Anonymous Community Feedback Survey
Five questions for your community members. Catches the engagement issues that ghost members never tell you — because the people who care enough to leave usually don't fill out named surveys either.
Free forever · 3 forms · unlimited responses · no credit card
Form preview
This is what respondents seeCommunity Feedback
Anonymous check-in for our community members. Tell us what's working and what's not — no name, no DM follow-up unless you ask.
You'll get an editable copy in your dashboard. Edit any question, then share the link.
When to use this template
Online and in-person communities — Slack groups, Discord servers, subreddits, professional associations, hobby clubs, customer user groups — all face the same problem: the most engaged members are the loudest and the disengaging members are silent.
A community survey captures input from the quieter middle. Use this template for:
- Online communities — Slack/Discord servers, forums, Reddit subreddits
- Product user communities — Salesforce Trailblazers, Notion Champions, HubSpot User Groups
- Professional associations — quarterly check-ins on member sentiment
- Local hobby groups — running clubs, book clubs, parent groups
- Open-source project contributor communities — gauge contributor satisfaction
Run it quarterly, not more often. Communities are slower-moving than products; monthly surveys produce noise.
Why anonymous community surveys reveal what named ones miss
Named community surveys (most platforms tie to user accounts) get responses from the highly engaged minority — 5% of members who'll fill anything you put in front of them. Their feedback skews toward "the community is great, just need more X" because the people who feel disconnected don't fill named surveys.
Anonymous embedded surveys capture the disengaging middle. The member who hasn't posted in 2 months but still reads passively will fill an anonymous form when they'd never log in to a named one. Their feedback is exactly what you need to prevent further disengagement.
The other unlock: criticism. Community members rarely criticize the organizers publicly because the social cost is high (they have to keep interacting with those organizers). Anonymous channels surface the criticism that matters.
Anonymeter's structural anonymity means no IP, no cookie, no member ID — even if members share the survey link in your Slack/Discord, you can't see which member filled it.
The 5 questions, explained
1. Engagement rating (1–5) — the headline metric to trend over quarters
2. Participation frequency (Daily/Weekly/Monthly/Rarely/Just lurking) — segments responses by engagement. Lurkers' feedback is especially valuable because they rarely surface in any other channel
3. Best part (text) — captures community strengths to protect
4. What feels missing (text) — the actionable half. Patterns emerge: missing topics, missing time slots, missing features, missing voices
5. Suggestions for organizers (text) — forward-looking. Often surfaces ideas (new event formats, new channels, new traditions) that organizers wouldn't have thought of
5 questions takes ~3 minutes. Don't extend — community members are time-poor.
Best practices
- Pin the survey in the main channel for 7 days, then close
- Send via DM-broadcast or community newsletter for higher response rate
- Don't ask "what's your role?" for small communities — identifies members
- Aim for 30%+ response rate — community surveys typically run lower than product surveys, plan accordingly
- Pay special attention to "Lurker" responses — these members are at risk of churning silently
- Share themed results back to the community within 2 weeks — signals you're listening
- Run quarterly, same form, same questions — trend matters more than absolute numbers
What to do with the responses
- Within 1 week of close, read all responses; tag by theme (content, format, frequency, leadership, friction, missing topics)
- Within 2 weeks, post community-wide: rating, participation breakdown, 3 themed observations, 1–2 commitments for the quarter
- Within 1 month, ship 1 visible change based on the feedback
- Track the rating quarter-over-quarter — declining trend warns of impending member churn before it happens
- Use Anonymous Follow-Up on actionable but vague comments — "can you say more about what 'too many off-topic posts' meant?" without identifying the member
Why Anonymeter for community surveys
Community platforms (Slack, Discord, Circle, Mighty Networks) all have either weak built-in polling or no anonymous survey capability. Third-party tools (Typeform, SurveyMonkey) require members to log in or risk losing anonymity.
Anonymeter gives you a permanent anonymous form. Share the link in your community channel, reuse quarterly, get honest input. Free for 3 forms, unlimited responses. $9/month Pro adds CSV export for trend tracking and Anonymous Follow-Up for clarifying questions.
For volunteer-run communities especially, the $0 cost matters — community surveys shouldn't require a budget approval.
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Related reading
How to Get Honest Feedback From Your Team (When Polite Garbage Is the Default)
Most teams default to polite-but-useless feedback. Here are 6 things that block honest feedback, and 5 specific changes that unlock it.
Survey Fatigue: 7 Practical Fixes Before Your Response Rate Collapses
Your team used to fill every survey. Now barely half respond. Here's what causes survey fatigue and 7 specific fixes that work.
Frequently asked
How often should I run a community survey?
What if my community is small (under 50 members)?
How do I get lurkers to respond?
Should I share results with the community?
Can I add segmentation questions like 'what country are you in'?
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