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Qualitative and Quantitative Survey: Examples & Questions

Are surveys qualitative or quantitative? Direct answer plus question examples, Likert scale classification, and the Survey Question Pairing Principle

TABLE OF CONTENT

Author: Unmesh Sheth

Last Updated:

March 29, 2026

Founder & CEO of Sopact with 35 years of experience in data systems and AI

Are Surveys Qualitative or Quantitative? Examples & Question Guide 2026

A program evaluator spends three weeks designing a participant survey. She agonizes over every question: should she ask "How many job interviews did you complete?" or "How did the program change how you think about employment?" Both are legitimate research questions. Both belong in the same survey. When results arrive, she has 200 rows of numbers she can report and 200 open-ended paragraphs she cannot analyze — because her survey tool exported them to separate columns with no connection between them, and she has no system to process either alongside the other.

She didn't make the wrong design choice. She answered the wrong question. The question "should our survey be qualitative or quantitative?" is The False Binary — the assumption that a survey must choose one data type, when the real question is "what analysis does this survey need to support, and how do we design both types to work together from the moment of collection?"

Most survey tools — SurveyMonkey, Typeform, Google Forms — make this worse by treating qualitative and quantitative questions as separate outputs. You get charts for your scales and an exported text file for your open-ended responses. Neither the tool nor the workflow is designed to connect the two. Sopact Sense is built on the premise that the confidence score means nothing without the narrative that explains it — so both are collected in the same instrument, linked to the same participant ID, and analyzed in the same system.

Ownable Concept
The False Binary
The assumption that a survey must choose between qualitative and quantitative questions — when the real question is "what analysis does this survey need to support, and how do both types work together from the moment of collection?" Choosing one produces either credible-but-shallow or rich-but-unscalable evidence. Pairing produces both.
Falling into the binary
What choosing only one data type costs
  • Quantitative only: outcomes without explanation
  • Qualitative only: stories without demonstrable scale
  • Funder asks "why" — the numbers can't answer it
  • Open-ended exports sit unread in a spreadsheet column
  • Two parallel reports stapled together, called "mixed methods"
Question pairing
What paired survey design produces
  • Scale + explanation from the same participant at the same moment
  • Mechanism identified at the point of collection, not weeks later
  • Funder gets the outcome and the causal explanation in one report
  • Both data types analyzed in the same system, under the same ID
  • One evidence base answering "what changed" and "why it changed"
10k+
monthly impressions for "are surveys qualitative or quantitative" — near-zero clicks because survey tools don't answer the question
80%
of open-ended survey responses collected by nonprofits are never systematically analyzed
1
platform that collects and analyzes qualitative and quantitative responses in the same participant record — no export cycles
Sopact Sense resolves The False Binary — paired qualitative and quantitative questions collected in the same form, linked by persistent participant IDs, and analyzed together by Intelligent Column without manual reconciliation.
Explore Sopact Sense →

Step 1: Are Surveys Qualitative or Quantitative?

The direct answer: A survey is neither inherently qualitative nor quantitative. It produces whatever type of data its questions are designed to generate.

A survey asking "On a scale of 1–5, how confident do you feel about your job search skills?" generates quantitative data: a number that can be averaged, trended, and compared across cohorts. A survey asking "Describe the most significant change in your job search skills since starting the program" generates qualitative data: a narrative that requires interpretation to produce insight.

The same survey can — and should — contain both. The scale question tells you what changed. The open-ended question tells you what caused it. Treating them as alternatives rather than as a paired system is the False Binary that makes most program surveys produce evidence that is either credible but shallow, or rich but unscalable.

Survey type by question structure:

A survey with only closed-ended, scaled, or multiple-choice questions produces quantitative data. A survey with only open-ended, narrative, or descriptive questions produces qualitative data. A mixed-method survey — the format most nonprofit and social sector programs should be using — produces both, with paired questions designed to complement each other analytically from the start.

For questionnaire templates, pairing frameworks, and sample instruments by design type, see mixed method surveys. This page covers the foundational question of survey type and question design. The mixed-method surveys page covers how to build the full instrument.

