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SurveyMonkey is built to handle every use case and need. Explore our product to learn how SurveyMonkey can work for you.

Get data-driven insights from a global leader in online surveys.

Integrate with 100+ apps and plug-ins to get more done.

Build and customize online forms to collect info and payments.

Create better surveys and spot insights quickly with built-in AI.

Purpose-built solutions for all of your market research needs.

Templates

Measure customer satisfaction and loyalty for your business.

Learn what makes customers happy and turn them into advocates.

Get actionable insights to improve the user experience.

Collect contact information from prospects, invitees, and more.

Easily collect and track RSVPs for your next event.

Find out what attendees want so that you can improve your next event.

Uncover insights to boost engagement and drive better results.

Get feedback from your attendees so you can run better meetings.

Use peer feedback to help improve employee performance.

Create better courses and improve teaching methods.

Learn how students rate the course material and its presentation.

Find out what your customers think about your new product ideas.

Resources

Best practices for using surveys and survey data

Our blog about surveys, tips for business, and more.

Tutorials and how to guides for using SurveyMonkey.

How top brands drive growth with SurveyMonkey.

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Tips for creating and using surveys on your blog or website

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Your company’s website is a conversation with your customers, and it’s important to ensure that conversation isn’t one-sided.

Do visitors like your homepage redesign? Do shoppers on your retail site want to see different products there? How’s your website experience in general?

Your visitors probably won’t be proactive about answering these questions. So give them a voice by asking for their feedback.

SurveyMonkey works seamlessly with WordPress, the platform that powers nearly a quarter of the world’s websites. You can embed a survey into WordPress (or have them pop up), ask your visitors everything you need to know, and make it easy for them to respond.

One of the biggest benefits of using WordPress surveys to gather website feedback is that you don’t have to find out who your users are or even develop a strategy to track them down—they come to you.

Embedding your survey can also increase the relevance of your results. Say you’ve recently redesigned your website. You may like how the new design looks, but how do your customers feel? The best time give them a website feedback survey is when they’re looking at the very site you’re asking about—that’s when their thoughts and attitudes are still fresh in their minds.

Additionally, WordPress surveys usually make for a good user experience. Visitors won’t need to leave your site to answer your questions and you don’t have to interrupt their browsing to get the answers you need.

For example, if you’ve just begun using WordPress and you want to make sure that everything works correctly, you can embed a small bug report survey into your site. That way, users can easily report problems while staying on your site.

No matter which way you do it, embedding a survey is a simple, unobtrusive tool for communicating with your visitors so that they have the best customer experience possible.

Embedding a survey directly into your WordPress site means it will seamlessly show up beside your other content. But that’s not always the best option. Users might not scroll all the way through a site to see your WordPress survey, or your survey might not fit in with your site’s content.

In these cases you might consider using a pop-up survey. Using a pop-up survey on your website is a direct way of getting feedback from all your visitors, not just the ones who happen scroll past your survey.

Alternatively, you can opt to include a pop-up invitation for people to take a survey, inviting users to follow a link to a survey instead of putting it directly in front of them.

In either case, it’s best to limit these surveys to a few questions—the Net Promoter Score℠ (NPS) question is a good choice for getting a quick read on customer loyalty and whether or not they’d recommend your site to others.

No matter what type of survey you choose to embed into your WordPress site, the process starts in the same place: After you’ve designed your survey, you’ve got to collect survey responses. Here’s how to do it in SurveyMonkey.

For all of your WordPress surveys you can adjust the width, height and border color. You can also customize whether respondents see a thank you page, if the survey stops showing up after a certain date and time, and more.

Copy paste the piece of code you get into your WordPress HTML tool wherever you’d like your survey to appear.

Once you get the code for either type, copy paste it immediately before your closing tag to add the survey.

It’s great idea to preview how your survey will look on your website by copying it into an HTML test bed. This way, you can be sure it will look perfect on your site.

Don’t spend time worrying about who sees your survey. Our Javascript is supported by most popular adblock programs, including AdBlock Plus. Pop-up surveys track cookies to make sure they don’t show multiple times.

Create WordPress surveys to track visitor feedback on your website, do market research, or gauge customer satisfaction.

You can hide SurveyMonkey branding from your surveys and popups with our white label surveys.

NPS®, Net Promoter® & Net Promoter® Score are registered trademarks of Satmetrix Systems, Inc., Bain & Company and Fred Reichheld.