balance of power and flexibility.
  • LimeSurvey — best open-source option; solid multilingual support and self-hosting if you need more control.
  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys; multilingual support is decent, but less robust for complex language management.
  • Formstack — good for business forms/surveys with multilingual needs, especially if you want workflow integrations.

Best picks by use case:

  • Enterprise / advanced translation management: Qualtrics
  • Fast and easy: SurveyMonkey
  • Open-source / self-hosted: LimeSurvey
  • Beautiful UX: Typeform
  • Custom logic + flexibility: Alchemer

If you tell me your budget, target languages, and whether you need auto-translation or human review, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you need multilingual surveys, the best options are usually:

  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise/global research; it supports launching surveys in 78 languages and has built-in translation tools. (qualtrics.com)
  • Alchemer — strong choice if you want deep translation control; it supports 200+ languages for survey translation. (help.alchemer.com)
  • QuestionPro — good balance of multilingual features and cost; it supports 95+ languages and offers auto-translate/manual translation options. (questionpro.com)
  • SurveyMonkey / GetFeedback — solid, simpler option; its multilingual feature lets you add translations manually and it supports RTL for Hebrew, Arabic, and Persian. (help.surveymonkey.com)
  • SurveySparrow — good if you want a modern UI and auto-detection; it says it can translate into 130+ languages and auto-detect browser language. (surveysparrow.com)

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best for translation flexibility: Alchemer
  • Best budget/value: QuestionPro
  • Best for ease of use: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for automated multilingual flows: SurveySparrow (qualtrics.com)

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or enterprise features.

What survey platforms are best for collecting NPS feedback? discovery 30/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best survey platforms for collecting NPS (Net Promoter Score) feedback:

  1. Delighted
    • Best overall for NPS-only programs
    • Very easy setup, clean NPS workflows, good email/SMS delivery
    • Great if you want simple, focused NPS reporting
  2. Qualtrics XM
    • Best for enterprise and advanced analytics
    • Strong sampling, segmentation, dashboards, and automation
    • Good if you need to tie NPS to broader CX programs
  3. SurveyMonkey
    • Best general-purpose option
    • Easy to create NPS surveys, affordable, widely used
    • Good for teams that need more than NPS but don’t need heavy enterprise features
  4. Typeform
    • Best for high-response, conversational surveys
    • Beautiful UI and strong engagement
    • Works well for lightweight NPS collection, especially web-based
  5. Jotform
    • Best for flexibility and cost control
    • Lots of templates and integrations
    • Good if you want NPS plus custom forms/workflows
  6. Medallia
    • Best for large customer experience programs
    • Strong enterprise-grade feedback management and actioning
    • Often used by bigger brands with complex NPS operations

My quick picks:

  • Simple NPS program: Delighted
  • Enterprise CX: Qualtrics or Medallia
  • Budget-friendly all-rounder: SurveyMonkey
  • Best-looking survey: Typeform

If you want, I can also give you the best platform by use case (SaaS, e-commerce, B2B, in-app, email, SMS).

retrieval Mentioned

For collecting NPS feedback, the best platforms usually depend on how mature your program is:

  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise CX programs. It goes beyond basic NPS collection with AI-driven theme analysis, real-time routing, and closed-loop workflows. (qualtrics.com)
  • Delighted — best for simple, fast NPS surveys. It’s built specifically for NPS, emphasizes no-code setup, real-time reporting, and lots of integrations. (delighted.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — best for flexibility and broader survey needs. It supports NPS use cases, AI-assisted survey features, and branded/customizable survey flows. (surveymonkey.com)
  • GetFeedback / SurveyMonkey CX — best if you want NPS tied closely to Salesforce. SurveyMonkey’s docs note direct mapping of NPS responses into Salesforce. (help.surveymonkey.com)

Quick pick:

If you want, I can also give you a top 5 ranked by price, ease of use, or Salesforce integration.

Which survey platforms are good for anonymous surveys? discovery 40/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Good anonymous-survey platforms:

  • SurveyMonkey — strong anonymous option; you can disable IP tracking and collect no identifying info.
  • Typeform — clean UX; good for anonymous forms if you avoid email capture and tracking.
  • Google Forms — simple and free; can be anonymous if you don’t require sign-in and turn off email collection.
  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise/privacy controls; very flexible anonymity settings.
  • Jotform — easy to use; can build anonymous forms and control data collection.
  • Microsoft Forms — good for internal orgs; anonymous if configured without name/email collection.

Best picks:

  • Most secure/privacy-focused: Qualtrics
  • Best simple/free: Google Forms
  • Best polished UX: Typeform
  • Best all-around small business: Jotform

Quick tip: anonymity depends more on settings than the platform—avoid collecting emails, IPs, device IDs, or login-based responses.

If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your use case: employee feedback, customer surveys, or research.

retrieval Mentioned

Good options for anonymous surveys:

  • Typeform — anonymous by default, good for polished, mobile-friendly forms. (help.typeform.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — strong anonymity controls; you can turn on Anonymous Responses and disable IP tracking. (help.surveymonkey.com)
  • Microsoft Forms — can submit anonymously when used outside your org, and you can also turn off name recording. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise/research use; supports anonymous links and anonymizing responses. (qualtrics.com)
  • Jotform — flexible and easy to set up as anonymous as long as you don’t collect identifying fields. (jotform.com)
  • Google Forms — okay for basic anonymous surveys if you leave email collection off, but it’s less purpose-built for anonymity. (support.google.com)

Quick picks:

  • Best easy/free-ish: Typeform or Google Forms.
  • Best business default: SurveyMonkey.
  • Best enterprise/privacy control: Qualtrics.
  • Best Microsoft 365 shops: Microsoft Forms.

If you want, I can narrow this down by free vs paid, employee surveys, or health/sensitive-topic surveys.

What are the best survey platforms for embedded website surveys? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms for embedded website surveys:

  1. Qualtrics XM
    • Best for: enterprise-grade analytics, targeting, and advanced logic
    • Strong embed options, robust segmentation, and deep integrations
    • Good if you need serious research + CX tooling
  2. Survicate
    • Best for: website and product feedback, easy embeds
    • Very good for embedded, in-app, and exit-intent surveys
    • Simple setup and strong targeting
  3. Hotjar
    • Best for: lightweight on-site feedback
    • Great for quick embedded polls/surveys paired with heatmaps/session recordings
    • Best when you want UX insights, not complex survey workflows
  4. Pendo
    • Best for: SaaS product feedback inside web apps
    • Strong for in-app/embedded surveys and user analytics
    • Ideal if you want product analytics + feedback in one place
  5. Typeform
    • Best for: polished, conversational surveys
    • Easy to embed and looks great on websites
    • Better for form-like experiences than heavy targeting/analytics
  6. Alchemer
    • Best for: flexible surveys and custom workflows
    • Strong logic, embedding, and reporting
    • Good mid-market alternative to Qualtrics

Best overall picks:

  • Enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Best ease of use: Survicate
  • Best for UX feedback: Hotjar
  • Best for SaaS product embeds: Pendo

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of embedding, or best for small businesses.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are the strongest options for embedded website surveys:

  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise-grade CX/VoC programs and advanced targeting/embedded data. It supports website/app intercepts and passing embedded data into surveys. (qualtrics.com)
  • Hotjar / Contentsquare Surveys — best for quick on-site feedback and UX research; supports inline embedded surveys plus popups/buttons, and has AI analysis on survey results. (help.hotjar.com)
  • Survicate — best for product/website surveys with easy site installation, targeting, and multi-site use. (help.survicate.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — best for a simple, mainstream option; supports embedded surveys, buttons, and popups via a website collector. (help.surveymonkey.com)
  • Alchemer — best for teams that want flexible embed types (HTML, iframe) and more control over how the survey is placed on the page. (help.alchemer.com)
  • Typeform — best if you want a polished, conversational embedded survey experience; it supports inline embeds, popups, sliders, and side tabs. (typeform.com)

Quick pick:

  • Enterprise / complex routing: Qualtrics
  • UX feedback / heatmap-adjacent workflow: Hotjar
  • B2B product feedback: Survicate
  • General-purpose surveys: SurveyMonkey
  • Flexible embed control: Alchemer
  • Most attractive embeddable form experience: Typeform

If you want, I can narrow this to the best 3 for your use case (e.g. SaaS, ecommerce, lead-gen, or NPS).

Which survey platforms are best for internal company surveys? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best options for internal company surveys:

  • Qualtrics EmployeeXM — best overall for enterprise employee engagement, pulse surveys, and analytics.
  • SurveyMonkey Enterprise — easiest to roll out quickly; good for internal feedback and manager-friendly reporting.
  • Microsoft Forms — best if you already use Microsoft 365; simple, cheap, and secure for basic internal surveys.
  • Google Forms — best for lightweight surveys in Google Workspace; fast, free, but limited reporting.
  • Culture Amp — best for employee engagement, eNPS, performance, and action planning.
  • Lattice — strong for HR teams that want surveys tied to performance and employee management.
  • Workday Peakon Employee Voice — strong enterprise choice for continuous employee listening.

Quick picks:

  • Enterprise + deep analytics: Qualtrics or Workday Peakon
  • HR-focused employee engagement: Culture Amp or Lattice
  • Simple internal forms: Microsoft Forms or Google Forms
  • General-purpose business surveys: SurveyMonkey Enterprise

If you want, I can narrow it down by company size, budget, or whether you use Microsoft/Google/Workday.

retrieval Mentioned

For internal company surveys, I’d shortlist these:

  1. Qualtrics Employee Experience — best for large orgs that want continuous listening, pulse surveys, lifecycle surveys, AI insights, and stronger governance/security options. (qualtrics.com)
  2. Culture Amp — best if you want a purpose-built employee experience platform with lots of ready-made templates and benchmarking. It offers 40+ templates, and says it’s trusted by 6,500 companies. (cultureamp.com)
  3. Microsoft Viva Glint / Viva Pulse — best for companies already deep in Microsoft 365/Teams. Glint is built for organization-wide employee listening, while Pulse is for quick manager/team check-ins. (microsoft.com)
  4. Workleap Officevibe — best for smaller or mid-sized teams that want simple recurring pulse surveys, AI help, and one-off custom surveys sent to specific groups. (workleap.com)
  5. Alchemer — best if you want a more flexible survey platform that can also handle employee engagement use cases. (alchemer.com)

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best for employee-experience specialty: Culture Amp
  • Best for Microsoft shops: Viva Glint/Pulse
  • Best budget/simplicity: Workleap
  • Best flexible survey builder: Alchemer

If you want, I can turn this into a side-by-side comparison table by price tier, anonymity, Slack/Teams integration, and analytics.

What are the best survey platforms for getting higher response rates? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For higher response rates, the best platforms are usually the ones with the best mobile UX, logic, personalization, and reminder/incentive support:

  1. Typeform — best for engaging, low-friction surveys
    • One-question-at-a-time format often boosts completion.
    • Great for marketing, customer feedback, lead gen.
  2. Qualtrics — best for enterprise-grade response optimization
    • Strong branching, personalization, email distribution, and reminder automation.
    • Excellent for employee, CX, and academic surveys.
  3. SurveyMonkey — best all-around for simple, fast deployment
    • Easy to use and solid for email/web surveys.
    • Good templates and audience tools if you need respondents.
  4. Alchemer — best for flexible, more advanced surveys
    • Good logic, custom branding, and data collection options.
    • Often a strong choice for research teams.
  5. Jotform — best if you want a form-style survey that feels easy to complete
    • Very mobile-friendly.
    • Good for short surveys and embedded forms.

If your goal is specifically higher completion rates:

  • Typeform for end-user engagement
  • Qualtrics for serious research/enterprise control
  • SurveyMonkey for ease and broad use

If you want, I can also recommend the best platform by use case (customer feedback, HR, academic research, B2B, etc.).

retrieval Not mentioned

If your main goal is higher response rates, these are the strongest options:

  • Typeform — best for completion rate. Its own help center says Typeforms average a 47% completion rate, and its logic features help reduce friction. (help.typeform.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — best for reminders + multi-channel distribution. It supports branded email invites, automated reminders, SMS, web links, kiosk mode, and in-app surveys; its docs explicitly say reminders can increase response rates. (surveymonkey.com)
  • Jotform — best for mobile, kiosk, and offline collection. It supports offline surveys, kiosk mode, save-and-continue, and mobile-friendly forms, which helps when people are answering in person or on the go. (jotform.com)
  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise-grade field and offline surveys. It has an offline surveys app and SMS distributions with reminder texts, but some survey features aren’t compatible offline. (qualtrics.com)

My short pick:

  • Best overall for higher completion: Typeform
  • Best for follow-up and response management: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for in-person/event/field surveys: Jotform
  • Best enterprise option: Qualtrics (help.typeform.com)

If you want, I can also rank them for customer surveys, employee surveys, or academic research.

Which survey platforms are best for advanced branching logic? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best options for advanced branching logic:

  1. Qualtrics XM
    • Best overall for complex logic, embedded data, quotas, and piping.
    • Strong for enterprise surveys and multi-path workflows.
  2. SurveyMonkey Enterprise
    • Good branching, skip logic, and question display logic.
    • Easier to use than Qualtrics, but less powerful for very complex flows.
  3. Alchemer (formerly SurveyGizmo)
    • Excellent for advanced logic and customization.
    • Great middle ground between ease of use and power.
  4. QuestionPro
    • Strong branching, loop logic, and survey automation.
    • Solid for research-heavy use cases.
  5. Typeform
    • Best for conversational surveys with clean logic paths.
    • Great UX, but less ideal for highly complex survey logic than Qualtrics/Alchemer.
  6. LimeSurvey
    • Very capable open-source option for advanced branching.
    • Good if you want self-hosting and more control.

Quick pick:

  • Most powerful: Qualtrics XM
  • Best balance: Alchemer
  • Best UX: Typeform
  • Best open-source: LimeSurvey

If you want, I can also rank them for price, ease of use, or enterprise features.

retrieval Not mentioned

For advanced branching logic, the strongest choices are usually:

  1. Qualtrics — best if you need the most sophisticated survey flow and logic types; Qualtrics documents display logic, branch logic, and skip logic. (qualtrics.com)
  2. Alchemer — very strong for complex survey design; its platform highlights advanced logic and branching, and it has a large set of question types and workflow flexibility. (alchemer.com)
  3. SurveyMonkey — good for advanced branching beyond simple skip logic; its help docs explicitly call out “Advanced Branching” based on multiple conditions. (help.surveymonkey.com)
  4. Jotform — strong if you want branching in forms/workflows; Jotform supports conditional logic and multi-branch workflow routing. (jotform.com)
  5. Typeform — best for simpler, conversational branching; it supports branching/conditional questions, but it’s generally less deep than Qualtrics/Alchemer for very complex research logic. (help.typeform.com)

If you want a quick rule of thumb:

  • Most powerful: Qualtrics
  • Best balance of power + usability: Alchemer
  • Best for easy marketing-style surveys: Typeform or SurveyMonkey (qualtrics.com)

If you want, I can also rank these by price, ease of use, or best for research vs lead-gen.

What survey platforms are best for quick survey creation? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best for quick survey creation:

  • Google Forms — fastest and simplest, free, great for basic surveys.
  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys; very easy to build.
  • SurveyMonkey — strong all-around option with good templates and logic.
  • Jotform — very fast form/survey creation with lots of templates and integrations.
  • Microsoft Forms — best if you use Microsoft 365; clean and easy.
  • Tally — super quick, minimalist, great free tier.
  • Zoho Survey — good for business use and easy setup.

If you want the shortest path:

  • Basic/free: Google Forms or Tally
  • Best-looking: Typeform
  • Business feature set: SurveyMonkey or Jotform

If you want, I can also rank them by free tier, best design, or best for teams.

retrieval Mentioned

For quick survey creation, the best picks are usually:

  • Google Forms — fastest if you want simple, free, and easy-to-share surveys with templates, drag-and-drop editing, and real-time responses. (workspace.google.com)
  • Microsoft Forms — very quick for basic surveys and polls, especially if you already use Microsoft 365; Microsoft also says you can build a quick survey in minutes. (support.microsoft.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — best if you want quick creation plus stronger survey features; its AI tools can generate a survey from a prompt and it supports skip logic and other survey controls. (help.surveymonkey.com)
  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational-looking surveys; its AI form builder can create forms in seconds/minutes. (typeform.com)
  • Jotform — best if you want lots of templates and fast customization with drag-and-drop; it also supports conversational survey layouts. (jotform.com)

My quick recommendation:

  • Simplest/fastest: Google Forms
  • Best if you’re in Microsoft 365: Microsoft Forms
  • Best overall for quick + powerful: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for nicer respondent experience: Typeform

If you want, I can narrow this to free options, best for business, or best for anonymous surveys.

Which survey platforms are best for social media polls and surveys? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best options depend on whether you want native social polls or a proper survey tool you can share on social media.

Best social-media poll platforms
  • Instagram Polls/Questions (via Stories) — best for quick audience engagement.
  • X (Twitter) Polls — simple, fast, good for public voting.
  • LinkedIn Polls — best for B2B/professional audiences.
  • Facebook/Meta Polls — useful in Groups and Stories, but less powerful than dedicated tools.
  • YouTube Community Polls — great if you already have a channel audience.
Best survey platforms to share on social media
  • Typeform — best for polished, high-response surveys.
  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around for surveys with strong analytics.
  • Google Forms — best free, simple option.
  • Jotform — best if you want more form customization and logic.
  • Qualtrics — best for advanced research and enterprise use.
Best picks by use case
  • Quick poll: Instagram, X, LinkedIn
  • Clickable survey link: Typeform
  • Low-cost/basic: Google Forms
  • Professional analytics: SurveyMonkey
  • Enterprise research: Qualtrics

If you want, I can also rank these for ease of use, pricing, or best audience reach.

retrieval Mentioned

For social media polls and surveys, my short list is:

  1. SurveyMonkey — best all-around if you want strong social sharing. It supports sharing via LinkedIn, X, Facebook, WhatsApp, plus web link/SMS and other collectors. (surveymonkey.com)
  2. Typeform — best for a polished, high-engagement look. You can share via Facebook, LinkedIn, X, Buffer, and Linktree, and it’s easy to embed or link from social bios/posts. (help.typeform.com)
  3. Qualtrics — best for enterprise or research-heavy use. It has built-in social media distribution for X, Facebook, Reddit, LinkedIn, and Pinterest. (qualtrics.com)
  4. SurveyPlanet — good budget-friendly option if you just need simple surveys and a straightforward share on social networks feature. (surveyplanet.com)
  5. Google Forms — best free/simple option for basic surveys; Google says you can share links on social media or embed the form. (maps.google.com)

If you want a quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design/engagement: Typeform
  • Best enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Best free/simple: Google Forms

If you want, I can narrow this down by budget, best for Instagram/X/LinkedIn, or best for anonymous polls.