1. Identify your situation
2. Question pairing examples
3. Quick answer FAQ
Only numbers, no explanation
Our survey produces metrics but can't explain why they changed
Program managers · Evaluation leads · Funder-facing teams
Only stories, no scale
Our qualitative data is rich but we can't demonstrate scale to funders
Qualitative researchers · Community programs · Narrative-first teams
Both, but disconnected
We collect both data types but they're in separate systems and never connected
M&E leads · Multi-tool teams · Evaluation consultants

The False Binary: Why "Qualitative or Quantitative?" Is the Wrong Question

The False Binary appears in grant proposals ("we will use qualitative surveys to capture participant voice"), in evaluation plans ("our quantitative survey will track outcomes"), and in program team discussions ("we ran the qualitative interviews separately from the survey"). Each formulation treats the two data types as alternatives — when their value comes precisely from their connection.

Programs that choose only quantitative surveys can report that outcomes improved. They cannot explain what drove the improvement. Programs that choose only qualitative surveys can describe what participants experienced. They cannot demonstrate scale. The funder who asks "what were your outcomes?" followed immediately by "what drove those outcomes?" is asking a question that only integrated surveys can answer — with the number and the explanation from the same participant at the same program point.

The False Binary also obscures a practical design error: collecting both data types in separate instruments at separate points in the program lifecycle. A program runs monthly quantitative surveys and conducts exit interviews six months later. The quantitative data describes what happened in real time. The qualitative data describes a retrospective memory of a six-month experience. These are not the same thing, and they cannot be correlated to produce causal evidence — they are two separate studies dressed up as mixed-methods.

The design fix is pairing at the collection point: a confidence rating and an explanation of what built or blocked that confidence, collected from the same participant in the same survey, at the same program moment. When both data types live in the same record, linked by a persistent participant ID, Sopact Sense's Intelligent Column can answer "do participants who describe transportation barriers in their responses show lower confidence scores?" as a query — not a six-week reconciliation project.

Step 2: What Is a Qualitative Survey?

A qualitative survey is a data collection instrument designed primarily to generate open-ended, narrative, and descriptive responses that require interpretation to produce insight. Qualitative survey questions cannot be answered with a number, a rating, or a selection from a predefined list.

"Describe what financial confidence means to you" is a qualitative survey question. "What specific barrier almost prevented you from completing the program?" is a qualitative survey question. "In your own words, how has your relationship with employment changed since joining the program?" is a qualitative survey question.

What distinguishes a strong qualitative survey question from a weak one is behavioral specificity. "How did you feel?" invites vague responses that cannot be coded consistently. "Describe a specific moment in the program when you felt most supported" produces a behavioral narrative with analyzable detail. "What would you tell a friend who was considering joining this program?" produces a revealed-preference answer that is both qualitative and highly predictive of outcomes.

Qualitative surveys are appropriate when: you need to understand the mechanism behind a quantitative finding, you are in an Exploratory Sequential design phase discovering what indicators matter before building a quantitative instrument, or you are capturing stakeholder voice for a funder report that requires qualitative evidence alongside outcome metrics.

Qualitative surveys are insufficient alone when: the program needs to demonstrate scale of impact, funder reporting requires comparable metrics across cohorts, or the research question asks "how many" or "by how much."

Step 3: Qualitative Survey Question Examples

Every qualitative survey question should be paired with a corresponding quantitative question covering the same outcome domain — so both can be analyzed together for the same participant. The pairing is the design unit, not the individual question.

Workforce and employment programs:

  • "Describe the most significant change in your professional confidence since starting the program." (Paired with: confidence rating 1–5)
  • "What specific obstacle did you face in your job search that the program helped you address?" (Paired with: employment status at 90 days)
  • "What would you tell someone with the same background as you about whether to join this program?" (Paired with: NPS score 0–10)
  • "Describe a moment in the program when you felt most prepared for the workplace." (Paired with: workplace readiness rating)

Education and youth programs:

  • "Describe a specific skill you developed that you have already used outside of class." (Paired with: post-program assessment score)
  • "What was the most significant barrier to attending consistently, and how did you manage it?" (Paired with: attendance rate)
  • "Describe how your relationship with learning has changed since the program began." (Paired with: engagement rating)

Community health and social services:

