In all likelihood, you have used a Likert scale (or something you’ve called a Likert scale) in a survey before. It might surprise you to learn that Likert scales are a very specific format and what you have been calling Likert may not be. Not to worry — researchers that have been doing surveys for… Read More »
Fall-Off Reports
What is this?
The page Fall-Off report is designed to analyze the survey rather than the data, and only after data has been collected. The goal is to identify pages where respondents have chosen to leave the survey, resulting in partial response data.
When would I use it?
You can use the Fall-Off Report to analyze peaks of survey abandonment on particular pages. Sometimes, your survey may be well laid out, but there’s one particular page that scares off survey takers (such as a really long table of radio buttons). By knowing what page people stopped on, it can help you identify what you may need to change for your next survey to avoid abandonment (such as types of questions, question density, number of pages,etc).
What do they look like?
What do the numbers mean?
To learn more about how to create and analyze Fall off Reports, please see the tutorial below.
Additional Articles Related to Fall-Off Reports
- Tutorial: Fall-Off Reports