What are the best survey platforms for collecting user insights? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms for collecting user insights, depending on your needs:

  • Typeform — best for high response rates and great-looking, conversational surveys.
  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around option for fast setup, analytics, and broad use cases.
  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise-grade research, advanced logic, and deep analytics.
  • Alchemer — strong for customizable surveys and customer feedback workflows.
  • Jotform — best if you want forms + surveys + easy integrations in one tool.
  • Tally — best budget-friendly option; simple, clean, and surprisingly powerful.
  • Maze — best for product teams doing user research and prototype testing.
  • Hotjar — best for in-product feedback and micro-surveys tied to behavior.
  • Google Forms — best free/basic option, but limited for serious insights.

Best picks by use case:

  • Startups / UX research: Typeform, Maze, Hotjar
  • Enterprise / advanced research: Qualtrics
  • General business surveys: SurveyMonkey
  • Low-cost / lightweight: Tally, Google Forms

If you want, I can also rank them for price, analytics, or best for B2B user interviews.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms for collecting user insights, by use case:

  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise-grade research and deep analysis. It offers many distribution channels, real-time reporting, and AI-powered text analysis. (qualtrics.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around for fast setup and broad use. Its AI features include survey generation, answer recommendations, sentiment analysis, and AI summaries of results. (surveymonkey.com)
  • Typeform — best for high-response, conversational surveys. It supports multi-channel distribution, open-ended feedback, AI sentiment analysis, and embedded surveys. (typeform.com)
  • Alchemer — best for flexible, research-heavy workflows. It emphasizes dashboards, sentiment/theme analysis, and real-time feedback analysis across survey and other data sources. (alchemer.com)
  • Delighted — best for lightweight CX/user feedback programs like NPS/CSAT. It focuses on quick survey deployment, segmentation, and visual analytics. (delighted.com)
  • QuestionPro — best for teams that want advanced research features plus analytics. It highlights survey analytics, dashboards, integrations, and enterprise research tooling. (questionpro.com)

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best for startups/product teams: Typeform or SurveyMonkey
  • Best for serious research/analytics: Qualtrics or Alchemer
  • Best for NPS/CSAT: Delighted

If you want, I can also narrow this down by budget, team size, or whether you need product feedback, UX research, or customer satisfaction.

What are the best alternatives to enterprise survey tools for small teams? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For small teams, the best alternatives to enterprise survey tools are usually:

  1. Tally — best overall for simple, modern surveys
    • Very easy to use
    • Great free plan
    • Clean forms, logic, and payments
    • Best if you want “Notion-like” simplicity
  2. Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys
    • Excellent user experience
    • Strong branding and logic features
    • Pricier than others, but good for lead gen and customer feedback
  3. Google Forms — best free option
    • Completely free with Google Workspace
    • Good enough for basic internal surveys, event forms, and quick polls
    • Lacks design polish and advanced analytics
  4. Jotform — best for flexibility
    • Huge template library
    • Supports approvals, file uploads, e-signatures, payments
    • Strong choice if your surveys need more workflow features
  5. SurveyMonkey — best for classic survey analysis
    • Reliable and familiar
    • Good reporting and question types
    • Better for research-style surveys than pretty branding
  6. Microsoft Forms — best for teams already on Microsoft 365
    • Simple, fast, and included in many business plans
    • Works well for internal team surveys
    • Less powerful than Jotform or Typeform
My quick picks
  • Best free: Google Forms or Tally
  • Best design: Typeform
  • Best value: Tally
  • Best advanced workflow: Jotform
  • Best for internal corporate use: Microsoft Forms

If you want, I can also give you a “best by use case” list for customer feedback, employee surveys, event registration, or market research.

retrieval Mentioned

For small teams, the best alternatives are usually:

  • Tally — best if you want the simplest “just works” option. It offers unlimited forms and responses on the free plan, and Tally Pro is $29/month with team collaboration, custom domains, and branding removal. (tally.so)
  • Google Forms — best for zero-cost, basic surveys. Google says it’s free for personal use, supports collaboration, real-time summaries, and Sheets export. (maps.google.com)
  • Jotform — best all-around choice if you need more templates, payments, and integrations. Jotform’s pricing page says it has a free Starter plan plus paid tiers, with Enterprise available for custom pricing. (jotform.com)
  • Typeform — best if design and respondent experience matter most. Its pricing starts at $29/month for Basic, with conversational forms and unlimited questions. (typeform.com)
  • Formbricks — best for product feedback, in-app surveys, or teams that want self-hosting. Formbricks offers cloud hosting and free self-hosting, with AGPLv3 core and an Enterprise license for advanced features. (formbricks.com)
  • Microsoft Forms — best if your team already lives in Microsoft 365. Microsoft describes it as a lightweight tool for surveys, polls, and quizzes, with group forms for team access. (support.microsoft.com)

Quick pick:

  • Cheapest/easiest: Google Forms or Tally.
  • Best polish: Typeform.
  • Best power/features: Jotform.
  • Best for SaaS/product teams: Formbricks. (maps.google.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best 3 for your exact use case (customer feedback, internal HR, NPS, event registration, etc.).

Which survey platforms are better than basic form builders for research surveys? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you need research-grade surveys, these are usually better than basic form builders:

  • Qualtrics — best all-around for academic, market, and customer research; strong logic, quotas, panel tools, advanced analytics.
  • Alchemer — very flexible, good for custom research workflows and integrations.
  • QuestionPro — strong for research surveys, with good analytics and panel/distribution options.
  • Forsta — solid for enterprise research, especially market research and complex survey programming.
  • Sawtooth — best if you need conjoint, MaxDiff, or other advanced choice-based research.
  • REDCap — great for clinical/academic research and compliance-heavy studies.
  • SurveyMonkey Enterprise — better than basic forms, but more lightweight than Qualtrics.

If you’re moving up from Google Forms / Typeform, the biggest gains are:

  • skip logic and piping
  • quotas and sampling
  • better response quality controls
  • panel management
  • advanced reporting/export

If you tell me your use case (academic, market research, UX, clinical, employee research), I can recommend the best 2–3.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean serious research surveys (skip logic, quotas, panel management, advanced reporting, exports, collaboration), these are usually better than basic form builders:

  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise / academic research and complex survey logic. It supports advanced quotas and survey flow tools. (qualtrics.com)
  • Alchemer — strong if you want flexibility, branching, many question types, automation, and more control over design/workflows. (alchemer.com)
  • QuestionPro — good for market research, with advanced analytics, multiple distribution options, and research-focused tools like conjoint/MaxDiff. (questionpro.com)
  • LimeSurvey — a solid option if you want control, localization, analytics, and self-hosting/privacy-friendly deployment. (limesurvey.org)

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best balance of power + usability: Alchemer
  • Best for market research methods: QuestionPro
  • Best open/self-hosted option: LimeSurvey (alchemer.com)

If you want, I can also give you a 2-minute shortlist by budget (free / under $100 / enterprise).

What are the best alternatives to premium survey software for startups? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For startups, the best alternatives to premium survey tools are usually:

  • Tally — best overall for simple, polished forms; generous free plan, very startup-friendly.
  • Google Forms — best free option; basic, reliable, and easy to share.
  • Jotform — best for more advanced forms/workflows; lots of templates and integrations.
  • Typeform — best if you want a premium-looking, conversational survey experience.
  • Airtable Forms — best if you already use Airtable for customer data or ops.
  • Microsoft Forms — solid if your team is already in Microsoft 365.
  • Zoho Survey — good budget-friendly option with decent analytics.
  • SurveyMonkey — good for standard surveys, though pricing rises fast.
  • LimeSurvey — best open-source/self-hosted option if you want full control.
Best picks by startup use case
  • Zero budget: Google Forms or Tally
  • Best UX without paying much: Tally
  • Most flexible: Jotform
  • Best for product feedback / lead capture: Typeform
  • Best if you want self-hosted: LimeSurvey

If you want, I can also give you a “best alternatives by budget” or “best for B2B startups” shortlist.

retrieval Mentioned

For startups, the best alternatives usually are:

  • Tally — best all-around free option if you want generous limits and modern UX. Its free plan includes unlimited forms and responses, with paid plans starting at $29/mo. (tally.so)
  • Google Forms — best for “good enough and free,” especially if your team already lives in Google Workspace. It’s included with Google accounts / Workspace, and is the simplest low-friction choice. (tally.so)
  • Jotform — best if you need lots of templates, integrations, payments, and a more polished builder. Jotform’s Starter plan is free; paid plans start at Bronze, with pricing on the official pricing page and 200+ integrations / 30+ payment gateways advertised. (jotform.com)
  • Microsoft Forms — best for startups already on Microsoft 365. Microsoft says Forms is available with eligible Microsoft 365 / work-school accounts, and Microsoft 365 Business Basic starts at $6/user/month. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Zoho Survey — best for more “real survey” features on a budget. Zoho offers a free plan plus paid tiers; the free tier allows 3 surveys and 100 responses per survey, with paid plans increasing limits. (zoho.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — best if you need deeper survey research/analytics, but it’s usually the pricier route. SurveyMonkey’s pricing page highlights advanced research methods, and its plans support features like skip logic, piping, and exports. (surveymonkey.com)

Quick pick:

If you want, I can also give you a “best by use case” shortlist for startups: customer feedback, lead gen, NPS, employee surveys, or product research.

How do survey platforms compare with spreadsheet-based feedback collection? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Survey platforms are usually better for structured, scalable feedback, while spreadsheets are better for simple, internal, low-volume collection.

Survey platforms (e.g. Typeform, SurveyMonkey, Google Forms, Jotform, Qualtrics) give you:

  • prebuilt question types, logic, and skip rules
  • mobile-friendly forms
  • automatic charts/exports
  • cleaner data and fewer formatting errors
  • easier sharing via link/email/embed

Spreadsheets (e.g. Google Sheets, Microsoft Excel) work well when you want:

  • full manual control
  • quick, informal feedback tracking
  • lightweight internal use
  • custom calculations or ad hoc analysis

Main tradeoff:

  • Survey platforms = better response experience + cleaner data
  • Spreadsheets = more flexible editing, but more prone to messy entries and harder to collect at scale

Best choice:

  • Use Google Forms if you want free and easy
  • Use Typeform if user experience matters
  • Use SurveyMonkey or Qualtrics for more advanced research
  • Use Google Sheets if it’s just a simple internal feedback log

If you want, I can compare them for a specific use case like employee feedback, customer NPS, or event surveys.

retrieval Mentioned

Survey platforms are usually better for structured, scalable feedback, while spreadsheets are better for simple, ad hoc collection.

Survey platforms

  • Built for forms, branching, validation, and anonymous responses
  • Easier to share at scale
  • Better reporting/analytics
  • Reduce messy data entry
  • Often include reminders, logic, and integrations

Spreadsheet-based collection

  • Fast to set up if you already use Excel/Google Sheets
  • Good for small teams and informal feedback
  • More flexible for custom tracking
  • But prone to duplicates, inconsistent entries, and manual cleanup
  • Harder to collect feedback from many external users cleanly

Rule of thumb

  • Use a survey platform when you care about response quality, consistency, and analysis.
  • Use a spreadsheet when the feedback is internal, low-volume, and temporary.

If you want, I can also compare specific tools like Google Forms vs Google Sheets, SurveyMonkey, or Typeform.

What are the best alternatives to high-cost survey tools for nonprofits? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some of the best lower-cost survey tools nonprofits use instead of expensive platforms like Qualtrics or SurveyMonkey Enterprise:

  • Google Forms — Free, simple, unlimited responses, great for basic intake forms and event feedback.
  • Microsoft Forms — Included with many Microsoft 365 plans, good for organizations already on Office tools.
  • Jotform — Very nonprofit-friendly, strong form logic, payment options, and lots of templates; has nonprofit discounts.
  • SurveyMonkey — Still pricey at higher tiers, but often offers nonprofit discounts and is good for moderate survey needs.
  • Zoho Survey — Usually cheaper than enterprise tools, solid logic and reporting, good value for smaller teams.
  • Typeform — Better for polished, conversational surveys; can get expensive, but good if response quality matters more than volume.
  • Tally — Excellent free tier, clean design, surprisingly capable for nonprofits with tight budgets.
  • Formstack — Strong for workflows and data collection; worth it if you need approvals or integrations, and they offer nonprofit pricing.

Best picks by use case:

  • Absolute lowest cost: Google Forms, Tally
  • Best all-around for nonprofits: Jotform
  • Best if you already use Microsoft 365: Microsoft Forms
  • Best for nicer-looking surveys: Typeform
  • Best value for more serious survey needs: Zoho Survey

If you want, I can also rank these by free plan strength, nonprofit discounts, and data security/compliance.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are the best lower-cost alternatives for nonprofits:

  • Google Forms — best for truly simple, no-frills surveys, event signups, and basic feedback. It supports sections, file uploads, collaboration, and response summaries. (support.google.com)
  • Microsoft Forms — good if your nonprofit already uses Microsoft 365; it offers surveys, quizzes, polls, real-time results, and Excel export. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Jotform — best if you want more polished forms/workflows without enterprise pricing; it offers a nonprofit discount of 50% off most paid plans (30% off Enterprise). (jotform.com)
  • Zoho Survey — strong value for nonprofits; Zoho offers an NPO discount, and its survey plans include a free tier plus paid tiers. Zoho also offers nonprofits a broader credits program across its products. (zoho.com)
  • Typeform — best for more engaging, donor-friendly surveys; NGOs/nonprofits can request discounts (25% off monthly, 40% off yearly). (help.typeform.com)
  • Alchemer — better for more advanced research/reporting than basic form tools, with a 25% nonprofit discount on annual plans. (help.alchemer.com)
  • Wufoo — solid lightweight option; it offers a 50% nonprofit discount on paid plans. (help.surveymonkey.com)

Quick pick:

  • Lowest cost: Google Forms / Microsoft Forms
  • Best nonprofit discount + flexibility: Jotform
  • Best for nicer respondent experience: Typeform
  • Best for more advanced survey work: Alchemer

If you want, I can narrow this to the best 3 for a small nonprofit, or make a feature-by-feature comparison.

Which survey platforms are better for analytics than simple polling tools? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you want analytics, not just quick polling, these are usually better:

  • Qualtrics — strongest for enterprise analytics, dashboarding, crosstabs, text analysis, and customer/employee experience programs.
  • Alchemer — very good for custom reporting, segmentation, and workflow automation; less “simple poll,” more research platform.
  • QuestionPro — strong analytics for the price, with advanced dashboards, cross-tabs, and research features.
  • SurveyMonkey Enterprise — solid if you already use SurveyMonkey, but analytics are better on paid tiers.
  • Zoho Survey — decent reporting and integrates well with Zoho’s BI tools.
  • Typeform — great UX, but analytics are lighter; better for form-style collection than deep analysis.

If you need serious analysis, I’d shortlist:

  1. Qualtrics
  2. Alchemer
  3. QuestionPro

If you tell me your use case—customer satisfaction, employee surveys, market research, or internal polling—I can recommend the best fit.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want analytics-heavy survey platforms instead of simple polling tools, these are the best-known picks:

  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise-grade analysis, cross-data reporting, and predictive analytics. It’s positioned as “much more than polling software” with built-in analytics and integrations. (qualtrics.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — good for teams that want strong dashboards, comparison reporting, multi-survey analysis, and AI-assisted insights without going full enterprise. (surveymonkey.com)
  • Alchemer — strong choice for custom reporting and open-text / sentiment analysis, especially if you care about qualitative feedback at scale. (alchemer.com)
  • Typeform — better for lightweight-to-moderate analytics; its Results/Smart Insights features add dashboards and AI summaries, but it’s usually less deep than Qualtrics or Alchemer. (help.typeform.com)

Quick rule of thumb:

  • Deepest analytics: Qualtrics
  • Best balance of ease + analytics: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for text/open-ended feedback analysis: Alchemer
  • Best for polished forms with decent built-in insights: Typeform

If you want, I can narrow this down by budget, team size, or use case (CX, HR, market research, product feedback).

What are the best alternatives to complex research platforms for customer surveys? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

If you want simpler alternatives to complex research platforms for customer surveys, these are the best options:

  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys and higher response rates
  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around easy survey tool with solid analytics
  • Google Forms — best free, no-frills option for quick surveys
  • Tally — best lightweight, modern alternative to Typeform with generous free tier
  • Jotform — best if you want more form flexibility and integrations
  • Qualtrics XM — still powerful, but simpler than some enterprise research suites for CX teams
  • Zoho Survey — good low-cost option for teams already using Zoho
  • Microsoft Forms — good for internal/customer surveys inside Microsoft 365
Best picks by use case
  • Fast, simple feedback: Google Forms or Tally
  • Best-looking customer surveys: Typeform
  • Most balanced option: SurveyMonkey
  • Lowest cost for teams: Zoho Survey
  • Best for integrations/workflows: Jotform

If you want, I can also give you a top 3 shortlist based on budget, ease of use, or advanced logic.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want something simpler than a heavy research platform like Qualtrics, I’d shortlist these:

  • Delighted — best for lightweight NPS / CSAT / CES programs and quick follow-up questions. It’s built around simple, multi-channel customer feedback workflows. (delighted.com)
  • Survicate — good for targeted product/customer surveys with segmentation and CRM/product-data targeting. (survicate.com)
  • Typeform — best if you want clean, conversational surveys and easy product-feedback forms with lots of integrations. (typeform.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — strong general-purpose choice with lots of customer feedback templates and a lower learning curve than enterprise research suites. (surveymonkey.com)
  • Microsoft Forms — best for simple, low-friction internal or customer surveys if your team already uses Microsoft 365. (create.microsoft.com)
  • QuestionPro — a middle ground if you want something easier than Qualtrics but still with more CX features than basic form tools. (questionpro.com)

Quick pick:

  • Fastest/easiest: Microsoft Forms
  • Best customer-experience focus: Delighted
  • Best product-feedback UX: Typeform
  • Best general alternative: SurveyMonkey
  • Best targeted in-app/customer segmentation: Survicate

If you want, I can also give you a top 3 by budget or by use case (NPS, product feedback, or market research).

Which survey platforms offer better customization than basic survey apps? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

If you want more customization than basic survey apps, these are strong options:

  • Qualtrics XM — very advanced logic, branching, embedded data, custom workflows, and branding control.
  • SurveyMonkey Enterprise — more design and logic options than basic tools, plus team/admin controls.
  • Typeform — highly polished, conversational forms with strong design customization and integrations.
  • Jotform — very flexible for form/survey layouts, widgets, conditional logic, and custom themes.
  • Alchemer (formerly SurveyGizmo) — great for custom question flows, piping, and branded surveys.
  • QuestionPro — strong survey logic, design flexibility, and enterprise features.
  • Formstack — good for custom forms/surveys, automation, and workflow integrations.
  • Microsoft Forms + Power Automate — less visual customization, but more flexibility if you want workflow automation in Microsoft’s ecosystem.