  • "In your own words, describe how your access to healthcare has changed since joining the program." (Paired with: healthcare access rating)
  • "What support was missing that would have made a meaningful difference in your experience?" (Paired with: satisfaction score)

Scholarship and grant programs:

  • "Describe the barriers you have overcome to reach this point in your academic journey." (Paired with: academic score and financial need index)
  • "What do you intend to do with this opportunity, and how does it connect to your long-term goals?" (Paired with: program alignment rubric score)

The qualitative question immediately following the quantitative question in the form produces the most analytically useful responses — participants naturally explain the experience they just rated, making the qualitative response a direct explanation of the quantitative score. For program evaluation instruments, this pairing structure is more reliable than conducting qualitative interviews weeks after quantitative surveys close.

Step 4: What Is a Quantitative Survey?

A quantitative survey is an instrument designed primarily to generate numeric, structured, and comparable responses — Likert scales, binary yes/no responses, multiple-choice selections, ranked lists, and numeric fill-in questions that can be aggregated, trended, and statistically analyzed.

"On a scale of 1–10, how confident are you in your ability to find employment in your field?" is a quantitative survey question. "Did you complete the program? Yes / No" is a quantitative survey question. "Rate the following program elements on a scale of 1–5" is a quantitative survey block. "How many job applications did you submit in the past 30 days?" is a quantitative survey question.

Quantitative surveys are necessary when: funder reporting requires comparable metrics across cohorts and time periods, program leadership needs to track trend lines across multiple collection cycles, outcomes must be benchmarked against sector standards, or the research question asks "how many," "how much," or "compared to when."

What quantitative survey data structurally cannot do is the constraint that makes pairing essential: it cannot explain itself. A satisfaction score of 3.2 is a precise measurement. It tells leadership that something is wrong. It does not tell them what is wrong, who is experiencing it, or what would fix it. That information is in the qualitative question the quantitative question should be paired with.

For survey analytics that produces actionable intelligence rather than dashboards that raise more questions than they answer, the quantitative instrument is the scale layer and the qualitative instrument is the explanation layer — designed together, collected together, and analyzed together.

Step 5: Is a Questionnaire Qualitative or Quantitative? Is the Likert Scale Qualitative or Quantitative?

Is a questionnaire qualitative or quantitative? A questionnaire follows the same logic as a survey: the data type is determined by question structure, not instrument name. Narrative open-ended questions produce qualitative data. Scaled and structured questions produce quantitative data. A questionnaire containing both types is a mixed-method instrument. "Questionnaire" and "survey" are structural equivalents.

Is the Likert scale qualitative or quantitative? The Likert scale is a quantitative measurement instrument. It generates ordinal numeric data — a position on a numbered scale (1 through 5, 1 through 7) — that can be averaged, trended, and compared across cohorts. The response labels ("strongly agree," "somewhat agree") look like qualitative categories, but the data produced is numeric and analyzed using quantitative methods.

A persistent source of confusion: because Likert scales measure attitudinal constructs (confidence, satisfaction, agreement), some researchers classify them as qualitative. The construct is attitudinal — but the measurement instrument is quantitative. The data produced is a number, not a narrative. For impact assessment purposes, Likert scales are quantitative instruments that should be paired with qualitative follow-up questions to explain what the attitudinal shift actually represents.

Is survey research qualitative or quantitative? Survey research is most commonly classified as a quantitative method — large samples, structured responses, statistical analysis. It can be qualitative when designed with open-ended questions and interpretive analysis. It is mixed-method when both types are combined in a single instrument designed for integrated analysis. The classification follows the instrument design and analysis approach.

Learn how Sopact Sense co-locates both question types in the same participant record

