You close the survey on a Friday. Three hundred responses came in, and six of them are qualitative survey questions — open-ended prompts where participants describe what worked, what didn't, and what would change if you let them rewrite the program. By Monday, the numeric questions are summarized. The open-text responses are in a spreadsheet column, unread. The board meeting is in three weeks. The analyst is already estimating two weeks of coding just to get to a first pass. Most of the evidence the participants actually gave you will show up in the final report as a handful of hand-picked quotes.
Most teams running a qualitative survey today reach for Qualtrics or SurveyMonkey. Both are excellent at what they were built for — distributing surveys at scale, running closed-ended reporting, managing panels. But both treat open-ended responses as an export problem. The built-in text features — word clouds, sentiment labels, topic counts — are useful for a quick scan, not for reading responses against a research framework. The real work still happens in a spreadsheet, or it doesn't happen at all.
Sopact Sense takes a different path. Every open-ended response is read against your analytical framework as soon as it arrives — themes emerge grounded in the exact sentences that support them, and the same respondent's answers stay linked across every survey you run. For teams already running a CRM or data stack, respondents and insights flow cleanly to Salesforce, HubSpot, Snowflake, and Mailchimp through API, webhook, and MCP. You keep your distribution tool. You get the analysis layer that the survey tool was never going to give you.
This page is for three people. If you're writing your first qualitative survey and want examples, read the "what is" and "examples" FAQs. If you're running qualitative surveys on Qualtrics or SurveyMonkey and losing weeks to coding, read "why teams switch." If you're deciding between tools, read "how to pick."
Last updated: April 2026
Qualitative survey software · 2026
See the themes as responses land.
Most survey tools hand you a spreadsheet of open-text and wish you luck.
Qualtrics and SurveyMonkey are strong on distribution and closed-ended reporting, but when the real insight lives in 300 open-ended paragraphs, their built-in analysis tops out at word clouds. Sopact Sense reads every response against your framework as it arrives — themes emerge grounded in the exact sentences that support them, and the same respondent's answers stay linked across every survey you run.
Illustrative pattern: 300 open-ended responses, one research framework.
Sopact Sense — reads as responses arrive
Manual coding in Qualtrics / SurveyMonkey exports
Illustrative. Actual time varies by sample size, framework depth, and team capacity.
Themes, not exports
Every open-ended response is read against your framework as soon as it arrives. No spreadsheet of raw text waiting for a coding phase.
Quotes you can show
For each theme, see the exact sentences in responses that support it. Defensible insight, not vibes from a word cloud.
One record per respondent
Track the same person across baseline, follow-up, and exit. Change over time becomes a query, not a spreadsheet merge.
Insights in hours
From survey close to board-ready themes in hours, not weeks. Analysis runs as responses arrive — the waiting is gone.
What is a qualitative survey?
A qualitative survey — sometimes called a qualitative research survey or qualitative questionnaire — collects open-ended, narrative responses rather than pre-defined answer choices. Instead of picking from a list or rating on a scale, respondents describe, explain, or reflect in their own words, and the analysis looks for patterns, themes, and unexpected insight in the text. Most real-world qualitative surveys mix a few closed-ended questions for segmentation with three to eight open-ended prompts that carry the real insight. A typical qualitative survey example might ask "describe a moment when the program changed how you approached your work" — one sentence of prompt, a paragraph of answer, and a decision to make about what the paragraph means.
The tools split into three groups in 2026:
general-purpose survey platforms like Qualtrics and SurveyMonkey, built for quantitative work with text features added on;
dedicated qualitative research tools like NVivo, ATLAS.ti, and MAXQDA, built for manual coding of interview transcripts; and
purpose-built qualitative survey tools like Sopact Sense, built to read every response against your framework as it arrives.
Why teams switch from Qualtrics and SurveyMonkey for qualitative work
Open-ended responses end up in a spreadsheet. Both platforms are optimized for closed-ended reporting — bar charts, cross-tabs, NPS dashboards. The moment a question asks for a paragraph, the built-in analysis runs out of road. Teams export to CSV, open a spreadsheet, and either code the responses by hand or hire a consultant to do it. A 300-respondent survey with six open-ended questions turns into a two-to-four-week project on the back end of every cycle.
The built-in text analysis is surface-level. Qualtrics Text iQ and SurveyMonkey's sentiment analysis produce word clouds, topic counts, and positive-negative labels. These are useful for a quick scan — but they don't read responses against your framework. If your research question is "did the program build confidence along the five dimensions we defined?", a word cloud can't answer it. You still need someone reading every response, and that person still needs weeks.