If you want, I can also rank these by best for branding, best for logic, or best value.

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes—these usually offer much more customization than basic survey apps:

  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys with custom branding, layouts, media, conditional logic, and personalized thank-you/welcome screens. (typeform.com)
  • Qualtrics — strongest for enterprise-level control: branded themes, custom CSS/JavaScript, organization-wide theme libraries, and detailed look-and-feel editing. (qualtrics.com)
  • Jotform — very flexible if you want drag-and-drop design, themes, custom backgrounds, custom CSS, and white-label options. (jotform.com)
  • Zoho Survey — good for branding and form logic, with white-label URLs, custom domains, logos, themes, and question/page logic. (zoho.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — more customizable than basic tools, with brand palettes, logos, white-label URLs, branded invites, and custom end pages/redirects. (surveymonkey.com)

If you want, I can narrow these down by use case:

  • most beautiful
  • most enterprise
  • most affordable
  • best for embedded website surveys
What are the best alternatives to manual email surveys for feedback collection? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best alternatives depend on when and where you want feedback. Good options:

  1. In-app / website surveys
    • Best for product UX feedback.
    • Tools: Hotjar, Qualtrics, Typeform, SurveyMonkey, Delighted
    • Example: trigger a 1-question survey after checkout or feature use.
  2. SMS surveys
    • Best for high open rates and quick responses.
    • Tools: Twilio, SimpleTexting, Podium
    • Good for service businesses, appointments, and retail.
  3. WhatsApp surveys
    • Best for international or mobile-first audiences.
    • Tools: Twilio WhatsApp, MessageBird, WATI
    • Feels more conversational than email.
  4. QR code surveys
    • Best for physical locations, events, packaging, or receipts.
    • Tools: SurveyMonkey, Jotform, Google Forms + QR generator
    • Put a QR on tables, signage, or post-purchase inserts.
  5. Live chat feedback
    • Best for immediate post-support feedback.
    • Tools: Intercom, Zendesk, Freshchat
    • Works well as a quick CSAT prompt after a chat ends.
  6. Voice of Customer platforms
    • Best for continuous feedback at scale.
    • Tools: Qualtrics, Medallia, InMoment
    • Useful for aggregating feedback across channels.
  7. NPS/CSAT widgets
    • Best for lightweight recurring measurement.
    • Tools: Delighted, AskNicely, CustomerGauge
    • Great for “How likely are you to recommend us?” prompts.
  8. Community / product forums
    • Best for qualitative insights and idea validation.
    • Tools: Circle, Discourse, Slack communities
    • Good if you want ongoing discussion, not just survey answers.

Best all-around picks:

  • Delighted for simple NPS/CSAT
  • Typeform for polished surveys
  • Hotjar for website feedback
  • Intercom for support-driven feedback
  • Twilio for SMS/WhatsApp automation

If you tell me your use case (product, customer support, events, retail, etc.), I can recommend the best 2–3 options.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best alternatives to manual email surveys:

  • In-product / in-app surveys — best for catching feedback at the exact moment of use. Tools like Survicate, Typeform, Hotjar, Delighted, and AskNicely support website/app embeds, pop-ups, or SDK-based surveys. (survicate.com)
  • Post-chat / support CSAT — best after customer service interactions. Intercom can send conversation ratings and CSAT across messenger, in-app, email, SMS, and social channels. (intercom.com)
  • SMS / mobile-first surveys — useful when email response rates are low. AskNicely, Delighted, and Typeform all support multi-channel delivery including SMS or mobile. (asknicely.com)
  • Web intercepts / feedback widgets — good for website visitors who haven’t converted yet. Hotjar and Survicate support targeted on-site widgets/surveys. (help.hotjar.com)
  • QR-code / kiosk / offline collection — best for retail, events, and service locations. AskNicely and Delighted both support kiosk-style and multi-channel survey flows. (asknicely.com)

If you want the shortest recommendation:

  • SaaS/product feedback: Survicate or Hotjar.
  • Support/team satisfaction: Intercom.
  • Simple NPS at scale: Delighted or AskNicely. (survicate.com)

If you want, I can turn this into a “best tool by use case” shortlist for your business.

Which survey platforms are better for team collaboration than solo survey tools? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

If you need team collaboration, look for platforms with multi-user roles, shared folders, review/approval workflows, comments, and centralized reporting. These are usually better than solo-first tools like basic Google Forms or Typeform.

Best team-friendly survey platforms
  • Qualtrics XM — strongest for larger teams, permissions, approvals, and enterprise workflow.
  • SurveyMonkey Enterprise — good shared management, collaboration, and reporting for teams.
  • Alchemer — very flexible; solid for teams that want shared projects and advanced permissions.
  • Jotform — good for team form/survey building with shared workspaces and approvals.
  • Formstack — strong for business teams needing workflow + data handling.
  • Microsoft Forms — best if your team already lives in Microsoft 365.
  • Google Forms — simple shared editing, but weaker for serious collaboration.
Better for collaboration than solo tools

Usually better than solo-first tools like:

  • Typeform (great UX, but less team workflow depth)
  • Wufoo
  • Paperform
  • Tally
Quick picks
  • Enterprise collaboration: Qualtrics XM
  • Best balance of power + team use: SurveyMonkey Enterprise
  • Most flexible for teams: Alchemer
  • Best if you want simple shared workflow: Jotform
  • Best if you’re in Microsoft 365: Microsoft Forms

If you want, I can also rank these by price, ease of use, or best for marketing / HR / research teams.

retrieval Mentioned

If you need team collaboration, these are stronger choices than solo-first survey tools:

  • Qualtrics — best for larger teams / research ops. It supports project sharing with granular permissions, and org-level “Collaborate Projects” access controls. (qualtrics.com)
  • SurveyMonkey Team / Enterprise — good balance of ease + collaboration. It offers shared surveys, section-level access, and team roles/permissions. (help.surveymonkey.com)
  • Jotform Teams / Enterprise — strong if you want shared workspaces and role-based access across forms, submissions, reports, and apps. (jotform.com)
  • Typeform Workspaces — better for organized team workflows, with shared workspaces and controlled access for teammates. (typeform.com)
  • Microsoft Forms (with Microsoft 365) — solid for internal collaboration, with coauthoring via group forms and shared edit access. (support.microsoft.com)

Rule of thumb:

  • Best for enterprise research: Qualtrics
  • Best general team survey tool: SurveyMonkey
  • Best shared workspace model: Jotform
  • Best for simple team forms inside Microsoft 365: Microsoft Forms
  • Best for branded, lightweight team surveys: Typeform

If you want, I can also rank these for small teams, enterprise, or budget.

How do I improve low survey response rates? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

To improve low survey response rates, focus on making it shorter, more relevant, and easier to complete:

  1. Keep it brief
    • Aim for 3–5 minutes max.
    • Cut any question you won’t use.
  2. Use a better tool
    • Typeform: best for conversational, mobile-friendly surveys.
    • SurveyMonkey: strong for quick distribution and reminders.
    • Qualtrics: best for larger organizations and advanced targeting.
  3. Personalize the invite
    • Use the person’s name.
    • Explain why they were chosen and how the feedback will be used.
  4. Offer a clear incentive
    • Small gift cards, raffle entries, or discounts often help.
    • Make the reward obvious in the email subject line if appropriate.
  5. Send at the right time
    • Midweek mornings often work well.
    • Avoid holidays and late Fridays.
  6. Optimize for mobile
    • Many people respond on phones, so use short questions and simple layouts.
  7. Send reminders
    • 1–2 polite follow-ups can significantly boost responses.
    • Keep reminders short and resend only to non-responders.
  8. Use trusted branding
    • Surveys from a known sender get more opens.
    • Make the email look legitimate and professional.
  9. Ask better questions
    • Use simple language.
    • Avoid double-barreled or overly sensitive questions early on.
  10. Show impact
    • Tell respondents how past feedback led to changes.

If you want, I can help you write a higher-response survey email or review your survey for drop-off points.

retrieval Not mentioned

To improve low survey response rates:

  • Shorten the survey: aim for 5–10 minutes max.
  • Ask only essential questions: remove anything “nice to know.”
  • Explain the purpose: tell people why their feedback matters.
  • Offer an incentive: gift cards, raffle entry, discount, etc.
  • Send better reminders: 1–3 polite follow-ups work well.
  • Choose the right timing: send when people are most likely to respond.
  • Make it mobile-friendly: simple, fast, no clutter.
  • Use a trusted sender: recognizable name and subject line.
  • Personalize: use the recipient’s name and relevant context.
  • Reduce friction: avoid forced logins and unnecessary steps.

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. a survey email template,
  2. a follow-up reminder sequence, or
  3. a checklist to diagnose why your response rate is low.
How can I create surveys with branching logic? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use a survey tool that supports skip logic / branching logic. Good options:

  • Typeform — very easy branching, polished UI
  • SurveyMonkey — strong logic rules, good reporting
  • Jotform — flexible conditional logic and forms
  • Qualtrics — best for advanced research logic
  • Google Forms — basic branching, free, but limited

How it works:

  1. Create your questions.
  2. Mark answers that should send people to different follow-up questions.
  3. Set rules like:
    • If answer = “Yes,” go to Q5
    • If answer = “No,” end survey or go to another section
  4. Test every path before publishing.

Example:

  • Q1: “Do you own a car?”
    • Yes → ask about make/model
    • No → skip to public transit questions

If you want, I can recommend the best tool for your budget and use case.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use skip logic / branching so respondents see different questions based on earlier answers.

Basic setup
  1. Define your goal
    • What do you want to learn?
    • What answers should trigger a new path?
  2. Map the flow
    • Start with a simple flowchart:
      • Q1 → if Yes, show Q2–Q4
      • if No, skip to Q5
    • Keep each branch short.
  3. Write clear conditions
    • Example:
      • If age < 18 → end survey
      • If product used = “No” → skip usage questions
      • If satisfaction ≤ 3 → ask follow-up reason
  4. Build the survey
    • In your survey tool, add rules like:
      • “If answer is X, go to page Y”
      • “Show question only if condition is met”
  5. Test every path
    • Click through as different respondent types.
    • Check for dead ends, loops, and missing questions.
Good branching practices
  • Use one branching rule at a time when possible.
  • Keep branches short and relevant.
  • Avoid too many layers unless necessary.
  • Make sure every path eventually reaches a thank-you/end page.
Example

Q1: Have you used our app?

  • Yes → ask usage and satisfaction questions
  • No → ask why not and interest in trying it

If you want, I can also show you:

  • a sample branching survey flow
  • how to do this in Google Forms, Typeform, SurveyMonkey, or Qualtrics
How do I analyze survey results more easily? problem 110/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

To analyze survey results more easily, use a simple 4-step workflow:

  1. Clean the data
    • Remove duplicates, blanks, and junk responses.
    • Standardize open-text answers into categories.
  2. Use a survey tool with built-in reporting
    • Good options: SurveyMonkey, Typeform, Qualtrics, and Google Forms.
    • If you want easy charts and filters, SurveyMonkey is especially straightforward.
  3. Group answers into themes
    • For open-ended responses, tag them into buckets like “pricing,” “support,” or “product features.”
    • Tools like Airtable, Notion, or Dovetail can help organize themes fast.
  4. Visualize key patterns
    • Compare responses by segment: age, location, customer type, etc.
    • Use Excel, Google Sheets, or Microsoft Power BI for quick charts and dashboards.

Fastest setup:

  • Google Forms + Google Sheets for simple surveys
  • SurveyMonkey for better auto-analytics
  • Power BI if you need dashboards for bigger datasets

If you want, I can also give you a step-by-step survey analysis template in Excel or Google Sheets.

retrieval Mentioned

Use a simple workflow:

  1. Clean the data first
    • Remove blanks/duplicates
    • Standardize answers (“Yes” vs “yes”)
    • Group “Other” responses if needed
  2. Start with basic summaries
    • Counts and percentages for each answer
    • Average / median for rating questions
    • Top 3 and bottom 3 responses
  3. Use charts
    • Bar charts for multiple choice
    • Stacked bars for comparing groups
    • Histograms for ratings
    • Word clouds only for quick scans of open-ended text
  4. Break results into segments
    • Compare by age, location, customer type, etc.
    • Look for big differences between groups
  5. Code open-ended answers
    • Turn repeated themes into categories
    • Count how often each theme appears
  6. Look for patterns, not just totals
    • Which groups are most satisfied?
    • Which questions have the widest spread?
    • What changed compared with last survey?
  7. Use a spreadsheet or BI tool
    • Excel / Google Sheets for small surveys
    • Power BI / Tableau / Looker Studio for larger ones

If you want, I can also give you:

  • a step-by-step Excel method
  • a survey analysis template
  • or a Python script to automate it.
How can I send surveys to customers and track responses? problem
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Use a survey platform that can email customers and track results automatically.

Good options:

  • SurveyMonkey — easy email distribution, response tracking, dashboards
  • Typeform — nicer-looking surveys, good for feedback forms
  • Google Forms — free and simple, basic tracking
  • Qualtrics — best for larger teams and advanced analytics
  • Jotform — flexible forms, strong automation

How to do it:

  1. Create the survey in one of those tools.
  2. Send it by email using the tool’s built-in email feature or via your CRM.
  3. Track responses in the dashboard: opens, completions, drop-off, and individual replies.
  4. Connect to your CRM so responses link to each customer.

Best CRM + survey combos:

  • HubSpot + SurveyMonkey/Typeform
  • Salesforce + Qualtrics
  • Mailchimp + Typeform/Jotform

If you want automatic follow-up, use:

  • Zapier or Make to push responses into Google Sheets, Slack, or your CRM.

If you tell me your budget and what software you already use, I can recommend the best setup.

retrieval Mentioned

Use a survey tool plus a simple tracking setup.

Easy option

  • Build the survey in Google Forms, Typeform, SurveyMonkey, or Jotform
  • Send it by:
    • email
    • SMS
    • a website popup/link
    • post-purchase page
  • Track responses in the tool’s dashboard or export to Excel/Google Sheets

Best setup for tracking

  1. Give each customer a unique ID or email
  2. Add that ID to the survey link or embed it in the form
  3. Store responses in a spreadsheet or CRM
  4. Use tags/statuses like:
    • Sent
    • Opened
    • Completed
    • No response
  5. Set reminders for non-responders

If you want deeper tracking

  • Connect the survey tool to:
    • HubSpot
    • Salesforce
    • Airtable
    • Zapier/Make
  • This lets you automatically log responses to customer records

Good tools by use case

  • Google Forms: free, simple
  • Typeform: nicer UX, better completion rates
  • SurveyMonkey: strong reporting
  • Jotform: flexible and easy integrations
  • Airtable: good if you want survey data + workflow tracking

If you want, I can recommend the best setup based on your budget and whether you send surveys by email, SMS, or website.

How do I make a survey that works on mobile devices? problem 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

To make a survey that works well on mobile devices:

  • Use a mobile-first layout: one question per screen if possible.
  • Keep it short: aim for 5–10 questions max.
  • Use large tap targets: buttons, radio options, and checkboxes should be easy to tap.
  • Avoid long text entry: use multiple choice, dropdowns, and rating scales instead of open-ended questions when you can.
  • Keep questions short and simple: no dense paragraphs.
  • Use vertical scrolling only: avoid side-by-side layouts.
  • Test on real phones: iPhone and Android, both portrait and landscape.
  • Make forms responsive: if you’re building it yourself, use responsive design frameworks like Bootstrap or Tailwind CSS.
  • Use mobile-friendly survey tools: Typeform, Google Forms, SurveyMonkey, and Jotform all work well on phones. Typeform is especially good for one-question-at-a-time surveys.

Quick rule: if someone can answer it with one thumb in under 2 minutes, it’s probably mobile-friendly.

If you want, I can also give you a mobile survey checklist or a sample layout.

retrieval Not mentioned

To make a survey work well on mobile:

  • Keep it short: fewer questions, less scrolling.
  • Use one question per screen when possible.
  • Use large tap targets: buttons, checkboxes, and radio options should be easy to tap.
  • Prefer multiple choice over typing.
  • Use simple layouts: single column, no side-by-side fields.
  • Minimize text entry: if you need it, keep fields short and use the right keyboard type.
  • Avoid complex grids or long matrices.
  • Make progress clear: show a progress bar.
  • Test on real phones: iPhone and Android, small and large screens.
  • Keep fonts readable: at least 16px equivalent.
  • Don’t rely on hover or tiny dropdowns.

If you’re building it with a tool, good mobile-friendly options include Google Forms, Typeform, and SurveyMonkey.

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. a mobile survey checklist, or
  2. a sample mobile-optimized survey template.
How can I collect anonymous survey responses? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use a survey tool that supports anonymous responses and avoid collecting anything that can identify people.

Good options:

  • SurveyMonkey — enable anonymous responses and disable IP tracking.
  • Typeform — turn off “collect respondent data” and don’t ask for email.
  • Jotform — use anonymous form settings and avoid prefilled links.
  • Google Forms — works well if you don’t require sign-in and don’t ask for names/emails.
  • Qualtrics — strong anonymity controls for research surveys.

Best practices:

  • Don’t ask for names, emails, phone numbers, or employee IDs.
  • Don’t use logged-in links if you want anonymity.
  • Disable IP address collection and analytics tracking if possible.
  • Avoid open-ended questions that could reveal identity.
  • If offering incentives, use a separate form/link for prize entry.

If you want, I can recommend the best tool for your use case: workplace, customer feedback, or research.

retrieval Mentioned

Use these methods:

  • Don’t collect identifying fields: no name, email, phone, IP, or account login.
  • Turn off metadata: disable IP logging, location capture, and tracking cookies if possible.
  • Use anonymous survey tools: set the form to not record respondent identity.
  • Avoid unique links: don’t send individualized survey URLs if you want true anonymity.
  • Use a third-party collector: have responses routed through a neutral platform or mailbox.
  • Separate incentives from responses: if you need gift cards, collect contact info in a separate form.
  • Be transparent: tell respondents exactly what is and isn’t collected.

Common tools: Google Forms, Typeform, SurveyMonkey, Qualtrics, Microsoft Forms — but check each one’s anonymity settings carefully.

If you want, I can also tell you how to make responses anonymous in a specific tool.