1
Separate exports, no connection
Charts for Likert scales. Text file for open-ended responses. No shared participant ID. The correlation requires manual matching that introduces errors.
2
Open-ended responses never analyzed
Qualitative questions collected, exported to a spreadsheet column — and never read. 80% of qualitative program data ends up here.
3
Different collection time points
Monthly quantitative surveys. Quarterly qualitative interviews. The two streams describe different moments in the participant experience and cannot be directly correlated.
4
Questions not designed to pair
Open-ended questions added without reference to specific quantitative outcomes. The qualitative responses cannot explain any metric because they weren't designed to.
Survey type Qualitative survey Quantitative survey Mixed-method survey (Sopact Sense)
Question format Open-ended narrative — cannot be answered with a number or predefined selection Likert scales, multiple-choice, binary yes/no, numeric fill-in Paired: rated question + open-ended explanation, collected in the same form under one participant ID
What it answers "Why did this happen?" and "What does it mean?" — mechanism and meaning "What changed?" and "By how much?" — scale and direction Both — from the same participant at the same program point
Funder question answered "What drove this result?" — yes. "How many participants?" — no. "By how much did outcomes improve?" — yes. "Why?" — structurally impossible. "What were your outcomes?" and "what drove them?" — both, from one instrument.
Is the Likert scale this type? No — Likert scales are quantitative even though they measure attitudinal constructs Yes — Likert scales generate ordinal numeric data analyzed using quantitative methods Likert items paired with qualitative follow-up questions covering the same outcome domain
Analysis approach Thematic coding, interpretive reading — 60–80 hrs/quarter manual without AI Statistical aggregation, trend lines, cohort comparison — fast and automatable Intelligent Column correlates open-ended themes with quantitative scores simultaneously — minutes, not weeks
Sufficient for evaluation? Not alone — cannot demonstrate scale or satisfy comparable metric reporting Not alone — cannot explain what drove outcomes or answer attribution questions Yes — scale and mechanism together, from one instrument, analyzed in one system
Sopact Sense is a data collection platform — qualitative and quantitative responses collected in one form, analyzed together. See how it works →

Step 6: Designing Paired Qualitative and Quantitative Survey Questions

The question pairing principle is the design rule that resolves The False Binary: for every critical outcome your program tracks quantitatively, design a corresponding qualitative question that captures the mechanism, barrier, or experience that explains the quantitative result.

The pairing must happen before data collection begins — not added when quantitative results raise unexplained questions. A qualitative question added after quantitative collection closes produces data from a different program moment — retrospective recall rather than contemporaneous experience.

The pairing structure: The quantitative question establishes scale ("On a scale of 1–5, how confident do you feel about your ability to find employment?"). The qualitative question immediately following establishes mechanism ("What specifically has changed in your job search approach since the program began?"). Both collected at the same program point, from the same participant, in the same form.

Why adjacent placement matters: When the qualitative question immediately follows the quantitative question, participants naturally reference the experience they just rated. The qualitative response becomes an explanation of the score rather than a separate reflection. This is the instrument-design equivalent of asking "rate this, then tell me why" — and the resulting data is analyzable as a pair, not as two separate outputs requiring reconciliation.

For the complete questionnaire structure, templates for each of the three research designs, and sample instruments by program type, see mixed method surveys. For choosing which research design governs the instrument sequence before building it, see mixed method design.

Video walkthrough
From Disconnected Surveys to Integrated Evidence: How Sopact Sense Closes The False Binary
This video shows how Sopact Sense eliminates The False Binary by collecting paired qualitative and quantitative survey questions in the same form, under the same participant ID. See how the platform moves from fragmented survey exports to a unified evidence pipeline — where open-ended responses and Likert scores are analyzable together through Intelligent Column without manual reconciliation, and where both answer the funder's "what" and "why" questions from the same dataset.
See how this pairing architecture applies to your survey design →
Explore Sopact Sense →

Frequently Asked Questions

Are surveys qualitative or quantitative?

Surveys are neither inherently qualitative nor quantitative. A survey with only scaled or multiple-choice questions produces quantitative data. A survey with only open-ended narrative questions produces qualitative data. A mixed-method survey — the most effective format for program evaluation — combines both types in paired questions designed to be analyzed together. The data type is determined by question structure, not by the word "survey."

Is a survey qualitative or quantitative research?

Survey research is most commonly used as a quantitative method — large samples, structured responses, statistical analysis. But it can be qualitative when designed with open-ended questions and interpretive analysis, or mixed-method when both types are combined in a single instrument. The classification is determined by instrument design and analysis approach.

What is a qualitative survey?

A qualitative survey is an instrument designed primarily to generate open-ended narrative responses requiring interpretation. Qualitative survey questions use open-ended formats that cannot be answered with a number or a predefined selection. They answer "why" and "how" questions — explaining the mechanisms and experiences that quantitative scores can detect but not describe.

