Industries

Surveys for Banks — Templates, Questions & Examples

Banking is built on trust, and trust is earned across every interaction: a branch visit, a call to support, a loan decision, or a tap inside the mobile app. Customers rarely switch banks over a single transaction, but they do switch over accumulated friction, unexplained fees, slow service, and the feeling that no one is listening. Customer surveys let banks measure satisfaction and effort at each of these touchpoints, detect issues with new digital features, and benchmark branches and call centers against one another. Well-designed feedback programs help reduce churn, improve first-contact resolution, and meet regulatory expectations around fair treatment, all while signaling to customers that their voice shapes the products and service they rely on.

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Survey types — Banks

Why it matters

  • Customer churn driven by accumulated friction rather than one event
  • Long branch and call-center wait times
  • Confusing fees and account terms that erode trust
  • Poor adoption or usability of new mobile and online banking features
  • Inconsistent service quality across branches and channels
  • Regulatory pressure to demonstrate fair treatment and complaint handling

Frequently asked questions

The key is relevance and restraint. Trigger short surveys tied to a specific event the customer just experienced, such as a branch visit or a support call, and keep them to two or three questions. Cap how often any one customer is asked so you never fatigue them, and never interrupt a transaction mid-flow. Make participation optional and respect when someone declines. Customers tolerate, and even appreciate, being asked for feedback when it is brief, clearly connected to something they just did, and visibly leads to improvements they can see over time.
In KSA and the UAE, Arabic is the language of trust for a large share of banking customers, especially around money, fees, and contracts where clarity matters most. A survey in fluent Arabic with right-to-left layout signals respect and produces more honest, detailed answers than a translated-feeling English form. Because Gulf banks also serve many expatriates, pairing Arabic with English and other languages widens reach. SurveyMaker lets you publish all languages from one link and consolidate results, so you measure satisfaction across your whole customer base without splitting your data or your insight.
Each answers a different question. CSAT measures how happy a customer was with one specific interaction and is best right after an event. NPS measures overall loyalty and willingness to recommend, which predicts long-term retention and is best in periodic relationship surveys. Customer Effort Score asks how hard it was to get something done, and it is especially powerful in banking because low effort strongly predicts loyalty for service interactions. A mature program uses CSAT and effort at transactional touchpoints and NPS at the relationship level, then connects them to spot where friction erodes loyalty.
Absolutely. In-app micro-surveys fired right after a key action, like a transfer or a bill payment, capture usability problems while the experience is fresh and the customer remembers exactly what confused them. Ask how easy the task was, whether anything went wrong, and what they expected to happen. Combine this with adoption data to see which new features delight users and which get abandoned. Because feedback is tied to the specific screen and action, your product team gets precise direction instead of vague complaints, which makes each app release measurably better than the last.

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