How do I build a survey without coding? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use a no-code survey builder. Easiest options:

  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys
  • Google Forms — free and simple
  • Jotform — more flexible logic and payments
  • SurveyMonkey — solid for business surveys
  • Tally — lightweight and modern

Quick steps:

  1. Pick a tool.
  2. Choose a survey template.
  3. Add your questions.
  4. Set skip logic if needed.
  5. Customize branding.
  6. Share via link, email, or embed.
  7. Review responses in the dashboard.

If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your use case: customer feedback, employee survey, event RSVP, or research.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use a no-code survey builder.

Simple path:

  1. Pick a tool: Google Forms, Typeform, Jotform, SurveyMonkey, or Tally.
  2. Start a new form.
  3. Add question types:
    • Multiple choice
    • Checkboxes
    • Short answer
    • Rating / scale
    • Dropdown
  4. Set logic if needed:
    • “If yes, show next question”
    • Branch to different pages
  5. Customize branding:
    • Logo, colors, intro text
  6. Test it.
  7. Share by link, email, or embed on a website.
  8. Review responses in the dashboard or export to CSV/Google Sheets.

Best choices:

  • Google Forms: free, easiest
  • Typeform: best-looking, conversational
  • Jotform: most flexible
  • SurveyMonkey: good for more formal research
  • Tally: simple and modern

Good survey tips:

  • Keep it short
  • Ask one thing per question
  • Use mostly multiple choice
  • Avoid leading wording
  • Test on mobile

If you want, I can recommend the best tool for your use case and walk you through creating your first survey.

How can I share surveys with a team for review? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

The easiest way is to use a survey tool with collaboration/review features.

Good options
  • SurveyMonkey — use Collaborate or share a preview link
  • Typeform — share a view-only form link and invite teammates to edit
  • Qualtrics — use user permissions and shared projects
  • Jotform — add collaborators and use approval workflows
  • Google Forms — share the form for editing or send a preview link for review
Typical workflow
  1. Build the survey
  2. Generate a preview/share link
  3. Invite teammates as collaborators if they need to edit
  4. Use comments/notes for feedback
  5. Lock the final version before sending to respondents
Best practice
  • Give reviewers view-only access unless they should edit
  • Use a draft version and a final version
  • Collect feedback in one place, like Google Docs comments or your survey tool’s notes

If you tell me which platform you’re using, I can give exact steps.

retrieval Not mentioned

A simple workflow:

  1. Create the survey draft
    • Build the survey in your survey tool.
  2. Add teammates as collaborators
    • Invite them by email, or use a shared workspace/team account.
    • Give view, comment, or edit access depending on what you want reviewed.
  3. Use a review link
    • Share a preview link so teammates can test the survey before it goes live.
    • Prefer a link that won’t collect real responses.
  4. Collect feedback in one place
    • Ask reviewers to leave comments directly in the survey platform, or use a shared doc/checklist for notes.
    • If possible, assign reviewers sections like wording, logic, branding, and mobile usability.
  5. Finalize and launch
    • Make edits, re-share the preview, then publish when approved.

If you tell me which survey platform you’re using (Google Forms, Typeform, SurveyMonkey, Qualtrics, etc.), I can give exact steps.

How do I create a survey with templates? problem 1,300/mo
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use a survey platform with built-in templates. Good options: Typeform, SurveyMonkey, Google Forms, and Jotform.

Basic steps
  1. Sign in to the survey tool.
  2. Click Create survey / New form.
  3. Choose a template (e.g., customer feedback, event registration, employee pulse).
  4. Edit questions to fit your needs.
  5. Customize branding (logo, colors, fonts).
  6. Set logic/branching if needed.
  7. Preview the survey.
  8. Publish and share the link.
Quick brand picks
  • Typeform — best for polished, interactive surveys
  • SurveyMonkey — best for business surveys and analytics
  • Google Forms — free and simple
  • Jotform — lots of templates and form features

If you want, I can give you step-by-step instructions for one specific tool.

retrieval Mentioned

Usually:

  1. Open your survey tool.
  2. Click New survey / Create form.
  3. Choose Template or Use a template.
  4. Pick a survey template like customer feedback, event satisfaction, or employee pulse.
  5. Edit the questions, branding, and settings.
  6. Preview it.
  7. Share or publish.

If you want, I can give step-by-step instructions for a specific tool like Google Forms, Typeform, SurveyMonkey, or Microsoft Forms.

How can I get better reporting from survey data? problem 10/mo
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

To get better reporting from survey data, focus on cleaner design, better analysis, and clearer visualization.

1) Make the survey easier to report on
  • Use consistent answer scales (e.g., 1–5 Likert) across questions.
  • Avoid vague wording and double-barreled questions.
  • Add required demographic or segmentation fields only if you’ll actually report by them.
2) Plan the reporting before you collect data
  • Define the KPIs you want: satisfaction, NPS, intent, awareness, etc.
  • Decide in advance which cuts matter: by region, customer type, tenure, product, etc.
  • Create a simple codebook for open-ended responses and categories.
3) Clean the data first
  • Remove duplicate, incomplete, or obviously low-quality responses.
  • Standardize free-text answers into consistent groups.
  • Watch for small sample sizes in subgroups so you don’t overstate results.
4) Use stronger analysis than simple averages
  • Show distributions, not just mean scores.
  • Compare segments side by side.
  • Use cross-tabs, confidence intervals, and significance tests when relevant.
  • For open ends, do sentiment analysis and theme coding.
5) Present results visually
  • Use bar charts, stacked bars, and trend lines instead of tables alone.
  • Highlight top 3 insights and 3 actions.
  • Keep charts labeled clearly and avoid clutter.
6) Turn findings into decisions
  • Pair every key finding with a recommendation.
  • Show what changed since the last survey.
  • Track metrics over time so reporting becomes a trend story, not a one-time snapshot.
Tools that help
  • Qualtrics or SurveyMonkey for collection and built-in reporting
  • Tableau or Power BI for dashboards
  • Airtable or Google Sheets for quick cleaning/coding
  • Dovetail for qualitative/open-ended analysis

If you want, I can give you a survey reporting template or a dashboard structure you can use right away.

retrieval Not mentioned

To get better reporting from survey data:

  1. Start with the decision
    • Ask: What will this report help someone do?
    • Avoid reporting everything; focus on what matters.
  2. Use a clear structure
    • Purpose
    • Method/sample
    • Top findings
    • Breakdowns by key groups
    • Action items
    • Limitations
  3. Report more than averages
    • Show percentages, distributions, and trends
    • Break results out by segment (age, role, region, customer type, etc.)
  4. Include base sizes
    • Always show how many responses each result is based on.
    • Small samples can mislead.
  5. Use plain language
    • Translate stats into takeaways:
      • “62% were satisfied” → “Most respondents were satisfied, but one-third were not.”
  6. Use good visuals
    • Bar charts for comparisons
    • Stacked bars for response distributions
    • Line charts for trends over time
    • Avoid cluttered pie charts unless there are very few categories
  7. Highlight significance carefully
    • If you compare groups, note whether differences are likely meaningful.
    • Don’t overstate small gaps.
  8. Separate facts from interpretation
    • “Survey scores dropped 8 points.”
    • “This may reflect service delays.”
    • Keep the data and the hypothesis distinct.
  9. Show context
    • Compare with prior waves, benchmarks, or targets.
    • A number alone is less useful than a number with context.
  10. Make the report action-oriented
    • End each section with:
      • What this means
      • What to do next

If you want, I can also give you:

  • a survey reporting template
  • a dashboard structure
  • or a sample executive summary for survey results.
What is the best free survey platform? transactional 480/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best free survey platform: Google Forms

Why it’s the best free option:

  • Completely free
  • Unlimited surveys/responses
  • Easy to use
  • Auto-saves to Google Sheets
  • Great for most basic-to-medium survey needs

Best alternatives:

  • Microsoft Forms — best if you use Microsoft 365 / Outlook
  • Jotform Free — best for more polished forms and templates
  • SurveyMonkey Free — good for simple surveys, but the free plan is very limited
  • Typeform Free — best-looking surveys, but free plan is restrictive

Quick pick:

  • Most people: Google Forms
  • Best design: Typeform
  • Best for business workflow: Jotform
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Forms

If you want, I can also recommend the best free survey platform for customer feedback, employee surveys, or academic research.

retrieval Mentioned

Best overall free survey platform: Tally. Its free plan is unusually generous: unlimited forms, submissions, and questions, plus advanced features like conditional logic, file uploads, payments, and integrations. (tally.so)

Best if you want the simplest, most familiar option: Google Forms. It’s the classic no-cost choice for basic surveys and works well for quick internal or general-purpose forms. (techradar.com)

Best if you’re already in Microsoft 365: Microsoft Forms. It’s a lightweight survey tool built into the Microsoft ecosystem. (support.microsoft.com)

If you want, I can give you a “best free survey platform” by use case (simple poll, research survey, customer feedback, anonymous responses, etc.).

How much do survey platforms cost? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Survey platform costs vary a lot, but here’s the typical range:

  • Free: basic plans with limits
    • Google Forms: free
    • SurveyMonkey Basic: free, but very limited
    • Typeform Free: free, limited responses
  • Low-cost SMB plans: about $15–$50/month
    • Jotform: around $34/month for popular paid tiers
    • Typeform: often starts around $25/month
    • SurveyMonkey Individual: usually around $30+/month
  • Mid-range business plans: about $50–$200/month
    • Qualtrics: usually custom pricing, often hundreds to thousands per month
    • QuestionPro: business plans often in this range
    • Alchemer: typically quote-based, commonly mid-to-high range
  • Enterprise: custom pricing
    • Qualtrics
    • Medallia
    • Alchemer Enterprise

What drives cost:

  • number of responses
  • number of users
  • advanced logic/reporting
  • integrations (Salesforce, HubSpot, Slack, etc.)
  • branding/custom domain
  • enterprise security/admin features

If you want, I can compare Google Forms vs Typeform vs SurveyMonkey vs Qualtrics by price and features.

retrieval Mentioned

Survey platforms range from free to custom enterprise pricing. For self-serve tools, you’ll often see entry plans around $39–$129/month: Typeform’s Basic starts at $39/mo, Business at $129/mo; SurveyMonkey offers a free plan plus paid individual/team/enterprise tiers; Jotform has a free Starter plan and paid plans starting at $39/month; Formstack’s Forms plan starts at $83/month billed annually. (typeform.com)

For more advanced research platforms, pricing is higher: Qualtrics’ self-serve Strategic Research starts at $420/month billed annually for 1,000 responses. Google Forms is included with Google Workspace, which starts at $7/user/month for Starter. (qualtrics.com)

Rule of thumb:

  • Free/basic: $0
  • Small business: ~$30–$130/month
  • Team/pro: ~$80–$500+/month
  • Enterprise: custom pricing (surveymonkey.com)

If you want, I can compare the cheapest good option, best for teams, or best for customer feedback.

Are there survey platforms with a free plan? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Yes — several survey platforms offer free plans.

Good options:

  • Google Forms — free, simple, unlimited surveys for most basic use
  • SurveyMonkey — free plan, but limited responses and features
  • Typeform — free tier, polished forms, limited responses/month
  • Jotform — free plan, good for forms and surveys, limited submissions
  • Microsoft Forms — free with a Microsoft account, basic surveys
  • Zoho Survey — free plan with response limits
  • Tally — generous free plan, popular for simple surveys

If you want, I can recommend the best free one based on your use case:

  • simple questionnaires
  • customer feedback
  • market research
  • event registration
  • anonymous surveys
retrieval Not mentioned

Yes — a few popular ones have free plans:

  • Google Forms — free to use with a Google account. (support.google.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — offers a Basic (free) plan with limited questions and response limits. (surveymonkey.com)
  • Typeform — has a Free plan for simple surveys/questionnaires. (help.typeform.com)
  • Jotform — has a Starter (free) plan with usage limits. (jotform.com)

If you want, I can also recommend the best free one for your use case (school, customer feedback, anonymous surveys, etc.).

What survey platform offers the best value for money? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best value for money overall: Jotform

Why:

  • Strong free/low-cost plans
  • Easy to build forms and surveys
  • Good templates, logic, and integrations
  • More flexible than many “survey-only” tools for the price

Good alternatives by use case:

  • Best for simple, polished surveys: Typeform — great UX, but pricier
  • Best budget open-source option: LimeSurvey — excellent value if you can self-host
  • Best for enterprise research: Qualtrics — powerful, but expensive
  • Best all-around classic survey tool: SurveyMonkey — solid, but value depends on plan

If you want, I can also give you the best value pick for your exact use case (customer feedback, employee surveys, market research, lead gen, etc.).

retrieval Not mentioned

Best value for money: Zoho Survey for most paid users. It has a free plan, multiple paid tiers, no setup fees, and 24/5 support for all users; Zoho also positions its plans as “pocket friendly” and its survey pricing page emphasizes scalable, lower-cost tiers. (zoho.com)

Best free option: Google Forms. Google says Forms is available for personal use for free, so if you just need basic surveys, it’s hard to beat on price. (google.com)

Worth paying more for design/UX: Typeform—but it’s usually not the best value. Typeform offers a free plan and annual discounts, but it’s generally a premium choice rather than a budget one. (typeform.com)

If you need more features and integrations: Jotform is strong, and Jotform itself says its Silver plan “provides the best value for small to mid-tier businesses.” (jotform.com)

Quick take:

  • Lowest cost: Google Forms
  • Best overall paid value: Zoho Survey
  • Best for richer form workflows: Jotform
  • Best-looking surveys: Typeform (google.com)

If you want, I can give you a 3-way pick based on your use case: employee surveys, customer feedback, or academic research.

Which survey platforms have affordable monthly pricing? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are survey platforms that are usually considered affordable on monthly plans:

  • Google FormsFree with Google account; best if you just need basic surveys.
  • Jotform — Starts around $34/month; lots of templates and form logic.
  • SurveyPlanet — Starts around $20/month; strong value for simple survey use.
  • forms.app — Starts around $25/month; good for forms, surveys, and workflows.
  • Typeform — Starts around $25/month; polished, but can get pricey as you scale.
  • SurveyMonkey — Starts around $25/month; familiar brand, decent for business surveys.

Best budget picks:

  • Google Forms if free is enough
  • SurveyPlanet for low-cost paid surveys
  • forms.app for a good feature-to-price balance

If you want, I can narrow this down by budget, team size, or must-have features like skip logic, branding, or exports.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best budget-friendly survey platforms with monthly options:

  • Zoho Survey — has a free tier and monthly billing. The free plan allows 3 surveys, 10 questions/survey, and 100 responses/survey/month. (zoho.com)
  • Jotform — has a free Starter plan and paid monthly or yearly subscriptions; Jotform says Bronze is the lowest-priced paid plan. (jotform.com)
  • Typeform — monthly pricing starts at $29/month for Basic, then $59/month for Plus and $99/month for Business. (typeform.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — offers a Standard Monthly plan; it’s the only monthly option they currently list, and other plans are annual-only. (help.surveymonkey.com)
  • Qualtrics — has a self-serve Strategic Research plan at $420/month, so it’s usually not the budget pick. (qualtrics.com)

If you want the cheapest overall, start with Zoho Survey or Jotform. If you want the cheapest paid monthly plan with a polished UI, Typeform Basic is the clearest entry point. (zoho.com)

If you want, I can rank these by cheapest, best features, or best for small businesses.

What are the cheapest survey platforms for small businesses? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For small businesses, the cheapest survey platforms are usually:

  1. Google FormsFree
    • Best if you just need simple surveys
    • Unlimited responses, easy to use
    • Weak on branding and advanced logic
  2. Microsoft FormsFree with Microsoft 365, otherwise limited free use
    • Good for basic internal surveys
    • Clean and simple
    • Not ideal for customer-facing branded surveys
  3. JotformFree plan available
    • Better design than Google Forms
    • Good templates and integrations
    • Free plan is limited in submissions
  4. SurveyMonkeyFree tier available
    • Well-known and easy to share
    • Free version is quite limited
    • Paid plans get expensive fast
  5. TypeformFree plan available
    • Very polished and user-friendly
    • Great for lead gen and customer feedback
    • More expensive than most once you upgrade
  6. TallyFree tier is very generous
    • One of the best budget picks
    • Simple, modern, and often enough for small businesses
    • Great value compared with bigger brands

Best cheap picks overall:

  • Lowest cost: Google Forms
  • Best free + business-friendly: Tally
  • Best if you want nicer forms: Jotform
  • Best for simple internal use: Microsoft Forms

If you want, I can also give you a ranked list by price, or a best survey tool for customer feedback, employee surveys, or lead capture.

retrieval Not mentioned

Cheapest options for small businesses, in practice:

  1. Google Forms — usually the cheapest if you already use Google Workspace, since Forms is included in Workspace plans. (workspace.google.com)
  2. Formplus — has a free forever plan; paid plans start at $20/year billed yearly. (workspace.google.com)
  3. Jotform — has a free plan and paid plans above that. (workspace.google.com)
  4. Form Maker (Google Forms add-on) — basic features are free; premium starts at $2.50/month. (workspace.google.com)

If you want, I can also rank these by best value for small business, not just lowest price.

Which survey platforms offer unlimited responses? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

A few survey platforms offer unlimited responses, usually on paid plans or self-hosted setups:

  • SurveyMonkey — some plans allow unlimited responses on paid annual plans.
  • Typeform — higher-tier plans can include unlimited responses.
  • Jotform — paid plans offer unlimited submissions on some tiers.
  • Tally — the Pro plan is known for unlimited responses.
  • Google Forms — effectively unlimited responses for free.
  • Microsoft Forms — also generally unlimited responses with Microsoft 365.
  • LimeSurvey — self-hosted, so unlimited responses if your server can handle it.
  • Qualtrics — enterprise pricing; can support very high / unlimited response volumes depending on contract.

If you want, I can narrow this down to free tools only, best for business, or best for anonymous surveys.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean no response cap at all, good options include:

  • Youform — free plan includes unlimited responses. (youform.com)
  • Formberry — free forever plan includes unlimited responses. (formberry.io)
  • Formbricks (self-hosted Community Edition) — unlimited surveys and unlimited responses. (formbricks.com)
  • Google Forms — effectively unlimited, but constrained by Google storage/Drive limits rather than a fixed response cap. (techradar.com)

If you mean on paid plans, SurveyMonkey advertises unlimited responses on some offerings like Audience projects, but its standard plans still have response limits. (surveymonkey.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down to best free options, best for business, or best for advanced logic.

Do survey platforms have free trial options? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Yes—many survey platforms offer free plans, free trials, or both.

Examples:

  • SurveyMonkey — free basic plan; paid plans unlock more responses/features
  • Typeform — free plan with limited forms/responses
  • Jotform — free tier for small-scale surveys
  • Qualtrics — usually demo/trial via sales, not a typical self-serve free plan
  • Google Forms — free with a Google account

If you want, I can also recommend the best free survey platform based on your use case.

