Generate with AI

Employee Engagement Survey for Nonprofits

Nonprofits run on trust, and surveys are how you prove impact and keep supporters engaged. Donor surveys reveal what motivates giving, why lapsed donors left, and how transparent your reporting feels. Beneficiary and program surveys measure whether your services actually change lives, providing the outcome evidence that grant applications and boards demand. Volunteer feedback keeps your most valuable unpaid workforce motivated and reduces turnover. Event surveys turn one-off attendees into recurring supporters. Because resources are tight, listening systematically lets a small team allocate effort where it matters most, strengthen accountability to funders, and tell a credible, data-backed impact story.

Why it matters

  • Donor churn and lapsed supporters
  • Difficulty proving program impact to funders
  • Low volunteer retention and engagement
  • Limited budget for research and measurement
  • Unclear which programs deserve more resources
  • Weak transparency and trust with the community

Recommended questions — Nonprofits

1
How confident are you that your donation is used effectively?
rating
2
How likely are you to recommend supporting our cause to others?
nps
3
What first motivated you to give to our organization?
radiogroup
4
How well did our program meet your needs?
rating
5
How would you prefer to receive updates about our impact?
checkbox
6
What could we do to make your volunteer experience better?
comment
7
Do you plan to continue supporting us next year?
boolean
8
Which program area do you feel most passionate about?
dropdown
9
I would recommend this company as a great place to work.
nps
10
I feel motivated to do my best work here.
rating
11
I understand how my work contributes to the company's goals.
rating
12
I feel recognized and valued for my contributions.
rating
13
Do you see a clear path for growth and development here?
boolean
14
I trust the leadership of this organization.
rating
15
What would make you more engaged at work?
comment
16
How likely are you to be working here in two years?
rating

Common use cases

  • After a donation or recurring-gift sign-up
  • End-of-year donor satisfaction and trust survey
  • Post-event feedback for galas and fundraisers
  • Volunteer experience and onboarding survey
  • Beneficiary outcome survey after a program
  • Lapsed-donor win-back questionnaire

What it is — Employee Engagement Survey

An employee engagement survey measures the emotional commitment employees have to their organization and its goals. It goes beyond satisfaction to assess motivation, sense of belonging, alignment with company values, trust in leadership, and willingness to go the extra mile. Engaged employees are more productive, stay longer, and deliver better customer experiences, so engagement is a leading indicator of business performance and retention. The survey typically spans multiple drivers, such as recognition, growth, and purpose, producing both an overall engagement score and a breakdown of the specific factors that lift or lower it.

When to use it

Run an engagement survey at least annually as a strategic measure of workforce health, ideally supported by shorter pulse surveys in between. Use it when planning people initiatives, after periods of major change, or when you see warning signs like rising turnover or falling productivity. It is most valuable when leadership is committed to acting on the results, because engagement data only creates value when it drives concrete changes to how people are managed and supported.

How it is measured

Engagement is commonly scored as the percentage of favorable responses across a set of engagement items, reported as an overall engagement score and by driver, such as recognition, growth, and leadership. Many programs also include an eNPS question, calculated like NPS, to summarize advocacy in one number. Benchmark each driver against prior rounds and external norms, and segment by team and tenure to locate strengths and risks. Watch the lowest-scoring drivers most closely, since they usually represent your biggest opportunities.

