How to Create a Customer Survey
Copyright © 1999-2008 Edward Lowe Foundation. www.edwardlowe.org All rights reserved.
How To Create A Customer Survey
How satisfied are your customers? Use these tips on
question phrasing and layout to maximize the response rate
and the value of the results when you prepare and apply a
written customer survey.
Surveying Your Customers
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Define Your Objectives
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Determine Who Completes the Survey
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Develop the Content
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Analyze the Results
Next Steps
Sample Survey
Resources
Surveying Your Customers
There are four steps in conducting a successful survey. They are:
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Define Your Objectives
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Determine Who Completes the Survey
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Develop the Content
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Analyze the Results
Step 1: Define Your Objectives
What do you want to know from the survey? Your objectives will shape your survey questions.
If you try to include too much, the survey will grow too
long. Customers may disregard it. Or they may invest the
time to complete it and tell you more than you can handle!
If you can't respond to their input and show you treat
their feedback seriously, relations will sour.
Step 2: Determine Who Completes the Survey
Identify those customers whose satisfaction you want to
measure. If your business caters to vastly different
customer groups, you may want to focus on one category of
buyers at a time. To avoid what marketers refer to as
"sampling error," send the survey to a random sample of
people who represent the customer base you seek to measure.
Use the survey to reach customers whom you would otherwise
miss. For example, don't just survey the handful of people
who represent your largest accounts or whom you see most
often. Distribute the questionnaire to customers you tend
to ignore or not interact with as frequently. They may have
ideas or problems that you would never otherwise hear
about.
Step 3: Develop the Content
The questions you ask flow from the objective you
identified in Step 1. Resist the temptation to stray from
the core issues to include topics you're merely curious
about. Follow these steps:
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Draft the questions. Make sure every question relates
clearly to your objective. Keep them simple and concise.
Long questions force respondents to work too hard to
understand what you want. Eliminate unnecessary words.
Instead of: Did the clerk provide personal service when
you asked to be helped with your selection?
Ask: Did the clerk provide caring service?
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Avoid ambiguous, vague and leading questions. For
example, loading your question with positives can create
"language bias" that influences how people respond.
Instead of: Were you delighted with our service?
Ask: How would you rate our service?
Instead of: Did the phone rep give you an acceptable
level of attention?
Ask: How long were you on hold? Did the
customer-service representative speak clearly? Were
your questions answered? Please describe the
representative's tone?
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Limit each question to one point. Otherwise, you may
confuse a customer who wants to respond positively to one
thought and negatively to another.
Instead of: Was the clerk pleasant and did she handle
the transaction quickly?
Ask: Was the clerk pleasant?
Did the clerk handle the transaction quickly?
Develop your questions for the survey:
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Choose the right order. Survey designers often warn about
"order effect," or the sequence with which you ask
questions. Where you place certain questions within the
survey can influence what kind of answers you get. For
instance, asking for overall impressions at the outset
might give you a different answer than if you ask it at
the end of the form-after the customer has been
responding to specific questions and remembering all the
minor problems associated with your product or service.
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Choose a response format. There are two common options
for respondents to give answers checklist and Likert
scale.
For checklists, the customer will be able to respond
"yes" or "no." For the other format, developed by R.A.
Likert in 1932, scales are used. Examples:
Strongly disagree, disagree, neutral, agree, strongly
agree
Very dissatisfied, dissatisfied, indifferent,
satisfied, very satisfied
Very poor, poor, average, good, very good
Note: You may want to add NR (not relevant) or NA (not
appropriate) to indicate a customer isn't a valid
respondent for that question.
The Likert scale allows the customer to express degrees
of opinion and thus offers a higher level of
reliability than a two-choice checklist.
Reliability appears to level off after five responses
so while a five-point scale is better than just two
options, ten is not necessarily better than five.
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Weigh the importance of each question. Isolate what you
can and cannot improve, and focus on questions that you
can act on. Consider what counts most to your customer,
and prune away "I'd just like to know" questions that
don't truly measure satisfaction.
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Use open-ended questions sparingly. Using a checklist or
Likert scale makes it easy to tabulate the responses
consistently, but answers to broad questions such as "How
can we improve our service?" are less conducive to making
comparisons and measuring differences over time.
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Leave room for comments at the end of the survey. If a
customer has a specific problem, that's the place to
describe it.
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Test the questions. Ask a pilot group of employees or
customers to complete the survey before you finalize it.
They'll help you flag any confusing or unnecessary
questions.
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Keep it short. Long surveys reduce the number of
responses you'll get.
Ideally, keep it to two pages, front and back for a
total of four pages.
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Limit it to 30 questions, including some opportunities
for customers to compare your product or service to the
competition. And leave lots of white space so that the
layout doesn't intimidate or overwhelm customers.
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Thank participants. For mailed forms, include a
self-addressed stamped envelope to facilitate the return
of the completed survey.
Online Or Written Survey?
A cost-effective way to collect input from customers is to
use prepackaged online surveys. Your customers can complete
these questionnaires at their PCs and send them back to you
instantaneously.
For example, ManagementCentral's Web site includes online
"Client Satisfaction Reports." You can direct your
customers or employees to complete the survey and return it
to ManagementCentral; it will process the results and
provide a customized analysis based on your needs.
Step 4: Analyze the Results
To compile and analyze the survey results, use a computer
spreadsheet program. Sort the data to draw more significant
conclusions. Examples: customer's job function, sales level
or product purchased.
Whenever you collect customers' impressions of your
service, don't interpret the results in isolation. Ideally,
you should evaluate customer ratings in comparison to how
they rate your competitors. That's why a good survey
includes an opportunity for respondents to rate your
competition alongside your company's performance.