What are qualitative survey question examples?

Qualitative survey question examples include: "Describe the most significant change in your professional confidence since starting the program," "What specific barrier almost prevented you from completing the program, and how did you manage it," and "In your own words, how has your relationship with employment changed?" Strong qualitative questions are behaviorally specific, not open-ended to the point of producing unusable vague responses.

What is a quantitative survey?

A quantitative survey is an instrument designed to generate numeric, structured, comparable responses — Likert scales, binary responses, multiple-choice selections, and numeric fill-ins. Quantitative surveys are used when programs need to demonstrate scale of impact, track trends across cohorts, or satisfy funder reporting requirements for comparable metrics. Their structural limitation is that they show what changed but not why.

Is a questionnaire qualitative or quantitative?

A questionnaire follows the same logic as a survey: the data type is determined by question structure, not instrument name. Open-ended questions produce qualitative data. Scaled and structured questions produce quantitative data. A questionnaire with both types is a mixed-method instrument. The word "questionnaire" does not determine the data type.

Is the Likert scale qualitative or quantitative?

The Likert scale is a quantitative measurement instrument. It generates ordinal numeric data — a position on a numbered scale — that can be averaged, trended, and compared across cohorts. The response labels ("strongly agree," "somewhat agree") look qualitative, but the data produced is numeric and analyzed using quantitative methods. Likert scales are the most common form of quantitative measurement in program evaluation surveys.

Is survey research qualitative or quantitative?

Survey research is typically classified as quantitative — but this applies when surveys use structured closed-ended questions with large samples and statistical analysis. When surveys use open-ended questions with interpretive analysis, they function as qualitative instruments. When both question types are combined in a single instrument designed for integrated analysis, survey research is mixed-method.

Can a survey be both qualitative and quantitative?

Yes. A mixed-method survey combines both types in paired questions designed to be analyzed together. The key design principle is question pairing: for every quantitative outcome metric, a corresponding qualitative question captures the mechanism or barrier that explains it. Sopact Sense collects both in the same form, links them via persistent participant IDs, and analyzes them together without manual export cycles.

What is The False Binary in survey design?

The False Binary is the assumption that a survey must choose between qualitative and quantitative questions — when the real question is "what analysis does this survey need to support, and how do both types work together from the point of collection?" Most program surveys should contain both types in paired format. The binary choice produces either credible-but-shallow quantitative data or rich-but-unscalable qualitative data. Integration produces both.

Why do survey platforms fail at mixed-method surveys?

Survey platforms like SurveyMonkey, Typeform, and Google Forms export qualitative and quantitative responses to separate outputs — charts for scaled questions, text exports for open-ended ones. Neither connects both under a shared participant identifier. Analyzing what a participant's open-ended response says in relation to their rating score requires manual export-import cycles that introduce errors. Sopact Sense co-locates both in the same participant record, enabling AI-powered correlation without reconciliation.

How do you analyze qualitative and quantitative survey data together?

Integrated analysis requires three conditions: shared participant identity, co-located storage, and pre-designed pairing. Sopact Sense's Intelligent Column correlates open-ended response themes with quantitative scores across all participants — answering "do participants who describe transportation barriers show lower attendance rates?" as a live query, not a weeks-long reconciliation project.

Ready to close The False Binary? Sopact Sense collects paired qualitative and quantitative questions in the same form, links them via persistent participant IDs, and analyzes them together through Intelligent Column — so the explanation always lives next to the score.
Explore Sopact Sense →
📋
The right survey question is not "qualitative or quantitative?" — it's "what decision does this evidence need to support?"
Most programs discover The False Binary when the funder asks "why" and the survey can't answer it — or when the interviews are compelling but can't prove scale. Sopact Sense was built so you design the pairing before the first form launches, not after the gap appears at the debrief.
Explore Sopact Sense → Request a personalized demo
TABLE OF CONTENT

Author: Unmesh Sheth

Last Updated:

March 29, 2026

Founder & CEO of Sopact with 35 years of experience in data systems and AI

TABLE OF CONTENT

Author: Unmesh Sheth

Last Updated:

March 29, 2026

Founder & CEO of Sopact with 35 years of experience in data systems and AI