No memory of the respondent across surveys. A baseline and a follow-up six months later are two separate exports in Qualtrics and SurveyMonkey. Linking the same respondent across them means either asking participants to re-enter an ID, or reconciling records by email in a spreadsheet. The longitudinal question — the one the funder or board actually cares about — is the one these tools make hardest to answer.
Features · what the tool does
Every response read. Every theme traceable. Every respondent tracked.
Three capabilities sit between what respondents write and what your team presents. Here's what each one does.
What your team sees · themes ranked, with the exact quotes that support each one
Output layer
01
Reading with evidence
Every response read against the research framework you define.
Each theme grounded in the exact sentences that support it.
Framework traceability — which question drove which theme.
Outlier detection — responses that don't fit any theme.
Consistency across responses — the same theme reads the same way every time.
02
Reads every kind of response
Short open-text ("any other comments?").
Long open-ended prompts ("describe what you'd change").
Multi-paragraph reflections and critical-incident responses.
Voice notes, uploaded documents, images of written responses.
Multi-language responses read in the language the respondent wrote in.
03
Tracking across surveys
One record per respondent, carried across every survey.
Baseline → follow-up → exit on one timeline per person.
Change over time becomes a query, not a spreadsheet merge.
Cohort comparison — this year's voices against last year's.
Cross-survey synthesis — pull themes from many surveys at once.
Intelligence layer
What the AI does — reads every response against your framework
Framework-driven coding
Quote-level evidence
Theme extraction
Sentiment in context
Cross-wave synthesis
Responses are coded as they arrive. Themes emerge grounded in quotes. The same respondent's answers stay linked across every survey — so the research framework, the evidence, and the participant all stay connected from first touch to final report.
What respondents write · every kind of open-ended answer your framework needs
Input layer
Short open-text answers
Long-form reflections
Voice-to-text responses
Uploaded images & scans
Multi-language responses
Interview transcripts
Focus group notes
Exports from Qualtrics, SurveyMonkey, Typeform, Google Forms
Widen the frame before you choose. A head-to-head on "which tool handles open text better" can miss the bigger picture. Sopact carries one record per respondent end-to-end — from first survey, through every follow-up wave, to funder-ready reporting — so a baseline response and an exit response a year later sit on the same timeline, queryable whenever the board asks about change over time. Feature-match evaluations rarely catch that.
How to pick the right qualitative survey tool
You need mass distribution with a few open-ended questions and quick text scans. Qualtrics and SurveyMonkey are fine for this. Their panel management, deliverability, and closed-ended reporting are industry standard. Just know that built-in open-text analysis is limited to word clouds and sentiment labels, and plan for manual coding or a third-party service if the research question is deeper than that.
You need rigorous qualitative coding of interview transcripts, focus groups, or long-form fieldwork. NVivo, ATLAS.ti, or MAXQDA remain the academic standard. You'll need trained researchers and weeks of time, but the output meets publication rigor. These tools connect to CRMs and data warehouses through export or API when downstream sharing matters.
You need every open-ended response read against your framework as it arrives, with one record per respondent and longitudinal tracking built in. This is what Sopact Sense was built for. AI reads each response against your analytical framework, themes emerge grounded in the exact quotes that support them, and the same respondent's answers stay linked across every survey you run. Existing tools — Salesforce, HubSpot, Snowflake, Mailchimp, Google Forms, Typeform — connect through API, webhook, and MCP, so you keep the distribution layer you already use.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a qualitative survey?
A qualitative survey collects open-ended, narrative responses rather than pre-defined answer choices. Respondents describe, explain, or reflect in their own words, and the analysis looks for patterns, themes, and unexpected insight in the resulting text. Most qualitative surveys mix a few multiple-choice questions for segmentation with three to eight open-ended prompts that carry the insight. The defining characteristic is the data type — text rather than numbers — which requires a different analytical approach than a Likert scale or a count.
What are examples of qualitative survey questions?
Open-ended questions invite description, reflection, or narrative. Examples across common program types: "What's the single change that would make this program better for you?", "Describe a moment in the past month when the training helped at work.", "Tell us about a time you almost left. What kept you?", "If you could redesign the application process, what would you change?", "Walk us through the first week — what was easier than expected, and what was harder?" The common thread: no list of answer choices, and framings that cue a specific story rather than a general opinion.
Can a survey be qualitative?
Yes. The method isn't defined by the delivery channel — it's defined by the type of data collected. A survey that asks mostly open-ended, narrative questions is a qualitative survey, even if it's sent by email or administered on a tablet. When most questions are open-ended, the line between "survey" and "asynchronous interview" blurs, and many researchers use the terms interchangeably at that point.
How is a qualitative survey different from a quantitative one?
