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SurveyMonkey Help Tutorial: Response Analysis Best Practices

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Published on May 10, 2013

Ways to get the most valuable conclusions from your data.

http://www.grovo.com/surveymonkey-ana...

After you've finished collecting the survey responses that you need, using SurveyMonkey's analysis tools can help you get the most out of the responses you've received, and there are some things you can do to make the process easier.

What kinds of things you can and should do depend largely on the questions you asked in your survey.

If your survey is made up of mostly multiple-choice or closed-ended questions, you can represent the responses you've received visually using graphs, and filter and compare responses to understand trends.

For example, a survey might reveal that your most satisfied users are more active on Twitter than Facebook.

On the other hand, if your survey consists of mostly written responses, you can have SurveyMonkey automatically look for significant or unique words in respondents' answers or manually categorize them yourself.

Finally, you can export your data, letting you display it on a web page, print it out, or use it in a different statistical analysis program.Ways to get the most valuable conclusions from your data.

http://www.grovo.com/surveymonkey-ana...

After you've finished collecting the survey responses that you need, using SurveyMonkey's analysis tools can help you get the most out of the responses you've received, and there are some things you can do to make the process easier.

What kinds of things you can and should do depend largely on the questions you asked in your survey.

If your survey is made up of mostly multiple-choice or closed-ended questions, you can represent the responses you've received visually using graphs, and filter and compare responses to understand trends.

For example, a survey might reveal that your most satisfied users are more active on Twitter than Facebook.

On the other hand, if your survey consists of mostly written responses, you can have SurveyMonkey automatically look for significant or unique words in respondents' answers or manually categorize them yourself.

Finally, you can export your data, letting you display it on a web page, print it out, or use it in a different statistical analysis program.

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