Frequently asked questions

Use a before-and-after approach. Survey beneficiaries at intake to capture a baseline, then again after the program to measure change in knowledge, behavior, confidence, or wellbeing. Frame questions around the specific outcomes in your theory of change rather than vague satisfaction. Combine rating scales for measurable shifts with one open comment for stories you can quote in reports. Anonymous responses encourage honesty among vulnerable groups. This outcome data is exactly what grant reviewers and boards want, turning anecdotes into credible, comparable evidence of effectiveness.
Keep it short and non-judgmental. Ask the main reason they stopped giving, with options like financial circumstances, unclear how funds were used, switched to another cause, or simply forgot to renew. Add one question on what would make them give again, and offer a way to update their communication preferences. Many lapsed donors leave over transparency or contact frequency, not the mission itself. Acting on the results, such as sending a clear impact report or reducing email volume, often re-engages a meaningful share at low cost.
Ramadan and Zakat season drive a large share of giving in Saudi Arabia and the UAE, so timing and tone matter. Keep surveys brief and gratitude-led, and send them after the donation has settled rather than during the peak rush. Offer the survey in Arabic and acknowledge the spiritual motivation behind giving, including Zakat and Sadaqah, without being intrusive about amounts. Ask how donors prefer to receive impact updates and whether they would like a Zakat compliance statement, which builds the trust that sustains recurring Gulf donors year after year.
Treat volunteers like valued contributors, not free labor. Survey them after onboarding to catch confusion early, then periodically on whether their role feels meaningful, whether they have the support they need, and what would make them give more time. Always close the loop by sharing what changed because of their input. Volunteers who feel heard stay longer and recruit others. Even a two-minute pulse survey after a major event signals respect and surfaces issues, like poor scheduling or unclear tasks, before they cause burnout and turnover.
Satisfaction measures whether employees are content with their conditions, such as pay, hours, and environment. Engagement goes deeper, measuring emotional commitment, motivation, and willingness to put in discretionary effort toward the company's goals. An employee can be satisfied but disengaged, comfortable yet doing the bare minimum. Engagement is a stronger predictor of performance, retention, and customer outcomes, which is why most modern people programs focus on it. The best surveys measure both, since satisfaction often reflects the basic conditions that make engagement possible.
eNPS, or employee Net Promoter Score, asks how likely employees are to recommend the organization as a place to work, on a 0-to-10 scale. It is calculated exactly like customer NPS: subtract the percentage of detractors (0 to 6) from the percentage of promoters (9 to 10), giving a result between minus 100 and plus 100. eNPS is a quick, comparable summary of advocacy, but it is a single signal, so use it alongside fuller engagement driver questions rather than as your only measure of how employees feel.
An annual engagement survey usually runs 20 to 40 questions, enough to cover the main drivers like leadership, recognition, growth, purpose, and wellbeing without exhausting respondents. Aim for a completion time of around ten minutes. Pulse surveys between annual rounds should be much shorter, often five to ten questions focused on a few drivers or recent changes. Every question should map to a driver you intend to act on; if you cannot explain how you will use an item, remove it to keep the survey focused and respectful of people's time.
A favorable engagement score in the range of 70 to 80 percent is often considered healthy, with top organizations reaching higher, but benchmarks depend on industry, region, and the exact questions used. More important than the headline number is the trend over time, how your drivers compare with one another, and whether specific teams are falling behind. A high overall score can still hide pockets of disengagement, so always segment your data and prioritize the lowest-scoring drivers and groups for action.

Ready to start collecting answers?

Build it with AI or a template and share it in minutes — no design skills needed.

Create this survey — free
50k+teams & creators
100+surveys built
7languages
★★★★★loved by users
Free plan, no credit card GDPR-ready & SSL secured Arabic & RTL support Set up in minutes
★★★★★

“We built our customer-satisfaction survey with AI in under two minutes and had responses the same afternoon. The Arabic support is excellent.”

Placeholder — replace with real customer · CX Manager, Your Customer Co.
★★★★★

“The template library saved us hours. We launched an NPS program across three branches without any design work.”

Placeholder — replace with real customer · Operations Lead, Retail Group
★★★★★

“Switching from a pricier tool was painless and the real-time analytics are exactly what we needed for our events.”

Placeholder — replace with real customer · Events Director, Conference Org
Your BrandAcme Co.Retail GroupHealth ClinicEventCoEduSchool
Build your first survey with AI — free No credit card · ready in seconds Get started