Net Promoter® Score survey
Measure customer loyalty and happiness
Understand your customers using a proven measurement system. Ask for a 1-10 score at key points in their journey, then analyze the results to:
· Compare sentiment across segments
· Determine customer loyalty
· Gauge customer satisfaction over time
Advanced targeting
Ask for feedback at the perfect moment
Trigger surveys after important events—like when the user completes a purchase or accesses support resources.
- Find out what pleases your user base
- Discover why users are unhappy
- Target specific audience segments to get highly relevant feedback
Streamlined analysis
Make vital product improvements faster
Built-in automation features help you integrate NPS® surveys within your team’s workflows. Spot trends quickly and share them with your colleagues so you can solve issues before customers churn.
- Analyze open-text responses with AI to reduce manual work
- Segment users according to their scores and watch relevant session replays to understand their experiences
- Solve issues fast by sending responses to Jira, Asana, Linear, and Trello
Most common use cases
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01 Prevent customer churn
Repeated low NPS can hint at where customers are encountering bugs, issues, or poor user experiences. Monitor your survey results to discover issues early on and resolve them before customers churn.
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02 Investigate issues
Want to know why a user submitted a low NPS? Use Session Replay and Journey Analysis to get more context by taking a closer look at their experiences.
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03 Segment by score
Discover what’s driving user sentiment trends by creating audience segments for specific scores. Next, compare your segments using Journey Analysis and Zone-based heatmaps to learn what’s making users frustrated or happy.
The North Face X Contentsquare
Leveraging CX to optimize holiday shopping
Every year in October, The North Face launches an online Gift Guide to help shoppers navigate the gift-giving season. As the main retail event of the year, the lead-up to the holidays is a major source of digital revenue for the brand, and getting it wrong is simply not an option.
Read more from The North face View all case studies
"
What’s great about Contentsquare is that the insights are visual and extremely easy to digest. It’s particularly helpful to be able to give the creative or leadership team a clear picture of pain points and successes — it helps secure immediate buy-in and significantly reduces time to action, meaning we don’t miss out on potential sales."
Lisa Skowrup
Senior Manager, Site Experience
The North Face
Frequently Asked Questions
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Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a customer loyalty and satisfaction measurement that asks customers how likely they are to recommend your product or service to others on a scale of 0–10. Coupled with qualitative feedback, it may help you reduce churn and increase retention.
Net Promoter® & Net Promoter Score® are registered trademarks of Satmetrix Systems, Inc., Bain & Company and Fred Reichheld. -
Yes. The template comes pre-populated with our expert-built questions, but you’re free to edit them to fit your needs. You can also customize the survey’s appearance, audience targeting and on-page positioning.
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There are several ways you can feature the survey on your website:
- As pop-ups that appear when users complete a certain action or visit a certain page
- As full-screen modals that appear over the top of the web page (prompting the user to close or complete the survey)
- As buttons that users can click to start the survey
- Embedded in your content in a fixed location on the page
Lastly, every survey has a unique URL that you can send to users directly -
A good survey questionnaire should be short, opening with a question that asks how likely the user is to recommend your company. You can also include a second, open-ended question that lets them elaborate on the reason for their score.
Here are a few ways you could phrase the first question:
- How likely are you to recommend [company name] to a friend or colleague?
- On a scale of 0 to 10, how likely are you to recommend [company name] to a friend or colleague?
Here are some examples of open-ended secondary questions you could use to collect qualitative feedback:
- What can we do to improve [company name]?
- What was missing or disappointing in your experience with [company name]?
- How can we improve your experience with [company name]?
- How do you benefit from using [company name]?
- What problem are you trying to solve with [company name]?
You may also want to ask users to provide feedback on a specific customer touchpoint. Questions for this type of transactional NPS survey (tNPS) are formulated like so:
- After trying out this new feature, how likely are you to recommend [company name] to a friend or colleague? Based on your interaction with our customer support team, how likely are you to recommend [company name] to a friend or colleague?
Pro tip: if your company has several products/services, replace [company name] with the name of one product or service instead.