A quantitative survey produces countable data — ratings, Likert scales, multiple-choice counts — designed for statistical analysis. A qualitative survey produces text — the respondent's own words, designed for thematic analysis. Quantitative answers "how many" and "how often"; qualitative answers "why" and "how." Most real-world surveys are a mix, and the ratio of closed to open questions determines which analytical approach carries the insight.
How many questions should a qualitative survey have?
Fewer than you think. A working rule of thumb is three to eight open-ended questions, plus two to five closed-ended for segmentation. Beyond that, response quality drops — respondents skim, write shorter answers, or abandon mid-survey. The limit is attention, not question count; each open-ended question typically asks for a paragraph of real thought, and people only have so much of that to give in one sitting.
How do you analyze open-ended survey responses?
Three approaches are common in 2026. Manual coding — read every response, tag themes, check inter-rater agreement — is rigorous but slow; a 300-respondent survey often takes two to four weeks. Surface-level text analytics — word clouds, sentiment scores, topic counts — are fast but shallow; they surface broad patterns and miss nuance. Framework-driven AI analysis — every response compared to the research questions you defined, themes grounded in the exact quotes that support them — is the newer option, and the one Sopact Sense was built for. The right approach depends on whether you need academic rigor, a quick scan, or board-ready themes in hours.
Is Qualtrics good for qualitative surveys?
Qualtrics is excellent at delivering surveys at scale and reporting on closed-ended questions. Its Text iQ product provides sentiment scoring, topic detection, and word frequency — useful for a quick scan of open-ended responses. For deep thematic analysis against a research framework, most teams still export responses and either code manually or use a separate tool. Qualtrics Text iQ is offered as an add-on; public pricing is not clearly listed on their site and is typically quoted by their sales team as of April 2026.
Is SurveyMonkey good for qualitative surveys?
SurveyMonkey is strong on ease of use, template variety, and mass distribution, with sentiment analysis and basic text categorization available in higher tiers. Like Qualtrics, the built-in text analysis leans toward quick scans rather than framework-driven analysis. For anything beyond a surface-level read of open-text responses, teams typically export and analyze elsewhere. SurveyMonkey's enterprise text analytics features are quoted by sales; public pricing covers the entry tiers as of April 2026.
What's the best qualitative survey tool in 2026?
It depends on the job. For mass distribution with light qualitative work, Qualtrics and SurveyMonkey remain the defaults. For rigorous academic qualitative coding of interviews and transcripts, NVivo, ATLAS.ti, and MAXQDA stay standard. For survey-based qualitative work where every open-ended response needs to be read against a framework, linked to one record per respondent, and turned into themes in hours, Sopact Sense is the newer option — purpose-built for AI-powered thematic analysis at the point of data collection.
How does Sopact Sense compare to Qualtrics and SurveyMonkey?
Qualtrics and SurveyMonkey are general-purpose survey platforms — strong on distribution, closed-ended reporting, and panel management. Sopact Sense is a qualitative-first platform — every open-ended response is read against your framework as it arrives, themes are grounded in the exact sentences that support them, and the same respondent's answers stay linked across every survey. Most teams that switch to Sopact didn't abandon their old tool for simple feedback forms; they moved the qualitative work — where the old tool was forcing a multi-week coding phase — onto a platform that treats open-text as the primary signal rather than an export.
How does Sopact Sense track the same respondent across multiple surveys?
One record per respondent, carried across every survey. When the same person answers a baseline, a follow-up, and an exit, the three responses sit on one timeline — so a question like "how did participants' confidence language change between baseline and exit?" returns an answer in minutes instead of reconciling three separate exports. For teams running their own CRM or data warehouse, respondents and insights sync cleanly through API, webhook, and MCP to Salesforce, HubSpot, Snowflake, and similar systems.
How long does it take to get insights from a qualitative survey with Sopact Sense?
From survey close to board-ready themes is typically hours, not weeks — because the AI has been reading responses against your framework since the first one came in. The framework setup happens once, at the start; after that, every new respondent's open-ended answers are coded against it as the response is submitted. A team that used to spend three to six weeks on coding often presents themes in the next day's standup.
Can I keep my existing survey tool and still use Sopact for analysis?
Yes. Responses from Qualtrics, SurveyMonkey, Google Forms, Typeform, or any tool with an export or API can be sent to Sopact Sense for framework-driven analysis. The API, webhook, and MCP connections let teams keep the distribution tool they already use while adding the qualitative analysis layer in Sopact. Many teams run a hybrid for their first few cycles — distribution stays in the familiar tool, analysis moves to Sopact — before deciding whether to consolidate.
Product and company names referenced on this page are trademarks of their respective owners. Information is based on publicly available documentation as of April 2026 and may have changed since. To suggest a correction, email unmesh@sopact.com.