Reading the responses
How to read a qualitative survey in full
Running a qualitative survey is the easy part. The work is in the reading — and a qualitative survey that gets skimmed instead of read speaks for a handful of people, not the group. Three practices keep every response counted.
Practice 01
Code against a fixed scheme
Decide the themes you are listening for before you read — and let new ones be added as they appear. Coding every answer against one defined scheme is what turns a pile of text into a finding you can report.
Why it matters
Without a scheme, two readers code the same survey two different ways.
Practice 02
Read every response, not a sample
The barrier that matters often shows up in a small share of answers. Skimming for a quotable line misses it. Reading all of them is what makes the survey representative.
Why it matters
A theme is only evidence when you know how many people raised it.
Practice 03
Pair each answer with the respondent
Keep every open answer attached to the person who wrote it — and to whatever number you also collected from them. A theme tied to one record can be read against a score, a cohort, a demographic.
Why it matters
An anonymous quote cannot be correlated with anything.
Coded against a scheme, read in full, and tied to the respondent, a qualitative survey becomes evidence rather than anecdote. For how those themes are then read alongside the numbers, see qualitative and quantitative analysis.