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes—many survey platforms offer free plans and/or free trials. For example, SurveyMonkey has a permanently free Basic plan, Qualtrics offers a free account plus a free trial for paid features, Typeform says you can get started for free, and Jotform lets you create surveys for free. (surveymonkey.com)

Commonly, the free option is limited by things like:

  • number of responses,
  • question types,
  • branding/customization,
  • advanced logic or analytics. (surveymonkey.com)

If you want, I can compare the best free survey platforms for your use case.

What survey platforms are worth paying for? transactional 320/mo
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are the paid survey platforms I’d actually consider worth the money:

  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise-grade research, advanced logic, dashboards, and governance. Expensive, but the most powerful.
  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around for most teams. Easy to use, solid analytics, good brand recognition.
  • Typeform — best for sleek, high-converting surveys and lead capture. Great UX, weaker for heavy research.
  • Alchemer — best if you want more control than SurveyMonkey without going full enterprise. Strong for customer feedback and internal surveys.
  • QuestionPro — good value for robust features, especially if you need research tools on a lower budget than Qualtrics.
  • Jotform — best if you want forms plus surveys, payments, and automation in one tool.
  • LimeSurvey — best if you want self-hosted/open-source and more privacy/control.

If you’re asking for the best value:

  • SurveyMonkey for general use
  • Typeform for polished customer-facing surveys
  • QuestionPro for feature-per-dollar
  • Qualtrics only if you need serious research or enterprise reporting

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. the best survey platform by use case, or
  2. a cheap-to-expensive ranking.
retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean survey-building software, these are the ones usually worth paying for:

  • Qualtrics — best for serious research / enterprise. It’s built for advanced survey work, and pricing starts at $420/month for its online offer; it also offers a free basic account. (qualtrics.com)
  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around value. Paid plans add unlimited surveys/questions, AI survey creation, market-research methods, SMS, and offline collection. (surveymonkey.com)
  • Typeform — best if design and response experience matter. Paid plans start at $25/month billed yearly (or $29/month monthly), and it’s strong for customer feedback, lead gen, and branded forms. (typeform.com)
  • Jotform — best budget-friendly option. It has a free Starter plan, then Bronze/Silver/Gold/Enterprise; it’s especially good if you want forms + surveys + workflow features in one place. (jotform.com)

My quick take:

  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey
  • Best premium research tool: Qualtrics
  • Best-looking surveys: Typeform
  • Best value: Jotform

If you tell me your use case—customer feedback, market research, employee engagement, or lead gen—I can narrow it to 1–2 best picks.

Which survey platform plans include reporting and analytics? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Most major survey platforms include reporting and analytics in paid plans, not the free tier.

Examples:

  • SurveyMonkeyStandard, Advantage, Premier, Team Advantage, Team Premier
  • TypeformBasic, Plus, Business, Enterprise
  • JotformBronze, Silver, Gold, Enterprise
  • QualtricsCore/Professional and Enterprise plans
  • Google Formsno built-in advanced analytics plans; basic summaries only

If you want, I can make a side-by-side list of the best survey platforms with reporting/analytics included.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean the big survey tools:

  • SurveyMonkey: the FLEX plan explicitly includes “powerful analysis tools” plus robust reporting and export; higher business plans also include reporting/analysis features. (uk.surveymonkey.com)
  • Typeform: reporting is available on Basic and above; analytics/integration-style analytics like Google Analytics are on Business and above. (help.typeform.com)
  • Qualtrics: even the free account has reporting features, while the Strategic Research trial adds advanced analytics like Text iQ and Stats iQ. (qualtrics.com)

If you want, I can turn this into a quick by-platform comparison table.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best survey platforms for businesses? 210/mo
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms for businesses, by use case:

  • Qualtrics — best overall for enterprise needs, advanced analytics, and customer/employee experience programs.
  • SurveyMonkey — best for easy business surveys, quick setup, and broad feature coverage.
  • Typeform — best for beautiful, conversational surveys and higher response rates.
  • QuestionPro — best value for robust business features, including research and employee surveys.
  • Jotform — best if you want surveys plus forms, payments, and workflow automation.
  • Google Forms — best free option for simple internal surveys.
  • Zoho Survey — best for businesses already using Zoho products.
  • Alchemer — best for customizable, enterprise-grade survey workflows.
Quick picks
  • Small business: SurveyMonkey or Jotform
  • Enterprise: Qualtrics or Alchemer
  • Marketing/customer feedback: Typeform or Qualtrics
  • Budget-friendly: Zoho Survey or Google Forms
  • Research-heavy teams: QuestionPro or Qualtrics

If you want, I can also give you the best platform for your specific business size and budget.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best survey platforms for businesses, depending on what you need:

  • Qualtrics — Best overall for enterprise-grade research, employee experience, and customer experience. Very powerful analytics, branching, and reporting.
  • SurveyMonkey Enterprise — Best for easy business surveys, quick deployment, and broad team use. Good balance of simplicity and features.
  • Typeform — Best for polished, conversational surveys and lead capture. Great UX and higher completion rates.
  • Google Forms — Best free/basic option for simple internal surveys. Easy, but limited branding and analytics.
  • Jotform — Best for flexible forms and surveys with strong automation, payment, and workflow features.
  • QuestionPro — Best for advanced survey logic, research, and feedback programs at a lower cost than some enterprise tools.
  • Zoho Survey — Best if you already use Zoho CRM or Zoho One. Strong value and good integrations.
  • Alchemer — Best for customizable business surveys and deeper data workflows.
Quick picks
  • Best for large companies: Qualtrics
  • Best for SMBs: SurveyMonkey or Zoho Survey
  • Best for design/engagement: Typeform
  • Best free option: Google Forms
  • Best for workflows/automation: Jotform

If you tell me your business size and use case (customer feedback, employee surveys, market research, etc.), I can narrow it to the top 3.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best survey platforms for businesses, depending on your needs:

  • Qualtrics — Best for enterprise-grade research, advanced analytics, and customer experience programs.
  • SurveyMonkey Enterprise — Best all-around choice for teams that want easy setup, strong templates, and broad business use.
  • Typeform — Best for sleek, conversational surveys and higher completion rates.
  • Google Forms — Best free/basic option for simple internal surveys and quick data collection.
  • Jotform — Best for highly customizable forms with payments, workflows, and integrations.
  • Alchemer — Best for organizations that need flexible survey logic and more control than basic tools.
  • Zoho Survey — Best value for businesses already using Zoho products.
  • Microsoft Forms — Best for companies using Microsoft 365 and Teams.
  • QuestionPro — Best for robust market research and employee/customer feedback.
  • Delighted — Best for NPS, CSAT, and quick customer feedback loops.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey Enterprise
  • Best enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Best design/UX: Typeform
  • Best free: Google Forms
  • Best for workflows: Jotform

If you want, I can also give you the best survey platforms by business size or by use case (employee feedback, market research, NPS, etc.).

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms for businesses, depending on what you need:

  • Qualtrics — Best for enterprise research and advanced analytics

Strongest for complex surveys, employee/customer experience programs, branching logic, and reporting.

  • SurveyMonkey — Best all-around for SMBs

Easy to use, good templates, solid distribution options, and quick setup.

  • Typeform — Best for beautiful, high-response surveys

Great if you want conversational, mobile-friendly forms that feel more engaging.

  • Google Forms — Best free/basic option

Simple, reliable, and good for lightweight internal surveys.

  • Jotform — Best for form-heavy workflows

More flexible than many survey tools, with lots of integrations and payment/approval features.

  • Microsoft Forms — Best for Microsoft 365 teams

Simple and convenient if your business already lives in Teams/Excel/SharePoint.

  • Alchemer — Best for customizable business surveys

Strong logic, branding, and data collection features for mid-market teams.

  • Zoho Survey — Best value for Zoho users

Affordable and integrates well with the Zoho ecosystem.

If you want the short answer:

  • Best overall for businesses: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Best for engagement/design: Typeform

If you want, I can also give you a best-by-use-case shortlist (employee surveys, customer feedback, NPS, market research, internal HR, etc.).

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms for businesses, by use case:

Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best for enterprise-grade research, customer experience, and employee feedback
  • Strong analytics, logic, reporting, and integrations
  • Good if you need serious depth and scale
Best for ease of use: SurveyMonkey
  • Fast to launch, easy to share
  • Great templates and decent reporting
  • Best for SMBs and general business surveys
Best for workflow automation: Typeform
  • Beautiful, conversational surveys that boost completion rates
  • Great for lead gen, onboarding, and customer feedback
  • Strong integrations with HubSpot, Slack, Zapier, etc.
Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Forms
  • Simple, free/low-cost, and tightly integrated with Microsoft 365
  • Best for internal surveys, quick polls, and basic feedback
Best for advanced customer feedback: Delighted (by Qualtrics)
  • Excellent for NPS, CSAT, and CES
  • Very easy to deploy across email, web, and SMS
  • Best for product and customer experience teams
Best for Google Workspace users: Google Forms
  • Free and simple
  • Great for basic internal surveys
  • Limited branding and analytics, but solid for simple needs
Best for research-heavy teams: QuestionPro
  • Strong survey logic, panel access, and research tools
  • Good balance between power and affordability
Quick recommendation
  • Enterprise: Qualtrics
  • SMB/general use: SurveyMonkey
  • Best UX/design: Typeform
  • Customer experience/NPS: Delighted
  • Simple free option: Google Forms or Microsoft Forms

If you want, I can also give you the best survey platform by budget, team size, or industry.

What are the top survey platform options for customer feedback? 30/mo
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Top survey platforms for customer feedback:

  1. Qualtrics CustomerXM

Best for enterprise-grade customer experience programs, advanced analytics, and closed-loop feedback.

  1. Medallia Experience Cloud

Strong for omnichannel feedback, contact center insights, and large-scale CX teams.

  1. SurveyMonkey Enterprise

Easy to use, fast to deploy, good for general customer satisfaction surveys and team workflows.

  1. Typeform

Best for conversational, high-response-rate surveys with a polished user experience.

  1. Jotform

Very flexible for forms and surveys, with lots of templates and integrations.

  1. Zendesk Surveys / NPS

Great if you already use Zendesk for support and want simple post-ticket feedback.

  1. Delighted by Qualtrics

Excellent for NPS, CSAT, and CES with quick setup and automated follow-ups.

  1. AskNicely

Strong for frontline customer feedback, NPS programs, and action-focused workflows.

If you want, I can also rank these by best for small business, best for enterprise, or best value.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Top survey platforms for customer feedback:

  1. SurveyMonkey

Best all-around choice for quick customer surveys, NPS, and basic reporting.

  1. Qualtrics CustomerXM

Best for enterprise-level customer experience programs and deep analytics.

  1. Typeform

Best for beautifully designed, conversational surveys that get higher completion rates.

  1. Jotform

Best for flexible forms/surveys with lots of templates and integrations.

  1. Delighted

Best for simple NPS, CSAT, and CES feedback collection.

  1. Google Forms

Best free option for basic feedback collection.

  1. GetFeedback

Strong choice for Salesforce users and customer experience teams.

  1. SurveySparrow

Good for conversational surveys and recurring customer feedback.

If you want, I can also narrow these down by budget, ease of use, or enterprise features.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best survey platforms for customer feedback:

  1. Qualtrics

Best for: enterprise-grade customer experience programs Strengths: powerful analytics, advanced logic, strong reporting, great for NPS/CSAT tracking.

  1. SurveyMonkey

Best for: easy, general-purpose customer surveys Strengths: simple to use, widely known, good templates, solid integrations.

  1. Typeform

Best for: engaging, conversational surveys Strengths: beautiful UI, higher completion rates, great for web/mobile feedback forms.

  1. Delighted

Best for: fast NPS, CSAT, and CES collection Strengths: very easy setup, customer-feedback focused, good for lightweight programs.

  1. Zendesk Survey / Zendesk QA tools

Best for: support teams already using Zendesk Strengths: strong ticketing integration, good for post-support feedback loops.

  1. HubSpot Service Hub

Best for: businesses using HubSpot CRM Strengths: built-in feedback surveys, CRM tie-in, easy automation.

  1. Jotform

Best for: customizable forms and surveys Strengths: flexible, lots of templates, good conditional logic, easy embedding.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best easy option: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design/UX: Typeform
  • Best for NPS: Delighted

If you want, I can also narrow these down by budget, company size, or need for NPS/CSAT.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Top survey platforms for customer feedback:

  1. Qualtrics CustomerXM

Best for enterprise feedback programs, CX dashboards, and advanced analytics.

  1. SurveyMonkey

Best all-around option for quick customer surveys, NPS, and easy sharing.

  1. Typeform

Best for beautiful, conversational surveys with higher response rates.

  1. Medallia

Best for large companies needing omnichannel customer experience management.

  1. Delighted (by Qualtrics)

Best for simple NPS, CSAT, and CES surveys with fast setup.

  1. Jotform

Best for flexible forms/surveys with lots of templates and integrations.

  1. Google Forms

Best free/basic option for simple customer feedback collection.

  1. Alchemer

Best for mid-market teams that want more control than SurveyMonkey.

If you want, I can also rank these by best for small business, enterprise, or lowest cost.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are strong survey platforms for customer feedback, depending on what you need:

  1. Qualtrics CustomerXM

Best for enterprise-grade customer experience programs, deep analytics, and automation.

  1. SurveyMonkey

Great all-around choice for simple customer surveys, NPS, and fast deployment.

  1. Typeform

Best for polished, conversational surveys with high completion rates and strong design.

  1. Google Forms

Free and easy for basic feedback collection, but limited in analytics and branding.

  1. Jotform

Good if you want more customization, form logic, and integrations without enterprise pricing.

  1. Hotjar

Better for in-product or website feedback, with polls, surveys, and user behavior tools.

  1. Delighted

Excellent for NPS, CSAT, and CES customer feedback with simple, focused workflows.

  1. Zoho Survey

Solid budget-friendly option with decent reporting and Zoho ecosystem integration.

If you want, I can also rank these by:

  • best for small businesses
  • best for enterprise
  • best for NPS/customer satisfaction
  • best value for money
What are the most popular survey platforms right now?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

The most popular survey platforms right now are:

  • SurveyMonkey — very common for general business and market research
  • Qualtrics — top choice for enterprise CX, employee, and academic research
  • Google Forms — free, simple, and widely used for basic surveys
  • Typeform — popular for polished, conversational surveys and lead capture
  • Microsoft Forms — common in schools and Microsoft 365 organizations
  • Jotform — flexible forms/surveys with lots of templates and integrations
  • Alchemer (formerly SurveyGizmo) — strong for business survey workflows
  • Zoho Survey — good value, especially for Zoho users
  • LimeSurvey — popular open-source option
  • Tally — newer, fast-growing, and loved for simple, modern forms

If you want, I can also break these down by best free, best for business, best for research, or best for customer feedback.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

The most popular survey platforms right now are:

  • SurveyMonkey — very widely used for general business surveys
  • Google Forms — free, simple, and ubiquitous for basic surveys
  • Qualtrics — top choice for enterprise, research, and customer experience
  • Typeform — popular for sleek, conversational forms and surveys
  • Microsoft Forms — common in schools and companies using Microsoft 365
  • Jotform — flexible forms/surveys with lots of templates and integrations
  • SurveySparrow — known for chat-like surveys and customer feedback
  • Zoho Survey — solid option for teams already using Zoho tools
  • Alchemer (formerly SurveyGizmo) — popular for more advanced survey needs
  • QuestionPro — used for market research and employee/customer feedback

If you want, I can also rank these by:

  • best free option
  • best for business
  • best for research
  • best for beautiful design
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

The most popular survey platforms right now are:

  • SurveyMonkey — the classic all-around choice for business surveys
  • Qualtrics — very popular for enterprise research and CX
  • Google Forms — free, simple, widely used
  • Typeform — known for polished, conversational surveys
  • Jotform — flexible forms + surveys, lots of integrations
  • Microsoft Forms — common in schools and Microsoft 365 teams
  • Zoho Survey — popular with small/medium businesses
  • Alchemer (formerly SurveyGizmo) — strong for custom business surveys
  • QuestionPro — used for market research and customer feedback
  • LimeSurvey — open-source option for self-hosting

If you want, I can also rank these by best free option, best for business, or best for market research.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

The most popular survey platforms right now are:

  • SurveyMonkey — the classic all-purpose survey tool; very widely used
  • Qualtrics — popular for enterprise, research, and customer experience
  • Google Forms — free and simple, common for basic surveys
  • Typeform — known for beautiful, conversational surveys
  • Microsoft Forms — popular with Microsoft 365 users and schools
  • Jotform — flexible forms/surveys with lots of integrations
  • Zoho Survey — good for businesses already using Zoho
  • Alchemer (formerly SurveyGizmo) — strong for custom business surveys
  • QuestionPro — popular for advanced survey and research needs
  • SurveySparrow — modern, chat-style survey experience

If you want, I can also rank these by best for business, best for free use, or best for research.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

The most popular survey platforms right now are:

  • SurveyMonkey — probably the most widely recognized general-purpose survey tool
  • Google Forms — free, simple, and very common for basic surveys
  • Typeform — popular for sleek, conversational surveys and forms
  • Qualtrics — big in enterprise, research, and customer experience
  • Microsoft Forms — common in schools and Microsoft 365 organizations
  • Jotform — flexible forms/surveys with lots of templates
  • Zoho Survey — popular with small and mid-size businesses
  • SurveySparrow — known for chat-style surveys and automation
  • Alchemer (formerly SurveyGizmo) — strong for business and advanced survey workflows
  • QuestionPro — used for market research and feedback programs

If you want, I can also rank them by:

  1. best overall,
  2. best free options, or
  3. best for business/enterprise.
Which survey platforms are most recommended for teams?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

For teams, the most commonly recommended survey platforms are:

  • Qualtrics XM — best for large teams/enterprise, advanced workflows, analytics, and permissions
  • SurveyMonkey Teams — strong all-around choice, easy collaboration, templates, and admin controls
  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys and good team sharing
  • Google Forms — simplest and cheapest option, fine for basic internal surveys
  • Jotform — good if you want more form-style flexibility, approvals, and integrations
  • Microsoft Forms — best for teams already using Microsoft 365

Best picks by need:

  • Enterprise / research-heavy teams: Qualtrics
  • General business teams: SurveyMonkey Teams
  • Design-friendly surveys: Typeform
  • Budget/basic use: Google Forms
  • Microsoft ecosystem: Microsoft Forms

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or analytics.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For teams, the most commonly recommended survey platforms are:

  • Qualtrics — best for larger teams and enterprise research; strong collaboration, logic, reporting, and admin controls.
  • SurveyMonkey Teams — solid all-around choice for business teams; easy to share, collaborate, and analyze results.
  • Typeform — best for polished, high-response forms and surveys; great UX, lighter on deep analytics.
  • Alchemer — strong for teams that want flexible workflows, permissions, and more advanced survey logic.
  • Jotform — good for teams needing surveys plus forms/workflows in one place; very broad integrations.
  • Google Forms — best budget option; simple team collaboration, but limited reporting and branding.

