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Survey Question Writer

Generate well-designed survey questions for any research topic, catching leading questions, double-barreled items, loaded wording, and unlabeled scales before they reach respondents.

Used 89 times
Expert Verified
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Created byOguz Serdar
CM
Reviewed byCuneyt Mertayak

Prompt Template

You are a survey design consultant who writes questions that produce honest, usable answers instead of noise, catching the wording mistakes that quietly wreck a dataset before the first response comes in.

I'm building a survey about [RESEARCH_TOPIC], and the specific thing I need to measure is [WHAT_TO_MEASURE]. Generate [SURVEY_LENGTH:number:5-30] questions in [QUESTION_TYPE:select:mix of formats,Likert scale (agree/disagree),multiple choice,open-ended,yes/no,rating scale] format, written for [AUDIENCE?].

Start by breaking [WHAT_TO_MEASURE] into its real sub-components instead of writing one broad question and calling it finished. A question like "how satisfied are you with our service" hides three or four separate things a respondent might feel differently about. Name those separate things first, then write one question per component. Sequence the survey so it opens with an easy, low-stakes item that builds momentum, moves through the substantive questions in a logical order, and saves anything sensitive or demographic for the end, once the respondent is already committed to finishing.

For every question you write, state the question first, then add one short sentence explaining the design choice behind it: why that format suits what it measures, why the scale carries the specific number of points and labels it has, or why the question sits where it does in the sequence. Most survey templates skip this part. It's the part that teaches someone to build their next survey without help.

Catch four mistakes before any question reaches the final list, and don't let one slip through quietly. Leading questions push a respondent toward the answer the researcher wants, often by praising something before asking about it: "Since our support team resolved your issue quickly, how would you rate them?" assumes the outcome inside the question. Rewrite it neutral, asking about the resolution and the speed as two separate questions with no assumption built in. Double-barreled questions bundle two ideas into one item: "How satisfied are you with the product's price and quality?" forces a single rating onto two things that can pull in opposite directions. Split every double-barreled draft into two questions before it ships. Loaded or biased wording smuggles in an assumption the respondent never agreed to: "How often does our confusing checkout process frustrate you?" assumes the checkout is confusing. Strip the assumption and ask the neutral version instead. Vague scales without labeled anchors ask someone to rate something from 1 to 5 without saying what 1 and 5 mean. Two respondents can pick the same number for opposite reasons. Label every point on a scale of five or fewer, and label at minimum the two ends and the midpoint on anything longer.

Match the wording and complexity to [AUDIENCE], when given. A survey for internal staff can use company-specific terms a customer survey should avoid, and a survey aimed at a general public sample needs shorter sentences with no jargon at all. If no audience is given, default to plain, general-public language.

Close with a short note on what to do before this goes live: pilot the [SURVEY_LENGTH] questions on five to ten people first, since wording that reads fine on paper often confuses real respondents in ways a design review misses.

Variables
5

text
text
number

Range: 5 - 30

select
text

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About Survey Question Writer

Most survey guides hand you a list of generic example questions sorted by category, tell you to avoid leading questions and double-barreled items, and stop there. They never show what a biased question looks like next to its fix, or explain why one version of a question works while a near-identical one quietly wrecks your data.

This tool builds questions around your actual [RESEARCH_TOPIC] and your [WHAT_TO_MEASURE], in your [QUESTION_TYPE], a Likert scale, multiple choice, open-ended, yes or no, a rating scale, or a mix. Before any question makes the final list, it gets checked against four mistakes that undermine survey data most often. Those four are a leading question that nudges the answer, a double-barreled item that bundles two ideas into one score, loaded wording that assumes something the respondent never agreed to, and a scale with unlabeled points that lets two people mean opposite things by the same number.

Every question comes with a one-sentence reason for why it's built that way: which format fits what it measures, why the scale carries the labels it has, or why it sits where it does in the sequence. That's the part a static example list can't give you.

Still working out whether your project even needs a survey? Run it through the research design explainer first. Once your questions are ready, open them in the Dock Editor to refine the wording, or paste the prompt into ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini.

How to Use Survey Question Writer

1

Describe your topic and what you're measuring

Open the Dock Editor, ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini and drop this prompt in. Enter your [RESEARCH_TOPIC] and be specific about [WHAT_TO_MEASURE]. Narrowing this to one specific thing is what keeps the tool from generating one broad, unusable question instead of several sharp ones.

2

Pick your question format and survey length

Set [QUESTION_TYPE] to a single format or a mix of formats, and set [SURVEY_LENGTH] anywhere from 5 for a quick pulse check to 30 for a full research instrument.

3

Add your audience, if it matters

Fill in [AUDIENCE] when the wording needs to match a specific group, internal staff, customers, or a general public sample. Leave it blank for plain, general-purpose language.

4

Review each question's rationale

Every generated question comes with a one-sentence reason for its design. Check that reason against your own judgment, especially on any question that touches a sensitive topic.

5

Pilot before you send it live

Run the finished set past five to ten people who match your real respondents before the full survey goes out. Wording that looks fine on paper often confuses people once it's live.

Who Uses Survey Question Writer

Market Researchers

Build a customer or brand-perception survey around the exact thing you're testing, choosing between Likert-scale and open-ended items depending on how much nuance [WHAT_TO_MEASURE] needs.

HR and People Teams

Draft an engagement or pulse survey where onboarding, management, and workload questions stay separated instead of bundled into one satisfaction score that hides which part needs fixing.

Students and Thesis Writers

Turn a research question into a properly sequenced survey instrument for a methods section, with a rationale for each item ready to defend to a committee.

Customer Experience Teams

Generate a post-purchase or cancellation survey that isolates the real reason customers leave instead of one vague how-satisfied-were-you question.

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