Marketing & Business Growth :  Market Research & Competitive Analysis

How to Write Survey Questions

Author: MySolutionSpot Editor
Published:  Fri, Jul 11 2008

Writing quality survey questions is not as easy as people think. Well-written survey questions gather the exact information you need without inciting biased or unclear perspectives within the question itself; a survey question must maintain a neutral stance at all times. Let's analyze a potential survey question:

Question: Do you believe religious extremists should be prosecuted for their actions if they hurt another person while protesting?

Is that a good survey question? In my opinion it is a terrible survey question. I'll explain why.

When we ask questions, they are structured largely based upon our environment - what we know and experience in life every day. This includes prejudices, pre-established perspectives, and our personal interpretation of the world at large. This is okay and actually makes daily communication much easier because the people we communicate with on a day-to-day basis more than likely share our immediate environment. They could be the neighbor who lives across the street or a fellow parent at the local high school football game and more than likely their perception of the world will be similar to ours. When we converse with them, those shared beliefs are communicated silently within the conversation, and the conveyance of ideas and opinions are much more easily shared. To put it another way, two wheat farmers based in the same county but who have never met could more than likely work together side by side all day long without much confusion in their communication. Now imagine a sea-hardened, leather-skinned Alaskan fisherman trying to carry on a general conversation with a green New York tax attorney. That would be an interesting conversation to hear, wouldn't it? These examples are, of course, extreme, but they convey the point I'm trying to make. Unless you deliberately structure your sentences in a neutral manner that does not encourage pre-conceived perceptions, you're going to have erroneous data for your survey.

Let's look at the question again:

Do you believe religious extremists should be prosecuted for their actions if they hurt another person while protesting?

'Religious extremists' is an extremely poor description. For me, that description brings up images of terrorists, and that is an image that directly conflicts with two other words in the sentence: prosecuted and protests. I don't associate terrorists with prosecution or legal, law-abiding action of any sort. Nor do I associate terrorists with any sort of organized protest. The description of 'religious extremists' convolutes the entire question and, in my opinion, would confuse the person taking the survey and most likely yield useless data.

'Hurt another person while protesting'. This description is also confusing. How did they hurt this person? Was it an accidental hot-coffee spill that burned someone's arm? Did the protester shoot someone? Or maybe the protester assaulted an employee who was simply walking by on her way to work? 'Hurt another person while protesting' is simply too vague to be within a survey question. It should clearly describe how the individual was hurt.

Here is a much more precise survey question that could be accurately answered by the New York attorney, the Alaskan fisherman, or the wheat farmers:

Do you believe a pro-life activist should be criminally prosecuted for shooting a pregnant woman while she was attempting to visit an abortion clinic during a public protest?

Although that survey question would invoke an emotional response from anyone who reads it, it still maintains a neutral stance within its description. This allows the reader to give their response based on a clear, unbiased perspective.

Formulating survey questions is a much tougher task than most people realize. The questions must maintain a neutral stance or they will taint the data being collected and render the survey useless. You should take great care when writing survey questions and have at least several stages of proofreading before the questions are finalized.

Article Source: http://www.articleated.com (http://www.articleated.com/Article/How-to-write-Survey-questions/2995)

Free survey-site access: top paid online survey databases free online surveys for pay. Canadian surveys: legitimate canadian surveys online. US surveys: free membership online paid survey.


Post Comment Contact Author
7  Comments
paul paul
Wed, Jun 9 2010 5:14 PM

Re: How to Write Survey Questions

  • Be aware of your personal biases.
  • Be clear and concise.
  • Use standard English.
  • Write clear instructions.
  • Avoid slang, jargon, and acronyms whenever possible.
  • Avoid loaded or leading words.
  • Avoid double-barreled questions (i.e., measure one thought per item).
  • Sequence the questions logically.
  • Preview the survey and/or have a colleague review it.
  • Consider the time needed to complete the survey.
  • When in doubt, K.I.S.S. (keep it short & simple).

For Video Demonstration Please Watch Anime Online

 

S McBurrz
Mon, Jun 14 2010 9:39 PM

Re: How to Write Survey Questions

I think testing is one of the most important parts of a survey. By using a small sample to test your survey and adjust it accordingly, it can save you hours of headaches down the road when the results come in. Great article!

 

Looking to create your own PDF files? Well with the PDF Creator Suite from McBurrz, you can do just that!

 

Find all kinds of open source software at McBurrz !

 

Brown erik
Wed, Aug 4 2010 1:58 AM

Re: How to Write Survey Questions

I remember doing a survey way back in college and I don’t remember thinking of any of the suggestions given here. I have a feeling we were leading the target audience to get what we wanted from them so there definitely was a bias. There was double failure because I remember that I needed a translator in most of the home because I couldn’t follow the language. It wasn’t a life threatening situation but now I feel I did not do the survey as it should have been done.

fulfillment companies

ben johnson
Tue, Aug 10 2010 2:43 AM

Re: How to Write Survey Questions

Magnificent post! This really is undoubtedly probably the most all-inclusive statement on this matter. Thanks for your time and energy, I'll return to browse the revisions

logo design - logo designs - website design

Stephen Paul
Sat, Aug 28 2010 6:06 PM

Re: How to Write Survey Questions

I think unless you deliberately structure your sentences in a neutral manner that does not encourage pre-conceived perceptions, you're going to have erroneous data for your survey. Thanks top rated eye creams

1 - 5 of 5 Posts
Share/Save/Bookmark