If you want the safest default recommendation for most teams: SurveyMonkey Teams or Qualtrics. If you want more design/engagement: Typeform. If you want advanced workflow/customization: Alchemer.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

For teams, the most commonly recommended survey platforms are:

  • Qualtrics — best for larger teams/enterprise; strong collaboration, analytics, and admin controls.
  • SurveyMonkey Teams — easy to use, good for shared question banks, templates, and team workflows.
  • Typeform — great for polished, high-response surveys; solid for marketing/product teams.
  • Google Forms — free and simple; best for lightweight internal surveys, though collaboration is basic.
  • Microsoft Forms — ideal if your team uses Microsoft 365; simple sharing and internal workflows.
  • Jotform Teams — flexible forms/surveys with good team permissions and automation.
  • Zoho Survey — good value for teams, especially if you already use Zoho apps.

If you want the safest “most recommended” picks:

  • Best overall for teams: Qualtrics
  • Best for ease of use: SurveyMonkey Teams
  • Best for design/UX: Typeform
  • Best free option: Google Forms

If you tell me your team size and budget, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

For teams, the most commonly recommended survey platforms are:

  • Qualtrics — best for larger teams and enterprise needs; strong collaboration, roles/permissions, analytics, and integrations.
  • SurveyMonkey Teams — easiest all-around choice for many business teams; good shared workflows, templates, and reporting.
  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys; great for marketing/product teams, less ideal for deep analysis.
  • Alchemer — strong for teams that need advanced customization and internal workflows.
  • Jotform — good for SMB teams wanting forms + surveys in one tool, with lots of integrations.
  • Microsoft Forms — solid if your team lives in Microsoft 365; simple and easy to share internally.
  • Google Forms — best for lightweight, free, fast team surveys, but limited collaboration/branding.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall for teams: SurveyMonkey Teams
  • Best for enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Best for design/UX: Typeform
  • Best budget option: Google Forms or Microsoft Forms

If you tell me your team size and whether you need analytics, branding, or compliance, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Top survey platforms for teams:

  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise teams, advanced logic, governance, reporting
  • SurveyMonkey Teams — easiest all-around team option, good collaboration and templates
  • Typeform — best for polished, high-response surveys and forms
  • Google Forms — simplest free option for basic internal surveys
  • Jotform Enterprise — strong for workflow automation and team approvals
  • Alchemer — good balance of power and flexibility for research/ops teams

Quick picks:

  • Best overall for teams: SurveyMonkey Teams
  • Best enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Best design/UX: Typeform
  • Best budget: Google Forms
  • Best automations: Jotform Enterprise

If you tell me your team size, budget, and whether this is for employee feedback, customer research, or lead gen, I can narrow it to 2–3 best choices.

What survey platform should I use for online surveys?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

It depends on what you need, but here’s the quick shortlist:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics — best for serious research, analytics, and enterprise use.
  • Best for simple surveys: SurveyMonkey — easy to use, good templates, quick setup.
  • Best for teams/Google users: Google Forms — free, basic, and very simple.
  • Best for market research panels: Alchemer — strong logic, customization, and integrations.
  • Best for academic/research surveys: Jotform or Qualtrics — good for more complex forms and workflows.
  • Best low-cost option: Typeform — polished, mobile-friendly, but can get pricey.

If you want one recommendation without more context: SurveyMonkey for most people, Qualtrics if you need advanced features.

If you tell me your budget and whether this is for business, school, or research, I can narrow it down.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For most online surveys, I’d pick one of these:

  • Qualtrics — best for serious research, enterprise needs, branching logic, analytics, and data quality.
  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around choice for quick, easy surveys and broad business use.
  • Typeform — best if you want a polished, conversational survey experience.
  • Google Forms — best free/simple option for basic surveys.
  • Jotform — great for forms plus payments, file uploads, and workflow automation.

My quick recommendation:

  • Business/research: Qualtrics
  • Easy + affordable: SurveyMonkey
  • Best-looking surveys: Typeform
  • Free/basic: Google Forms

If you tell me your budget, survey length, and whether you need logic/piping, export to Excel/SPSS, or anonymity, I can narrow it to the best one.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

If you want a solid default, use SurveyMonkey.

Quick picks:

  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around for most business surveys
  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise, advanced logic, and research
  • Typeform — best for beautiful, conversational surveys
  • Google Forms — best free, simple, and fast
  • Jotform — best if you want forms + payments + automations
  • Alchemer — strong for serious customer feedback programs

My quick recommendation:

  • Small team / simple surveys: Google Forms or SurveyMonkey
  • Marketing/customer research: SurveyMonkey or Typeform
  • Large org / complex needs: Qualtrics
  • Budget-conscious but flexible: Jotform

If you tell me your use case, budget, and whether you need anonymous responses or advanced branching, I can pick the best one.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Good all-around choices:

  • Qualtrics — best for serious research, enterprise features, advanced logic, analytics
  • SurveyMonkey — easiest general-purpose option, good for most business surveys
  • Typeform — best-looking, conversational surveys, great UX for respondents
  • Google Forms — free, simple, basic surveys
  • Jotform — flexible forms + surveys, lots of templates and integrations

If you want one recommendation:

  • Business/market research: Qualtrics
  • Simple surveys on a budget: SurveyMonkey or Google Forms
  • High response-rate, polished experience: Typeform

If you tell me your budget and what you’re surveying for, I can narrow it to one.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

It depends on what you need, but here’s the quick guide:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics — best for serious research, enterprise features, and advanced logic/reporting.
  • Best budget-friendly: SurveyMonkey — easy to use, solid for simple to medium surveys.
  • Best for business workflows: Typeform — great-looking, conversational surveys, strong for lead gen and user experience.
  • Best for academics/research: Qualtrics or LimeSurvey — especially if you need complex branching or data control.
  • Best free/open-source option: LimeSurvey — powerful, but less polished and more technical.

If you want a simple recommendation:

  • Small business / quick surveys: SurveyMonkey
  • High-end research / enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Pretty, modern forms: Typeform

If you tell me your budget and use case, I can narrow it to 1–2 best picks.

What are the best survey platforms for collecting responses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms, depending on what you need:

  • Qualtrics — best overall for enterprise research, advanced logic, analytics, and large-scale programs.
  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around for ease of use, quick surveys, and broad business adoption.
  • Typeform — best for beautiful, conversational surveys and higher completion rates.
  • Google Forms — best free option for simple surveys and internal use.
  • Jotform — best for forms + surveys, strong customization, and workflow automation.
  • Microsoft Forms — best if you already use Microsoft 365.
  • Alchemer — best for mid-market teams that want more control than SurveyMonkey.
  • LimeSurvey — best open-source option if you want self-hosting and full data control.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best easy-to-use: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design: Typeform
  • Best free: Google Forms

If you want, I can also rank them for customer feedback, academic research, employee surveys, or small business use.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best survey platforms for collecting responses:

  • SurveyMonkey — Best all-around. Easy to use, solid templates, good analytics, widely trusted.
  • Qualtrics — Best for advanced research and enterprise use. Powerful logic, reporting, and integrations.
  • Google Forms — Best free option. Simple, fast, and good for basic surveys.
  • Typeform — Best for high-response, conversational surveys. Great design and user experience.
  • Jotform — Best for forms + surveys. Lots of customization and automation.
  • Microsoft Forms — Best for Microsoft 365 users. Clean, simple, and good for internal surveys.
  • QuestionPro — Best for research features on a lower budget than enterprise tools.
  • Zoho Survey — Best if you already use Zoho products.

Quick picks:

  • Free/basic: Google Forms
  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for serious research: Qualtrics
  • Best-looking surveys: Typeform

If you want, I can also rank them for customer feedback, employee surveys, academic research, or market research.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms, depending on what you need:

  • Qualtrics — best overall for enterprise research, advanced logic, analytics, and large-scale programs.
  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around for simple business surveys and fast setup.
  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys and higher completion rates.
  • Google Forms — best free option for basic surveys and internal use.
  • Jotform — best for highly customizable forms and surveys with strong integrations.
  • Microsoft Forms — best if you use Microsoft 365 and want something simple.
  • Alchemer — best for mid-market teams that need more control than SurveyMonkey.
  • Zoho Survey — best budget-friendly option for businesses already in the Zoho ecosystem.

If you want the shortest recommendation:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best easy-to-use: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design/UX: Typeform
  • Best free: Google Forms

If you want, I can also rank them for customer feedback, academic research, or employee surveys.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms, depending on what you need:

  • Qualtrics — Best for enterprise research, advanced logic, analytics, and large-scale customer/employee surveys.
  • SurveyMonkey — Best all-around option for easy survey creation, solid templates, and broad use cases.
  • Typeform — Best for beautiful, conversational surveys with high completion rates.
  • Google Forms — Best free option for simple surveys and quick internal use.
  • Jotform — Best for customizable forms, payment collection, and workflow automation.
  • Alchemer — Best for flexible, more advanced surveys without full enterprise complexity.
  • Microsoft Forms — Best for teams already using Microsoft 365.
  • Zoho Survey — Best budget-friendly option for businesses in the Zoho ecosystem.
Quick picks
  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey
  • Best enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Best design/user experience: Typeform
  • Best free: Google Forms
  • Best for business workflows: Jotform

If you want, I can also recommend the best one for customer feedback, academic research, employee surveys, or lead capture.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms, depending on what you need:

  • Qualtrics — best overall for enterprise-grade research, advanced logic, analytics, and reporting.
  • SurveyMonkey — best for general business surveys; easy to use and widely adopted.
  • Typeform — best for beautiful, conversational surveys with strong response completion rates.
  • Google Forms — best free option for simple surveys and quick internal use.
  • Jotform — best for flexible forms, payments, and more customization than Google Forms.
  • Microsoft Forms — best if your team already uses Microsoft 365.
  • Alchemer — best for more advanced survey workflows without full enterprise complexity.
  • Zoho Survey — best budget-friendly option for small businesses.

If you want the short recommendation:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best easy-to-use: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design/UX: Typeform
  • Best free: Google Forms

If you want, I can also rank them for price, analytics, or customer feedback vs. market research.

Which survey platforms are best for small businesses?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

For most small businesses, the best survey platforms are:

  1. SurveyMonkey — best all-around
    • Easy to use, solid templates, good analytics
    • Great for customer feedback, employee surveys, and lead capture
    • Best if you want a simple, proven tool
  2. Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys
    • Very strong design and mobile experience
    • Great for forms that need higher completion rates
    • Best if branding and user experience matter
  3. Google Forms — best free option
    • Completely free and simple
    • Good for basic surveys and internal use
    • Best if you just need something fast and low-cost
  4. Jotform — best for forms plus workflows
    • More flexible than Google Forms
    • Strong integrations, payment collection, approvals, and automation
    • Best if you want surveys tied to business processes
  5. Qualtrics — best for advanced research
    • Powerful reporting, segmentation, and logic
    • Usually overkill for very small businesses
    • Best if you need deep customer or market research

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design: Typeform
  • Best free: Google Forms
  • Best automation: Jotform

If you want, I can also recommend the best option based on your budget and use case, like customer feedback, employee surveys, or lead generation.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For small businesses, the best survey platforms are usually:

  • SurveyMonkey — easiest all-around choice; great templates, basic analytics, and simple sharing.
  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys and higher response rates.
  • Jotform — strong if you also need forms, payments, and automations in one place.
  • Google Forms — best free option; simple, reliable, and good for basic internal/customer surveys.
  • Qualtrics — best for more advanced research and customer experience, but usually overkill for small teams.
  • Zoho Survey — good value if you already use other Zoho tools.
  • Microsoft Forms — solid if your business runs on Microsoft 365.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design/UX: Typeform
  • Best free: Google Forms
  • Best for workflows/forms: Jotform

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for customer feedback.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

For small businesses, the best survey platforms are usually:

  1. SurveyMonkey

Best all-around for customer feedback, employee surveys, and simple market research. Easy to use, lots of templates, and good reporting.

  1. Typeform

Best for polished, conversational surveys that feel more engaging. Great for lead gen, NPS, and branded customer surveys.

  1. Google Forms

Best free option for basic surveys. Simple, fast, and good if you just need straightforward data collection.

  1. Jotform

Best if you want more than surveys—forms, payments, approvals, and automations. Very flexible for small teams.

  1. Qualtrics

Best for more advanced research and customer experience programs. Powerful, but usually overkill unless you need deeper analytics.

  1. Microsoft Forms

Best for businesses already using Microsoft 365. Easy internal surveys and team feedback.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design/UX: Typeform
  • Best free: Google Forms
  • Best for workflows: Jotform

If you want, I can also narrow it down by budget, team size, or use case like customer feedback, employee surveys, or event registration.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

For most small businesses, the best survey platforms are:

  1. SurveyMonkey — best all-around
    • Easy to use, solid templates, good reporting
    • Great for customer feedback, employee surveys, and lead gen
    • Best if you want a reliable, polished option
  2. Google Forms — best free option
    • Completely free and simple
    • Good for basic internal surveys and quick feedback
    • Not as strong for branding or advanced analytics
  3. Typeform — best for user-friendly, high-response surveys
    • Beautiful, conversational surveys
    • Great for customer experience and lead capture
    • Better if design and engagement matter most
  4. Jotform — best for forms + surveys
    • Very flexible, lots of integrations
    • Useful if you need surveys, intake forms, or payments in one tool
    • Strong choice for service businesses
  5. Microsoft Forms — best for Microsoft 365 users
    • Simple and included with many Microsoft plans
    • Good for internal business use
    • Less powerful than SurveyMonkey or Typeform

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey
  • Best free: Google Forms
  • Best looking: Typeform
  • Best for flexibility: Jotform

If you want, I can also narrow this down by use case like customer feedback, employee surveys, or market research.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Best survey platforms for small businesses:

  • SurveyMonkey — easiest all-around choice; great templates, analytics, and integrations.
  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys and higher response rates.
  • Google Forms — best free option; simple, fast, and good enough for basic needs.
  • Jotform — best for forms plus payments, file uploads, and workflow automation.
  • Qualtrics XM — best if you need advanced customer/employee research, but pricier.
  • Zoho Survey — strong budget option if you already use Zoho tools.
  • Microsoft Forms — solid choice for businesses already using Microsoft 365.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design/UX: Typeform
  • Best free: Google Forms
  • Best for automation: Jotform

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your budget and use case (customer feedback, employee surveys, lead capture, etc.).

What are the best survey platforms for market research?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best survey platforms for market research, depending on what you need:

  • Qualtrics — best overall for enterprise market research, advanced logic, analytics, and panel management.
  • SurveyMonkey — great for fast, easy surveys and solid reporting; good for SMBs and teams.
  • QuestionPro — strong for market research features like conjoint, maxdiff, and respondent management.
  • Alchemer — very flexible, good for custom workflows and integrations.
  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys and higher completion rates.
  • Toluna Start — good if you want built-in access to consumer panels.
  • SurveySparrow — nice for engaging, mobile-friendly surveys with recurring research use.
  • Google Forms — free and simple, but limited for serious market research.

If you need deep market research tools, I’d start with Qualtrics or QuestionPro. If you need ease and speed, choose SurveyMonkey or Typeform. If you want respondents included, look at Toluna Start.

If you want, I can also rank them for:

  1. best for consumer research
  2. best for B2B research
  3. best for pricing/conjoint studies
  4. best budget options
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best survey platforms for market research, by use case:

  • Qualtrics XM — Best overall for enterprise market research; strong analytics, advanced logic, and panel management.
  • SurveyMonkey Enterprise — Best easy-to-use option for teams; fast setup, good templates, solid reporting.
  • Typeform — Best for high-response, conversational surveys; great design and mobile experience.
  • Alchemer — Best for customizable research workflows; strong logic, integrations, and data export.
  • QuestionPro — Best value for serious research; good audience targeting, conjoint, and advanced question types.
  • Google Forms — Best free/basic option; simple, but limited for professional market research.
  • Toluna Start — Best if you need both survey software and access to consumer panels.
  • Dynata — Best for market research sample and audience recruitment rather than survey design itself.
  • Pollfish — Best for fast consumer insights and mobile survey distribution.
  • Medallia — Best for customer experience research at scale.

My short recommendation:

  • Enterprise / advanced research: Qualtrics
  • Easy team surveys: SurveyMonkey
  • Beautiful, higher-engagement surveys: Typeform
  • Best research value: QuestionPro or Alchemer

If you want, I can also give you the best platform for B2B research, B2C research, or pricing comparisons.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

For market research, the best survey platforms are usually:

  • Qualtrics — best overall for advanced market research, segmentation, and enterprise workflows.
  • SurveyMonkey Enterprise — best for fast, easy-to-use surveys with solid analytics.
  • Alchemer — great for flexible survey logic, custom workflows, and mid-market teams.
  • QuestionPro — strong for research panels, CX, and robust reporting at a lower cost than Qualtrics.
  • Typeform — best for high-response, conversational surveys and great design.
  • Toluna Start — good if you need built-in access to respondents/panels.
  • Forsta — strong for enterprise research, insights, and dashboarding.

Best picks by need:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best value: Alchemer
  • Best for simplicity: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for design/engagement: Typeform
  • Best with panels: Toluna Start or QuestionPro

If you want, I can also give you the best platform by budget, team size, or use case.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Best survey platforms for market research depend on whether you need panel access, advanced analytics, or simple survey design. Top picks:

  • Qualtrics — Best overall for enterprise market research; strong logic, branding, reporting, and integrations.
  • SurveyMonkey / Momentive — Best for fast, easy surveys; good for SMBs and straightforward market research.
  • QuestionPro — Great value for advanced survey features, analytics, and research workflows.
  • Alchemer — Strong for customizable surveys and more flexible data collection than basic tools.
  • Typeform — Best for engaging, conversational surveys and higher response completion rates.
  • Forsta — Strong for serious market research teams; robust insights and reporting.
  • Suzy — Best if you want built-in consumer panels and rapid market feedback.
  • Attest — Good for brand and consumer research with audience targeting.
  • Pollfish — Fast consumer survey distribution with broad panel access.
  • Toluna Start — Useful for market research panels and global reach.