Finally, share the results with your customers. This is
absolutely necessary if you want to continue to receive
feedback from them.
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Learn More From A Fair Comparison
"research has shown conclusively
that customer satisfaction can be accurately
correlated with customer loyalty only if it is
measured relative to the competition. If your
customer shows top-box satisfaction, obviously he
is telling you he is at least no less satisfied
with your firm than he is with a competitor. But
the most direct way to measure customer
satisfaction's real impact on your business is to
measure the competition's customer satisfaction
as well."
from "Enterprise One to One" by Don
Peppers and Martha Rogers, Doubleday, 1997.
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Next Steps [top]
Once you've identified your customers' needs, your
strengths and weaknesses and the priority for improvements
from the surveys, pick a few action items to produce
results. Strive to concentrate your efforts on those select
areas that will achieve the biggest gains in customer
satisfaction. Identify key performance indicators for
customer satisfaction, develop goals and measure your
progress against those benchmarks.
Sample Survey [top]
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Date:
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Company:
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Department (optional):
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Role/Function (optional):
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Address (optional):
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Phone (optional):
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Instructions: First evaluate the services
provided by us. Next, evaluate the services
provided by an alternate supplier or the
competition in general. A "5" represents
world-class levels, "1" is poor, "3" is average. If
you feel that we or the competition perform this
service in a world-class manner, then circle "5".
If you feel that we or the competition perform at a
poor level, then circle "1". Please use the
remaining numbers to describe less extreme
feelings.
In the last column indicate how important you
feel this service is to you. If the statement
describes a service that is important to you,
please circle "H" for High. If the service is not
important to you, circle "L" for Low. If you feel
somewhere in between, indicate so by circling "M"
for Medium.
If you wish to add information not covered by
the statements or provide examples that describe
your opinions about a service, please do so in
the comment sections provided at the end of each
question. The questions are general in nature yet
comprehensive when accompanied with your specific
comments. Your comments are valuable in improving
our understanding of your requirements, and we
appreciate each one of them.
Thank you for your time and effort in helping
us become a world-class vendor!
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A. Reliability Ability to perform the
promised service dependably and accurately.
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This
Company
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Competition
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Importance
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1. Follows through with commitments in a
timely manner.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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2. Shows a sincere interest in solving my
problems.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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3. Performs the service right the first
time.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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4. Is dependable.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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5. Insists on error-free records.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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B. Empathy Caring, individualized attention
a firm provides its customers.
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1. Gives me personal attention.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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2. Has convenient service features (e.g.,
hours,contacts, etc.).
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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3. Has my best interests at heart.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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4. Understands my specific needs.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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C. Tangibles Appearance of physical
facilities, equipment, personnel and
communication materials.
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1. Has modern and/or appropriate facilities
and equipment.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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2. Physical facilities are visually
appealing.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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3. Projects a professional image.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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D. Responsiveness Willingness to help
customers and provide prompt service.
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1. Employees inform me exactly when
services will be performed.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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2. Employees give me prompt service.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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3. Employees are always willing to help me.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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4. Employees are never too busy to respond
to my requests.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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E. Assurance Knowledge and courtesy of
employees and their ability to inspire
trust and confidence.
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1. The behavior of employees instills
confidence in me.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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2. I feel safe in my transactions with
employees.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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3. Employees are courteous.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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4. Employees have the knowledge to answer
my questions.
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1 2 3 4 5
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1 2 3 4 5
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L M H
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Additional Comments
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Listed below are five features pertaining to
suppliers and the services they offer. We would like
to know how important each of these is to you when
you evaluate suppliers' service.
Please allocate a total of 100 points to the
five features based on how important each is to you
the more important a feature is to you, the more
points you should allocate to it.
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_____
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Points
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Appropriate facilities/equipment;
professional personnel.
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_____
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Points
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Accurate and dependable service performance.
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_____
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Points
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Willingness to help customers and provide
prompt service.
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_____
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Points
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Knowledgeable and courteous employees that
inspire trust and confidence.
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_____
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Points
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Caring, individualized attention to
customers.
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100
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Points
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Resources [top]
Books
Voices Into Choices: Acting on the
Voice of the Customer by Gary Burchill and Christina Hepner Brodie. (Oriel Inc., 1997).
Enterprise One to One: Tools for
Competing in the Interactive Age by Don Peppers and Martha Rogers. (Doubleday, 1999).
Clicking: 17 Trends That Drive Your
Business And Your Life by Faith Popcorn and Lys Marigold. (HarperBusiness, 1998).
Customer Visits: Building a Better
Market Focus by Edward F. McQuarrie. (Sage Publications, 1998).
The Discipline of Market Leaders:
Choose Your Customers, Narrow Your Focus, Dominate Your
Market by Michael Treacy and Fred Wiersema. (Addison-Wesley, 1997).
Professional Associations
American Productivity & Quality Center
Customer Measurement Satisfaction Association;
a professional association run by the Benchmarking Network,
a Houston-based customer measurement consulting company.
Mystery Shopping Services
Second To None
PulseBack
For a list of mystery shopping services, see http://www.pocket-change.com/mystery.htm
Software
SPSS
Inc.'s data mining software is widely used by
businesses to measure customer satisfaction.
The SAS
Institute Inc. also develops data mining tools.
Online Customer Surveys
CustomInsight offers free surveys for a
limited number of respondents, with fees for larger
samples.
Greenfield Online Inc.'s Web site, offers
for-fee customer surveys.
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without written permission from the publisher.