Anonymous Product Feedback Form
Three questions sent right after the user has used the product. Honest, anonymous, no email gate — exactly the feedback your product team needs to ship better.
Free forever · 3 forms · unlimited responses · no credit card
Form preview
This is what respondents seeProduct Review
Tell us what you really think — honest feedback only.
You'll get an editable copy in your dashboard. Edit any question, then share the link.
When to use this template
Product feedback fills the gap that NPS and CSAT don't reach. NPS captures relationship sentiment, CSAT captures transactional satisfaction — neither tells you specifically what to build next.
Use anonymous product feedback when:
- Your product is in active development and you want a continuous stream of improvement suggestions
- You want input from non-power-users — most product input comes from your loudest 5%; anonymous embed captures the quieter 95%
- You're collecting from prospects and trial users, not just paying customers — they don't have a logged-in identity yet
- You want to compare across user segments without identifying individuals — power users vs new users, paid vs free, mobile vs desktop
Embed in your product (settings page, post-onboarding screen, feature-flag rollouts), not in email. Embed gets 3–5× higher response rates than email-gated surveys.
Why anonymous beats logged-in for product feedback
Logged-in product feedback (Pendo, Hotjar's surveys, Productboard's portal) gives you traceable signal — you can see exactly which user said what, follow up with them, and prioritize based on their account value.
The tradeoff: response rate craters to 5–10%. Users who care enough about giving feedback to log in are a self-selected minority — they're typically power users with very specific use cases. Their feedback is real but it doesn't represent the user base.
Anonymous embedded feedback gets 25–40% response rates. The distribution of responses matches the user distribution much more accurately. The cost is losing per-user traceability — but the patterns in anonymous feedback are typically more useful than the individual responses you get from logged-in tools.
For early-stage products, this tradeoff strongly favors anonymous. For mature products with established account management workflows, run both in parallel.
The 3 questions, explained
1. "How would you rate the product?" (rating, required) — anchors the response. Track the average over time; it's a useful (if blunt) product-health metric. The distribution matters too — a 3.8 average could be lots of 4s or a bimodal split of 5s and 2s.
2. "How often do you use it?" (choice: Daily / Weekly / Monthly / Rarely) — segments the rating into usage cohorts. A 2/5 rating from a Daily user is a problem; a 2/5 rating from a Rarely user might just be "I don't really use this." Segmenting by usage gives the rating actual meaning.
3. "What's the #1 thing you'd improve?" (text, optional) — the value question. The pattern of answers here drives your prioritization. The volume of "the dashboard is confusing" or "exports are broken" tells you what to ship next.
3 questions is the optimum for an in-product survey. More than that and completion drops to <10%.
Best practices
- Embed in the product, not in email. Settings page, dashboard footer, post-onboarding screen — anywhere users naturally pause.
- Don't show it on every page view. Use a "request feedback" approach: small icon in the corner, optional click. Modal pop-ups tank trust.
- Don't ask "what's your role?" or "company size?" — those break the anonymous social contract. If you need segmentation, run a separate logged-in survey for that.
- Read every text response personally for the first 500. The patterns emerge from text, not from the rating.
- Tag responses by theme as you read — feature requests, bug reports, UX complaints, pricing concerns. The theme distribution is your priority list.
- Use Anonymous Follow-Up for ambiguous comments — "can you describe what 'broken' looked like?" gets the specifics without identifying the user.
What to do with the responses
The pattern that works for product teams:
- Daily: scan new responses. 30 seconds, 5–10 new responses. Catch high-priority issues fast.
- Weekly: theme review. Sort the week's responses into 5–7 themes. Note the volume per theme.
- Monthly: prioritization meeting. Bring the top 5 themes (by volume) to your product planning meeting. Anonymous feedback should drive at least 20% of the next sprint's work.
- Quarterly: report patterns to leadership. Themes from anonymous product feedback are often the earliest signal of product-market fit issues — leadership should see them.
- Use Anonymous Follow-Up for actionable but vague responses — Anonymeter lets you reply without ever knowing who you're replying to. Most respondents will engage in the follow-up.
Why Anonymeter for product feedback
Dedicated product feedback tools (Pendo, Userpilot, Hotjar, Productboard) cost $100–$500 per month minimum. They add value through deep analytics, user segmentation, in-product targeting — useful if you need those, overkill if you just want honest product input.
Anonymeter is the unbundled version. Embed the form, collect responses, read them. $0 for unlimited responses on the free plan. $9/month Pro adds CSV export (for joining to your own analytics) and Anonymous Follow-Up (for clarifying questions).
The anonymity is structural — no IPs, no cookies. Higher response rates and more honest comments than tools that quietly tie responses to user accounts.
Related templates
Anonymous NPS Survey Template
Two questions, zero friction. The NPS survey that gets answered because respondents don't have to log in or hand over an email.
Anonymous Customer Feedback Form
Three questions. No login. Customers tell you what they actually think — because there's no name, no email, no consequences.
Anonymous Feature Request Form
Four questions, embedded anywhere users hit a limitation. Captures product ideas from people who wouldn't bother with a named request.
Related reading
How to Get Truthful Product Feedback (Not the Polite Version)
Most product feedback is polite, vague, and useless. Here's how to design feedback channels that surface what users actually think — and what to do with it.
The Best NPS Survey Questions (And the One You Have to Ask)
NPS surveys are simple — one question, one follow-up. Here's exactly what to ask, what NOT to ask, and the format that maximizes response rate.
Frequently asked
How is this different from a CSAT or NPS survey?
Should I show the form to all users or just engaged ones?
What if I get the same feature request 100 times?
Can I tie responses to specific accounts for follow-up?
How do I prevent fake or troll responses?
Is this really free?
Run your anonymous product feedback form in 5 minutes
Free forever plan — 3 forms, unlimited responses, no credit card.
Sign up free to use this template →