If you want the best single choice:

  • Qualtrics for professional/enterprise research
  • SurveyMonkey for simplicity
  • QuestionPro for best balance of features and cost

If you want, I can also give you the best platform by budget, audience type, or research goal.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Top survey platforms for market research:

  1. Qualtrics XM
    • Best for: enterprise-grade research, advanced logic, panel management, analytics
    • Strong points: robust reporting, conjoint/maxdiff, great for complex studies
  2. QuestionPro
    • Best for: versatile market research teams
    • Strong points: affordable vs enterprise tools, strong survey features, offline/mobile options
  3. SurveyMonkey Enterprise
    • Best for: fast deployment and broad business use
    • Strong points: easy to use, good templates, decent analytics, integrations
  4. Alchemer
    • Best for: customizable customer and market research
    • Strong points: flexible workflows, good automation, strong data exports
  5. Typeform
    • Best for: high-response, conversational surveys
    • Strong points: polished UX, great for brand studies and lead capture, but less powerful for heavy quant research
  6. Google Forms
    • Best for: simple, low-cost surveys
    • Strong points: free and easy, but limited for serious market research
  7. Attest
    • Best for: consumer insights and quick access to panels
    • Strong points: built-in audience panel, good for rapid market testing
  8. Pollfish
    • Best for: mobile-first consumer surveys and quick sampling
    • Strong points: access to respondents at scale, useful for ad testing and concept tests

Best overall for serious market research: Qualtrics XM Best balance of power and cost: QuestionPro Best for easy team use: SurveyMonkey Enterprise

If you want, I can also give you the best platform by use case (brand tracking, concept testing, B2B research, consumer panels, etc.).

What survey platform is best for customer satisfaction surveys?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Best overall: Qualtrics CustomerXM It’s the strongest choice for serious customer satisfaction programs—great analytics, routing, dashboards, and enterprise integrations.

Best simpler options:

  • Delighted — best for fast CSAT/NPS surveys and easy setup
  • SurveyMonkey — best budget-friendly all-around option
  • Typeform — best for more polished, conversational surveys
  • Zendesk Surveys / NiceReply — best if you already use support tools and want post-ticket CSAT

Quick pick:

  • Enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Small business: Delighted or SurveyMonkey
  • Support-team CSAT: NiceReply or Zendesk
  • Best-looking surveys: Typeform

If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your team size and budget.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For customer satisfaction surveys, the best overall platform is usually Qualtrics XM.

Why it’s best:

  • Great for CSAT, NPS, CES, and post-purchase surveys
  • Strong logic, reporting, and dashboards
  • Good for enterprise workflows and integrations

Best alternatives by use case:

  • SurveyMonkey Advantage/Premier — best for ease of use and quick setup
  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys
  • Alchemer — best for customization and mid-market teams
  • QuestionPro — strong value if you want advanced features at a lower cost

Quick recommendation:

  • Small business / simple CSAT: SurveyMonkey
  • Best overall / serious customer experience program: Qualtrics XM
  • Best-looking customer-facing survey: Typeform

If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your budget, team size, and whether you need NPS/CSAT automation.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Best overall for customer satisfaction surveys: Qualtrics CustomerXM It’s the strongest choice if you want serious CX features like NPS, CSAT, CES, closed-loop follow-up, branching logic, and analytics.

Best simpler/cheaper option: SurveyMonkey Great for small to mid-sized teams that just need solid surveys fast.

Best for in-app/product feedback: Delighted Excellent if you want one-click NPS/CSAT surveys and easy automation.

Best for beautifully designed surveys: Typeform Good for a more conversational, high-response experience, but lighter on CX reporting.

My quick pick:

  • Enterprise / CX program: Qualtrics
  • SMB / general customer surveys: SurveyMonkey
  • Simple NPS/CSAT: Delighted

If you want, I can recommend the best platform for your budget, team size, and use case.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Best overall for customer satisfaction surveys: SurveyMonkey It’s the easiest all-around choice for CSAT, NPS, and short customer feedback surveys, with strong templates, logic, and reporting.

Best if you need enterprise-grade analytics: Qualtrics CustomerXM Great for larger teams that want deeper segmentation, dashboards, and workflow automation.

Best for a polished, conversational survey experience: Typeform Best when you care about response completion rates and a cleaner brand feel.

My quick pick:

  • Small/medium business: SurveyMonkey
  • Enterprise / advanced CX: Qualtrics CustomerXM
  • Design-focused / high completion: Typeform

If you want, I can also recommend the best option based on your budget and team size.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Best overall: Qualtrics CustomerXM It’s the strongest choice for serious customer satisfaction programs—great for CSAT, NPS, CES, routing, analytics, and follow-up workflows.

Best simpler option: SurveyMonkey Enterprise Good if you want something easier to launch, with solid templates and reporting.

Best for very polished, lightweight surveys: Typeform Nice UX and high completion rates, but weaker for advanced CX programs.

Best enterprise CX platform: Medallia Best if you need deep customer experience management across many channels and teams.

Quick recommendation:

  • Small team / budget: SurveyMonkey
  • Best UX: Typeform
  • Best all-around for CSAT: Qualtrics
  • Large enterprise CX: Medallia

If you want, I can also recommend the best platform for your company size and budget.

What are the best survey platforms with analytics?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms with strong analytics:

  1. Qualtrics

Best overall for advanced analytics, dashboards, text sentiment, and enterprise reporting.

  1. SurveyMonkey / Momentive

Best for easy setup plus solid built-in charts, crosstabs, and exportable reports.

  1. Typeform

Best for beautiful surveys and basic analytics; great response completion data and simple reporting.

  1. Alchemer

Best for flexible surveys with strong reporting, filters, and workflow automation.

  1. Jotform

Best budget-friendly option with good submission analytics and integrations.

  1. Google Forms

Best free basic option, with simple response summaries and Google Sheets analysis.

  1. Microsoft Forms

Best if you already use Microsoft 365; decent built-in analytics and Excel integration.

  1. LimeSurvey

Best open-source choice for self-hosting and more control over data/analytics.

My top picks:

  • Enterprise / deep analytics: Qualtrics
  • Best balance of ease + analytics: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design + decent analytics: Typeform
  • Best value: Alchemer or Jotform

If you want, I can also rank them for small business, market research, or employee surveys.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms with strong built-in analytics:

  1. Qualtrics XM
    • Best overall for enterprise-grade analytics
    • Great for: dashboards, cross-tabs, text analytics, sentiment analysis, benchmarking, automated alerts
    • Best if you need deep reporting and advanced research
  2. SurveyMonkey
    • Best for: easy-to-use survey creation + solid analytics
    • Good features: response filters, trend reports, charts, crosstabs, export options, integrations
    • Best for: teams that want simplicity without losing reporting power
  3. Typeform
    • Best for: beautiful, conversational surveys
    • Analytics: basic-to-good reporting, drop-off insights, response summaries, integrations with BI tools
    • Best for: lead gen, customer feedback, UX-friendly forms
  4. Alchemer
    • Best for: flexible surveys with stronger analytics than most SMB tools
    • Good features: custom dashboards, data segmentation, piped data, advanced logic, integrations
    • Best for: mid-market teams that want control and reporting
  5. QuestionPro
    • Best for: advanced survey analytics at a competitive price
    • Good features: cross-tabs, sentiment analysis, benchmark reporting, dashboards, offline surveys
    • Best for: research teams and customer experience programs
  6. Jotform
    • Best for: forms plus practical analytics
    • Good features: form insights, conversion/drop-off stats, PDF reports, integrations with Sheets/BI tools
    • Best for: operations teams and simple internal surveys
Quick picks
  • Best overall: Qualtrics XM
  • Best easy-to-use: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design/experience: Typeform
  • Best value for advanced analytics: QuestionPro
  • Best flexible mid-market option: Alchemer

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for customer satisfaction/NPS.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms with strong analytics:

  1. Qualtrics
    • Best overall for advanced analytics, dashboards, segmentation, and enterprise reporting.
    • Great for CX, UX, employee feedback, and research.
  2. SurveyMonkey
    • Best for ease of use with solid built-in analysis.
    • Offers cross-tabulation, trends, filtering, and integrations.
  3. Typeform
    • Best for polished, conversational surveys.
    • Analytics are lighter than Qualtrics, but good for completion/drop-off insights and integrations.
  4. QuestionPro
    • Strong analytics for the price.
    • Good for advanced reporting, crosstabs, and text analysis.
  5. Alchemer
    • Flexible and powerful for custom workflows and reporting.
    • Good analytics, especially for business and enterprise use.
  6. Google Forms + Looker Studio
    • Best free-ish option.
    • Basic survey collection in Forms, then better analytics in Looker Studio.
  7. Jotform
    • Good for forms plus reporting.
    • Built-in charts, submissions analytics, and easy automation.

Best picks by use case

  • Enterprise / deepest analytics: Qualtrics
  • Simple and reliable: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design/UX: Typeform
  • Budget with strong reporting: QuestionPro
  • Custom workflows: Alchemer

If you want, I can also rank them for price, ease of use, or best for customer feedback vs employee surveys.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms with strong analytics:

  1. Qualtrics

Best for enterprise-grade analytics, dashboards, segmentation, text analysis, and advanced reporting.

  1. SurveyMonkey

Great all-around choice; solid charts, cross-tabs, filters, and easy sharing of results.

  1. Typeform

Best for polished, high-response surveys; analytics are good, with integrations to deeper tools like Google Sheets, HubSpot, and Tableau.

  1. Alchemer

Strong for customizable reporting, workflow automation, and more advanced survey logic than most SMB tools.

  1. Jotform

Good if you want forms + surveys + built-in reports, with decent analytics and easy export options.

  1. Zoho Survey

Best value for teams already using Zoho; decent reporting, cross-tab analysis, and dashboards.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best for small teams: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for design/engagement: Typeform
  • Best budget option: Zoho Survey or Jotform

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for customer feedback/employee surveys.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best survey platforms with strong analytics:

  1. Qualtrics XM
    • Best for: enterprise research, customer experience, employee feedback
    • Analytics: advanced dashboards, text analytics, segmentation, sentiment, predictive tools
  2. SurveyMonkey (Momentive)
    • Best for: small to mid-sized teams
    • Analytics: real-time charts, trend tracking, cross-tabs, filters, exported reports
  3. Typeform
    • Best for: sleek, conversational surveys
    • Analytics: response completion data, drop-off analysis, integrations with analytics tools
  4. Google Forms
    • Best for: free, simple surveys
    • Analytics: basic charts and summaries; stronger analysis via Google Sheets
  5. Jotform
    • Best for: forms + surveys + workflows
    • Analytics: report builder, visual summaries, submission tracking, integrations
  6. Alchemer
    • Best for: customizable surveys and research teams
    • Analytics: robust reporting, crosstabs, data exports, advanced logic
  7. Zoho Survey
    • Best for: teams already using Zoho
    • Analytics: dashboards, trend reports, sentiment analysis, CRM integration
  8. Microsoft Forms
    • Best for: Microsoft 365 users
    • Analytics: simple response charts, Excel export, easy team sharing

Best overall: Qualtrics XM Best value: SurveyMonkey Best for design: Typeform Best free option: Google Forms

If you want, I can also rank these for customer feedback, market research, or employee surveys.

Which survey platforms are easiest to use?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

The easiest survey platforms to use are usually:

  1. Google Forms — simplest overall, free, very fast to set up
  2. Typeform — very polished and user-friendly, great-looking surveys
  3. SurveyMonkey — easy for standard surveys, lots of templates
  4. Jotform — simple drag-and-drop builder, flexible forms/surveys
  5. Microsoft Forms — easy if you already use Microsoft 365

Best picks by use case:

  • Fastest and free: Google Forms
  • Best-looking: Typeform
  • Best all-around business option: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for forms + surveys: Jotform

If you want, I can also rank them by price, mobile experience, or best for customer feedback.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

The easiest survey platforms for most people are:

  1. Typeform – best-looking and very easy for respondents; super simple to build.
  2. Google Forms – free, fast, and the easiest if you just need basic surveys.
  3. SurveyMonkey – very user-friendly, with stronger survey features than Google Forms.
  4. Jotform – easy drag-and-drop builder, good if you want more form flexibility.
  5. Tally – simple, clean, and great if you want a modern free option.

Best pick by use case:

  • Simplest overall: Google Forms
  • Best user experience: Typeform
  • Best balance of ease + features: SurveyMonkey
  • Best free alternative: Tally
  • Best for customizable forms: Jotform

If you want, I can also rank them for free use, business surveys, or customer feedback.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

The easiest survey platforms to use are usually:

  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys and forms; very intuitive.
  • SurveyMonkey — easiest all-around for traditional surveys; lots of templates.
  • Google Forms — simplest free option; great for basic surveys.
  • Jotform — easy drag-and-drop builder with lots of form features.
  • Qualtrics — powerful, but a bit less beginner-friendly than the others.

Best picks by need:

  • Absolute easiest: Google Forms
  • Best-looking: Typeform
  • Best for business surveys: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for flexible forms: Jotform

If you want, I can also rank them by price, design, or best for teams.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

The easiest survey platforms to use are usually:

  • Google Forms — simplest and free; great for quick surveys and internal use.
  • Typeform — very polished and super easy for respondents; best-looking experience.
  • SurveyMonkey — user-friendly and reliable; good all-around choice.
  • Jotform — easy drag-and-drop builder; more flexible than Google Forms.
  • Tally — very simple, modern, and generous free plan; great if you want speed.

Best picks by need:

  • Fastest to set up: Google Forms
  • Best-looking surveys: Typeform
  • Best balance of ease + features: SurveyMonkey
  • Best free alternative: Tally
  • Best for forms with more logic/customization: Jotform

If you want, I can also rank them for beginners, business use, or free plans.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

The easiest survey platforms to use are usually:

  • Google Forms — simplest overall, free, fast setup
  • Typeform — most polished and user-friendly for respondents
  • Jotform — very easy drag-and-drop builder, lots of templates
  • SurveyMonkey — straightforward and familiar, good for basic surveys
  • Tally — super simple, clean, and great for lightweight forms

Best picks by use case:

  • Easiest free option: Google Forms
  • Best-looking surveys: Typeform
  • Best no-fuss builder: Jotform
  • Best for simple business surveys: SurveyMonkey
  • Best modern lightweight option: Tally

If you want, I can also rank them by price, features, or best for beginners.

What are the best survey platforms for teams?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms for teams, by category:

  • Qualtrics — Best overall for enterprise teams

Strongest for advanced logic, analytics, employee/customer experience, and governance.

  • SurveyMonkey Team Advantage / Premier — Best for easy team collaboration

Simple to use, good sharing/review workflows, solid templates, and broad adoption.

  • Typeform — Best for polished, high-response surveys

Great UX, conversational forms, and strong for marketing, lead gen, and brand surveys.

  • Google Forms — Best free option for small teams

Basic, fast, and easy in Google Workspace, but limited for advanced survey needs.

  • Jotform — Best for flexible forms and internal workflows

Strong team collaboration, approvals, integrations, and form-to-process automation.

  • Microsoft Forms — Best for Microsoft 365 teams

Good if you live in Teams/Excel/SharePoint and want simple internal surveys.

  • Alchemer — Best for customizable research and operations surveys

More powerful than basic tools, with good logic, piping, and reporting.

If you want the shortest recommendation:

  • Enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Most teams: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design/response rate: Typeform
  • Free/simple: Google Forms

If you tell me your team size, budget, and whether it’s for employee, customer, or research surveys, I can narrow it to the top 2.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms for teams, depending on what you need:

  • Qualtrics XM — Best overall for enterprise teams; strongest for advanced logic, employee/customer experience, analytics, and governance.
  • SurveyMonkey Enterprise — Best for fast team adoption; easy to use, good collaboration, and strong templates.
  • Typeform — Best for polished, conversational surveys; great for higher response rates and brand-friendly design.
  • Google Forms — Best free option; simple, reliable, and easy to share, but limited for larger teams.
  • Microsoft Forms — Best if your team lives in Microsoft 365; seamless with Teams, Excel, and SharePoint.
  • Jotform — Best for workflow-heavy teams; excellent form building, approvals, and integrations.
  • Alchemer — Best for flexible, mid-market survey teams; more powerful than basic tools, less complex than enterprise suites.
  • LimeSurvey — Best open-source option; good if you want more control and self-hosting.

Quick picks:

  • Enterprise / research-heavy: Qualtrics
  • General team surveys: SurveyMonkey Enterprise
  • Beautiful, high-response surveys: Typeform
  • Microsoft teams: Microsoft Forms
  • Budget/free: Google Forms

If you want, I can also give you the best platform by use case like employee engagement, NPS, customer feedback, or internal team pulse surveys.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best survey platforms for teams, depending on what you need:

  • SurveyMonkey — Best all-around for teams. Strong collaboration, templates, analytics, and easy sharing.
  • Qualtrics — Best for enterprise and advanced research. Powerful logic, reporting, and admin controls.
  • Typeform — Best for polished, conversational surveys. Great for engagement and brand-friendly design.
  • Google Forms — Best free/simple option. Easy to use, but limited for serious team workflows.
  • Jotform — Best for flexible forms and workflows. Good approvals, integrations, and payment/form automation.
  • Microsoft Forms — Best for Microsoft 365 teams. Simple, fast, and integrates well with Teams/Excel.
  • Zoho Survey — Best budget-friendly business option. Solid features and good value.
  • Alchemer — Best for teams that want deep customization and enterprise survey features.

My quick picks:

  • Small team: SurveyMonkey or Typeform
  • Enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Budget: Zoho Survey or Google Forms
  • Microsoft-heavy org: Microsoft Forms

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or analytics.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms for teams, by use case:

  • Qualtrics — best overall for large teams and enterprise research; powerful logic, analytics, and governance.
  • SurveyMonkey Enterprise — best for easy team adoption; strong collaboration, templates, and admin controls.
  • Typeform — best for polished, high-response surveys; great UX and branded forms.
  • Google Forms — best free/simple option; lightweight, but limited for serious team workflows.
  • Jotform — best for teams needing forms + approvals + workflows; flexible and very customizable.
  • Alchemer — best for advanced survey design and data collection; strong for research-heavy teams.
  • Microsoft Forms — best for Microsoft 365 teams; simple sharing and decent internal surveys.
  • Formstack — best for business workflows and data capture; good integrations and automation.
Quick pick
  • Enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Mid-market team survey tool: SurveyMonkey Enterprise
  • Best design/engagement: Typeform
  • Best free: Google Forms
  • Best workflow automation: Jotform

If you want, I can also rank these for price, ease of use, or best integrations with Slack/Teams/HubSpot.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms for teams, depending on what you need:

  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise teams, advanced analytics, and complex survey programs
  • SurveyMonkey Enterprise — best all-around for team collaboration, templates, and ease of use
  • Google Forms — best free/simple option for lightweight internal surveys
  • Typeform — best for polished, high-response surveys with a better respondent experience
  • Jotform — best for teams that want forms + surveys + workflows in one tool
  • Zoho Survey — best budget-friendly option for small to mid-size teams
  • QuestionPro — best for robust research features and team reporting
  • Alchemer — best for customizable surveys and more control than basic tools
  • Microsoft Forms — best if your team already lives in Microsoft 365
  • LimeSurvey — best open-source option for teams needing self-hosting and data control

If you want the safest pick:

  • Enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Most teams: SurveyMonkey Enterprise
  • Best simple/free: Google Forms
  • Best design/UX: Typeform

If you want, I can also give you the best survey platforms by team size, budget, or use case.

