Website Feedback Survey for Government Agencies
Public agencies are judged on the quality of citizen services, and surveys are the primary way to measure and improve them. Citizen satisfaction surveys reveal where digital portals confuse users, where wait times frustrate, and where staff handle requests well. As governments digitize services, transactional feedback after a license renewal or permit application pinpoints friction in real time. Surveys also gauge public awareness of programs, gather input on policy and budget priorities, and track trust in institutions. For agencies accountable to taxpayers and leadership, systematic listening makes service delivery measurable, supports transparency mandates, and ensures limited public resources target what citizens actually need.
Why it matters
- Long wait times and slow processing
- Confusing digital portals and online forms
- Low public awareness of available services
- Eroding public trust and perceived transparency
- Inconsistent service quality across branches
- Difficulty prioritizing limited public budgets
Recommended questions — Government Agencies
Common use cases
- After completing an online service transaction
- Following an in-person visit to a service center
- Public consultation on a proposed policy
- Awareness survey for a new government program
- Annual citizen satisfaction and trust study
- After a call to the agency contact center
What it is — Website Feedback Survey
A website feedback survey gathers visitor opinions about a website's usability, design, content, navigation, and overall experience. It captures why visitors come, whether they accomplish their goal, and what obstacles get in their way, complementing analytics that show what people do but not why. By collecting feedback directly on the page, often in the moment, it surfaces broken journeys, confusing layouts, missing information, and trust concerns. The insights help teams improve conversion, reduce bounce and abandonment, and design a site that genuinely serves what visitors are trying to do.
When to use it
Run website feedback continuously with on-page or exit surveys to catch issues as visitors experience them, and use targeted surveys after a redesign, launch, or major change to validate it. Trigger feedback at key moments, such as on the pricing page, after a failed search, or when someone is about to leave. It is especially valuable when analytics show a problem, like a high-exit page or low conversion, but cannot tell you why, and you need the visitor's voice to diagnose the cause.
How it is measured
Useful metrics include a task success rate (the percentage who accomplished what they came to do), an ease-of-use or website satisfaction rating, and a website-specific NPS. Track these by page, device, and traffic source to localize problems. Combine them with reasons for visiting and open-ended comments to understand intent and friction. Watch the gap between high traffic and low task success to find pages that attract visitors but fail them. Tie improvements to behavioral metrics like bounce rate, conversion, and time on task to confirm the fixes worked.
Frequently asked questions
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