Generate with AI

Exit Interview Survey for SaaS Startups

For a SaaS startup, every cancellation is a leak in the bucket, and every confused new user is a trial that may never convert. Because revenue is recurring, retention and activation matter more than any single sale, and the fastest way to improve both is to understand exactly where users get stuck or disappointed. Surveys give product and growth teams a direct line to users at the moments that decide the relationship: onboarding, first value, feature adoption, support, and the painful moment of churn. Used well, they surface why trials stall, which features drive expansion, what causes downgrades, and how product-market fit is trending, giving a small team the customer insight usually reserved for much larger ones.

Why it matters

  • Trial users who sign up but never reach their first moment of value
  • Silent churn where customers cancel without explaining why
  • Low adoption of features the team invested heavily in building
  • Unclear product-market fit and weak signal on what to build next
  • Support experiences that quietly push users toward competitors
  • Pricing and plan confusion that blocks upgrades and expansion

Recommended questions — SaaS Startups

1
How would you feel if you could no longer use our product?
radiogroup
2
How likely are you to recommend our product to a colleague?
nps
3
How easy was it to get started and reach your first result?
rating
4
Which feature delivers the most value for you?
dropdown
5
How satisfied were you with your recent support experience?
csat
6
What is the main reason you are canceling your subscription?
radiogroup
7
Does our pricing feel fair for the value you receive?
boolean
8
What is the one thing we could build or fix to make this a must-have for you?
comment
9
What is the primary reason you decided to leave?
radiogroup
10
Which factors contributed to your decision to leave?
checkbox
11
How would you rate your relationship with your manager?
rating
12
How satisfied were you with your opportunities for growth?
rating
13
Did you feel fairly compensated for your work?
boolean
14
Would you consider returning to this company in the future?
boolean
15
What could we have done to keep you?
comment
16
What advice would you give us to improve the workplace?
comment

Common use cases

  • An onboarding survey after signup to find activation blockers
  • An in-app NPS survey to track loyalty and product-market fit
  • A churn or cancellation survey to capture the real reason users leave
  • A feature-feedback prompt right after someone uses a new capability
  • A post-support CSAT survey to measure resolution and effort
  • A periodic product-market-fit survey asking how users would feel without the product

What it is — Exit Interview Survey

An exit interview survey gathers structured feedback from employees who are leaving the organization, capturing their honest reasons for departing and their candid view of the role, management, culture, and growth opportunities. Because departing employees have little to lose, they often share insights they withheld while employed, making this one of the richest sources of retention intelligence. Aggregated over time, exit data reveals patterns behind turnover, exposes management or culture issues, and highlights what the company should change to keep its best people from leaving in the first place.

When to use it

Conduct an exit survey for every employee who voluntarily resigns, ideally during their notice period and after the decision to leave is final. It also applies to end-of-contract departures and, in some cases, retirements. Use it alongside or instead of a live exit conversation to capture honest, comparable data at scale. Review the aggregated results regularly, not just case by case, so you can spot recurring themes in why people leave and act on them before they cost you more talent.

How it is measured

Exit surveys mix quantitative ratings with categorical and open-ended questions. Track the distribution of primary departure reasons (such as compensation, management, growth, or workload), the percentage of regrettable versus non-regrettable exits, and average ratings of management and culture among leavers. Compare these by department, manager, and tenure to locate hotspots. Trend the leading reasons over time so you can tell whether your retention efforts are working, and combine the numbers with themed analysis of written comments to understand the story behind the data.

Frequently asked questions

The most widely used method asks: how would you feel if you could no longer use this product, with options of very disappointed, somewhat disappointed, or not disappointed. The share of users who say very disappointed is your product-market-fit signal, and a common benchmark is that around forty percent or more suggests strong fit. Follow up by asking those users what they would miss most and who they think benefits most, which clarifies your core value and ideal customer. Run this regularly so you can see whether changes to the product strengthen or weaken fit over time.
Keep it short and lead with a single multiple-choice question on the main reason for leaving, with concrete options like too expensive, missing a feature, too hard to use, switched to a competitor, or no longer needed. Add one open field so users can explain in their own words, because the specifics often reveal a fixable issue. If appropriate, offer a relevant save action, such as a discount or a pause option, based on the reason chosen. Aggregate the results monthly to find the top churn drivers, then prioritize fixes that address the largest, most recoverable segments.
Timing is everything in-app. Trigger surveys after a meaningful action, such as completing onboarding, finishing a key workflow, or hitting a milestone, never on the first screen or mid-task. Target by behavior so you ask onboarding questions to new users and NPS to established ones, and cap frequency so no user sees a survey more than occasionally. Keep each one to one or two questions and let users dismiss it instantly. When surveys feel like a natural pause tied to something the user just accomplished, response rates stay high and the product still feels respectful of their time.
If you serve users in KSA, the UAE, or the wider Arab market, yes. Many founders default to English-only and miss honest feedback from Arabic-first users who would express frustrations or feature requests far more clearly in their own language. Offer the survey in both Arabic and English with proper right-to-left support, and detect or let users pick their language. This is especially important for churn and product-market-fit surveys, where nuance matters. SurveyMaker publishes multilingual surveys from one link and merges responses, so a startup can serve global and Gulf users without fragmenting its insight.
Yes. Departing employees give the most candid feedback when they trust their responses will be handled confidentially and shared only in aggregate, not attributed back to them in a way that could affect references or rehire eligibility. Make clear who will see the data and how it will be used. While individual responses are necessarily linked to a known leaver, you should report findings as anonymized themes across many exits. This balance lets you act on patterns while protecting the individual's candor and dignity.
Regrettable turnover is when a high-performing or hard-to-replace employee leaves, representing a real loss the company would have preferred to avoid. Non-regrettable turnover covers departures the organization is neutral or even relieved about, such as poor performers or roles being phased out. Tracking the two separately is essential, because a high overall turnover rate driven by non-regrettable exits is far less alarming than a lower rate concentrated among your best people. Exit surveys should flag which category each departure falls into so your retention efforts target the losses that matter most.
Send it during the notice period, after the resignation is confirmed but before the last day, when the experience is fresh and the employee still feels connected enough to give thoughtful answers. Avoid the final, hectic day when people are rushing to wrap up. Some organizations also send a follow-up survey a few months after departure, once emotions have settled, which can surface even more honest reflections. Combining an in-the-moment survey with a later follow-up often gives the most complete picture of why someone left.
Aggregate responses across many exits to find recurring themes rather than reacting to single cases. Break the data down by department, manager, and tenure to locate where regrettable turnover concentrates, then dig into the drivers behind it, such as pay, management, or lack of growth. Share findings with leaders who can change those drivers, and tie specific actions to the top reasons people leave. Finally, track whether your interventions reduce departures for those reasons over time, closing the loop between insight and retention.

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