What survey platforms are best for feedback collection?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Best survey platforms for feedback collection:

  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational forms and high completion rates.
  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around choice for classic surveys and analytics.
  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise-level feedback, advanced logic, and reporting.
  • Google Forms — best free option for simple feedback collection.
  • Jotform — great for customizable forms, workflows, and file uploads.
  • Microsoft Forms — solid if you already use Microsoft 365.
  • Zoho Survey — good value for small businesses and teams.

If you want a quick pick:

  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design/UX: Typeform
  • Best enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Best free: Google Forms

If you tell me your budget and use case (customers, employees, event feedback, etc.), I can narrow it to the top 2–3.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Best survey platforms for feedback collection:

  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise-grade feedback, NPS/CSAT, deep analytics
  • SurveyMonkey — easiest all-around choice for most teams
  • Typeform — best for sleek, conversational forms and higher completion rates
  • Google Forms — best free option for simple surveys
  • Jotform — best for flexible forms with strong integrations
  • Microsoft Forms — good if you already use Microsoft 365
  • Zoho Survey — solid budget-friendly business option
  • Delighted — best for quick NPS, CSAT, and customer experience feedback

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for enterprise: Qualtrics
  • Best for design/UX: Typeform
  • Best free: Google Forms

If you want, I can narrow it down by budget, team size, or use case (customer feedback, employee surveys, event feedback, etc.).

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best survey platforms for feedback collection:

  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around for quick customer surveys, NPS, and general feedback
  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise-level experience management and advanced analytics
  • Typeform — best for conversational, high-response-rate surveys with a polished UI
  • Google Forms — best free, simple option for basic feedback collection
  • Jotform — best if you want more form-building flexibility and integrations
  • Microsoft Forms — best for teams already using Microsoft 365
  • Zoho Survey — good budget-friendly option with solid reporting
  • Alchemer — strong choice for customizable, research-focused surveys

Quick pick:

  • Small business / simple feedback: Google Forms or Typeform
  • Customer experience / serious analytics: Qualtrics or SurveyMonkey
  • Internal team feedback: Microsoft Forms or Jotform

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your use case and budget.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best survey platforms for feedback collection:

  • SurveyMonkey — Best all-around for customer, employee, and market feedback; easy to use, solid analytics.
  • Typeform — Best for high-response, conversational surveys; great UX and design.
  • Qualtrics — Best for enterprise-grade feedback programs; powerful logic, reporting, and integrations.
  • Google Forms — Best free option for simple feedback collection; basic but reliable.
  • Jotform — Best if you want more form-building flexibility and workflow automation.
  • Microsoft Forms — Best for teams already using Microsoft 365.
  • Zoho Survey — Good budget-friendly option with decent reporting.
  • Alchemer (formerly SurveyGizmo) — Strong for customizable customer feedback surveys.

If you want, I can also recommend the best one for small business, nonprofits, or employee feedback.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Top survey platforms for feedback collection:

  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise-grade customer/employee feedback, advanced logic, and analytics.
  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around for quick feedback surveys and broad ease of use.
  • Typeform — best for conversational, high-response-rate forms and UX-friendly surveys.
  • Google Forms — best free/simple option for basic feedback collection.
  • Jotform — best for customizable forms, integrations, and internal workflows.
  • Zoho Survey — best value if you already use Zoho products.
  • Alchemer — best for deeper survey customization and reporting.
  • Microsoft Forms — best for teams using Microsoft 365.

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for customer feedback vs employee feedback.

What are the best survey platforms for researchers?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best survey platforms for researchers:

  1. Qualtrics
    • Best for: academic, market, and UX research
    • Why: very powerful logic, sampling, panels, data exports, and advanced analytics
    • Watch for: expensive
  2. SurveyMonkey
    • Best for: quick, easy survey deployment
    • Why: simple interface, decent question types, good distribution tools
    • Watch for: less flexible than Qualtrics for complex research
  3. REDCap
    • Best for: clinical, health, and university research
    • Why: strong data security, audit trails, and IRB-friendly workflows
    • Watch for: not as polished for general survey design
  4. Alchemer
    • Best for: researchers who want more flexibility than SurveyMonkey
    • Why: strong logic, branding, workflows, and integrations
    • Watch for: mid-to-high pricing
  5. LimeSurvey
    • Best for: budget-conscious researchers and self-hosting
    • Why: open-source, highly customizable, good for institutions
    • Watch for: setup and maintenance can be more technical
  6. Google Forms
    • Best for: very simple, low-stakes surveys
    • Why: free, easy, integrates with Google Sheets
    • Watch for: limited research-grade features
  7. Microsoft Forms
    • Best for: organizations using Microsoft 365
    • Why: simple, convenient, easy internal distribution
    • Watch for: limited advanced survey logic

Best overall for serious research: Qualtrics Best for clinical/health research: REDCap Best budget/open-source option: LimeSurvey

If you want, I can also give you a best-by-use-case ranking for academic, UX, market, or clinical research.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

For researchers, the best survey platforms are usually:

  1. Qualtrics
    • Best overall for academic and enterprise research
    • Strong logic, randomization, panel features, embedded data, and reporting
    • Great for IRB/compliance workflows
    • Downside: expensive
  2. REDCap
    • Best for clinical, health, and university research
    • Excellent for secure data collection, audit trails, and longitudinal studies
    • Free or low-cost through many institutions
    • Downside: less polished for public-facing surveys
  3. SurveyMonkey
    • Best for simpler surveys and fast deployment
    • Easy to use, decent analytics, good distribution tools
    • Downside: weaker than Qualtrics for advanced research design
  4. LimeSurvey
    • Best open-source option
    • Flexible, self-hostable, good for researchers who need control over data
    • Downside: UI and setup are less friendly
  5. Jotform
    • Best for form-heavy workflows and quick online data collection
    • Good integrations and ease of use
    • Downside: not as strong as Qualtrics for advanced survey methodology

My quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best for academic/health research: REDCap
  • Best free/open-source: LimeSurvey
  • Best simple budget option: SurveyMonkey

If you want, I can also rank them by price, data security, or ease of use.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

For researchers, the best survey platforms are usually:

  1. Qualtrics

Best overall for academic and professional research.

  • Excellent logic, randomization, embedded data, panels
  • Strong analytics and exports
  • Great for universities and IRB-friendly workflows
  1. REDCap

Best for clinical, health, and institutional research.

  • Very secure and widely used in universities/hospitals
  • Strong for longitudinal studies and sensitive data
  • Free or low-cost through institutions
  1. SurveyCTO

Best for field research and mobile/offline data collection.

  • Works offline on phones/tablets
  • Great for global development, NGO, and mixed-mode studies
  • Strong data quality controls
  1. Alchemer

Best flexible alternative to Qualtrics.

  • Good advanced logic and integrations
  • Often cheaper than Qualtrics
  • Solid for custom research workflows
  1. LimeSurvey

Best open-source option.

  • Self-hostable, good for privacy control
  • Very cost-effective
  • Interface is less polished than Qualtrics
  1. Jotform

Best for quick, lightweight survey forms.

  • Easy to use
  • Good for simple studies or recruitment forms
  • Less ideal for complex research design
Quick pick
  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best for clinical research: REDCap
  • Best for offline fieldwork: SurveyCTO
  • Best budget/open-source: LimeSurvey

If you want, I can also rank them by price, security, or best for academic research.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best survey platforms for researchers, depending on your needs:

Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Strong for academic and market research
  • Advanced logic, randomization, panel tools, and reporting
  • Great for large, complex studies
  • Best if you need enterprise-level features and IRB-friendly workflows
Best for academic researchers on a budget: Google Forms
  • Free and easy to use
  • Fine for simple surveys
  • Limited logic, data handling, and customization
Best for flexible, affordable research: SurveyMonkey
  • Very easy to build surveys
  • Good analytics and templates
  • Good for smaller studies, pilot surveys, and general research
Best for open-source / self-hosted: LimeSurvey
  • Powerful and research-oriented
  • Good if you need data control or on-prem hosting
  • More technical to set up than Qualtrics or SurveyMonkey
Best for UX/product research: Typeform
  • Excellent respondent experience
  • Great for conversational surveys
  • Less ideal for complex academic designs or heavy statistical work
Best for field/phone/data collection: REDCap
  • Widely used in universities and healthcare research
  • Very strong for secure, structured data collection
  • Especially good for clinical and institutional research
Best for fast, simple participant recruitment studies: Prolific + a survey tool
  • Prolific is not a survey platform itself, but it’s one of the best for recruiting research participants
  • Common combo: Prolific + Qualtrics or Prolific + SurveyMonkey
Best for experimental psychology and behavior studies: Pavlovia / Gorilla
  • Better than general survey tools for experiments
  • Supports tasks, randomization, and behavioral research workflows
Quick recommendation
  • Most researchers: Qualtrics
  • Budget/simple needs: Google Forms or SurveyMonkey
  • Clinical/academic data security: REDCap
  • Open-source control: LimeSurvey
  • Experiments/behavioral research: Gorilla or Pavlovia

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or suitability for academic research.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Top picks for researchers:

  1. Qualtrics XM

Best overall for academic and professional research.

  • Advanced logic, randomization, embedded data
  • Strong data export and analysis
  • Good compliance/security options

Best for: universities, large studies, complex surveys

  1. REDCap

Best for clinical, health, and regulated research.

  • Excellent for consent forms and longitudinal studies
  • Strong audit trail and HIPAA-friendly workflows
  • Free/low-cost through many institutions

Best for: medical, behavioral, and institutional research

  1. LimeSurvey

Best open-source option.

  • Self-hosted or cloud
  • Highly customizable
  • Lower cost than enterprise tools

Best for: researchers who want control and flexibility

  1. SurveyMonkey Enterprise

Best for quick, easy survey deployment.

  • Simple interface
  • Solid templates and reporting
  • Less powerful than Qualtrics for advanced study design

Best for: smaller studies and fast fielding

  1. Alchemer

Best mid-tier alternative to Qualtrics.

  • Strong branching and customization
  • Good reporting
  • Often cheaper than Qualtrics

Best for: teams needing advanced features without enterprise pricing

  1. QuestionPro

Best for academic and market research mix.

  • Good logic and analytics
  • Panel and distribution options
  • Competitive pricing

Best for: survey research with broader outreach needs

My short recommendation:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best for clinical/academic regulated research: REDCap
  • Best budget/open-source: LimeSurvey

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or data/privacy compliance.

Which survey platforms are best for creating custom surveys?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Best overall custom-survey platforms:

  • Qualtrics XM — best for enterprise-grade custom surveys, advanced logic, branding, and analytics.
  • SurveyMonkey Enterprise / Advantage — easiest all-around option for custom surveys with solid templates and logic.
  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational, one-question-at-a-time surveys.
  • Jotform — great if you want highly customizable forms/surveys with lots of integrations.
  • Google Forms — best free, simple option, but limited customization.
  • Alchemer — strong for advanced survey design and workflow automation.
  • QuestionPro — good balance of custom features, pricing, and analytics.

Quick picks:

  • Most powerful: Qualtrics
  • Best ease of use: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design: Typeform
  • Best budget: Google Forms or Jotform
  • Best for advanced workflows: Alchemer

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for business vs. academic research.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Best survey platforms for custom surveys:

  • Qualtrics — best for advanced customization, logic, branching, and enterprise-grade reporting.
  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around for easy survey building with strong templates and skip logic.
  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys and high completion rates.
  • Jotform — best if you want forms plus surveys, with lots of design and automation options.
  • Alchemer — strong choice for deep customization and more flexible workflows.
  • Google Forms — best free option, but limited customization.
  • Microsoft Forms — good if you’re already in Microsoft 365, but fairly basic.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best easy-to-use: SurveyMonkey
  • Best design/UX: Typeform
  • Best budget/free: Google Forms

If you want, I can also recommend the best one for business, academic, customer feedback, or employee surveys.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Best survey platforms for custom surveys:

  1. Qualtrics XM

Best for: enterprise-grade custom logic, branding, and advanced analytics. Great if you need complex branching, quotas, integrations, and polished survey experiences.

  1. SurveyMonkey

Best for: easy setup with solid customization. Good balance of simplicity, templates, question logic, and shareable surveys.

  1. Typeform

Best for: highly polished, conversational surveys. Excellent if you want a beautiful, modern look and better respondent engagement.

  1. Jotform

Best for: very flexible form/survey building. Strong for custom workflows, conditional logic, and collecting files or payments too.

  1. Google Forms

Best for: free, simple custom surveys. Not as advanced, but very easy to use and good for basic needs.

  1. Alchemer (formerly SurveyGizmo)

Best for: advanced customization without going full enterprise. Strong logic, branding, and reporting options.

  1. Microsoft Forms

Best for: teams already using Microsoft 365. Simple, clean, and easy to integrate with Excel and Teams.

If you want the short version:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best for design: Typeform
  • Best value: SurveyMonkey or Jotform
  • Best free option: Google Forms

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your budget, audience, and whether you need advanced logic.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Top choices for custom surveys:

  • Qualtrics — best for advanced logic, enterprise research, and deep analytics.
  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around for easy setup, strong question types, and broad use.
  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys and higher completion rates.
  • Alchemer (formerly SurveyGizmo) — best for powerful customization and workflow control.
  • Jotform — best if you want forms plus surveys with lots of templates and integrations.
  • Google Forms — best free option for simple custom surveys.

If you want, I can also recommend the best one for business, academic, or customer feedback use.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Best options for custom surveys:

  • Qualtrics — best for enterprise-grade customization, logic, branching, and advanced analytics.
  • SurveyMonkey — best all-around for easy custom survey creation and broad feature set.
  • Typeform — best for polished, conversational surveys and high completion rates.
  • Jotform — great for highly customizable forms/surveys with lots of templates and integrations.
  • Google Forms — best free/simple option for basic custom surveys.
  • Alchemer — strong choice for deeper survey logic and customer feedback programs.
  • Microsoft Forms — good if you’re already in Microsoft 365 and need something lightweight.
  • QuestionPro — solid for customizable research and advanced survey workflows.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Qualtrics
  • Best for ease of use: SurveyMonkey
  • Best for design/UX: Typeform
  • Best free: Google Forms
  • Best for forms + surveys: Jotform

If you want, I can also rank these for small business, research, or enterprise use.

All 72 prompts run for Microsoft

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Microsoft known for?
  • 2 What are Microsoft's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Microsoft? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Microsoft compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Microsoft?
  • 6 What is a typical survey platform known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best survey platforms for employee engagement surveys? discovery
  • 2 Which survey platform is best for student surveys? discovery
  • 3 What are the best survey platforms for nonprofit feedback collection? discovery
  • 4 Which survey platforms work well for event feedback? discovery
  • 5 What survey platforms are best for product research surveys? discovery
  • 6 What are the best survey platforms for healthcare patient surveys? discovery
  • 7 Which survey platforms are good for website feedback forms? discovery
  • 8 What survey platforms are best for creating mobile-friendly surveys? discovery
  • 9 Which survey platforms are easiest for nontechnical users? discovery
  • 10 What are the best survey platforms for academic research? discovery
  • 11 Which survey platforms are best for multilingual surveys? discovery
  • 12 What survey platforms are best for collecting NPS feedback? discovery
  • 13 Which survey platforms are good for anonymous surveys? discovery
  • 14 What are the best survey platforms for embedded website surveys? discovery
  • 15 Which survey platforms are best for internal company surveys? discovery
  • 16 What are the best survey platforms for getting higher response rates? discovery
  • 17 Which survey platforms are best for advanced branching logic? discovery
  • 18 What survey platforms are best for quick survey creation? discovery
  • 19 Which survey platforms are best for social media polls and surveys? discovery
  • 20 What are the best survey platforms for collecting user insights? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to enterprise survey tools for small teams? comparison
  • 22 Which survey platforms are better than basic form builders for research surveys? comparison
  • 23 What are the best alternatives to premium survey software for startups? comparison
  • 24 How do survey platforms compare with spreadsheet-based feedback collection? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to high-cost survey tools for nonprofits? comparison
  • 26 Which survey platforms are better for analytics than simple polling tools? comparison
  • 27 What are the best alternatives to complex research platforms for customer surveys? comparison
  • 28 Which survey platforms offer better customization than basic survey apps? comparison
  • 29 What are the best alternatives to manual email surveys for feedback collection? comparison
  • 30 Which survey platforms are better for team collaboration than solo survey tools? comparison
  • 31 How do I improve low survey response rates? problem
  • 32 How can I create surveys with branching logic? problem
  • 33 How do I analyze survey results more easily? problem
  • 34 How can I send surveys to customers and track responses? problem
  • 35 How do I make a survey that works on mobile devices? problem
  • 36 How can I collect anonymous survey responses? problem
  • 37 How do I build a survey without coding? problem
  • 38 How can I share surveys with a team for review? problem
  • 39 How do I create a survey with templates? problem
  • 40 How can I get better reporting from survey data? problem
  • 41 What is the best free survey platform? transactional
  • 42 How much do survey platforms cost? transactional
  • 43 Are there survey platforms with a free plan? transactional
  • 44 What survey platform offers the best value for money? transactional
  • 45 Which survey platforms have affordable monthly pricing? transactional
  • 46 What are the cheapest survey platforms for small businesses? transactional
  • 47 Which survey platforms offer unlimited responses? transactional
  • 48 Do survey platforms have free trial options? transactional
  • 49 What survey platforms are worth paying for? transactional
  • 50 Which survey platform plans include reporting and analytics? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best survey platforms for businesses? 210/mo
  • 2 What are the top survey platform options for customer feedback? 30/mo
  • 3 What are the most popular survey platforms right now?
  • 4 Which survey platforms are most recommended for teams?
  • 5 What survey platform should I use for online surveys?
  • 6 What are the best survey platforms for collecting responses?
  • 7 Which survey platforms are best for small businesses?
  • 8 What are the best survey platforms for market research?
  • 9 What survey platform is best for customer satisfaction surveys?
  • 10 What are the best survey platforms with analytics?
  • 11 Which survey platforms are easiest to use?
  • 12 What are the best survey platforms for teams?
  • 13 What survey platforms are best for feedback collection?
  • 14 What are the best survey platforms for researchers?
  • 15 Which survey platforms are best for creating custom surveys?