Data Analysis

Practical Survey Analysis in Excel [On-Demand Webinar]

Excel sits on every desktop and can do almost everything a stats package does — once you know which features to use. This one-hour on-demand webinar walks through the practical survey analysis workflow: designing the analysis plan, testing response rates, charting cleanly, testing significance, and finding the satisfaction drivers.

By Adam Ramshaw 1 min read
Practical Survey Analysis in Excel [On-Demand Webinar]

Excel is a very functional tool and it has the advantage of being on everyone’s desk.
While there are many advanced statistical packages out there you don’t need them to perform a detailed and comprehensive analysis of your survey data.

In this one hour webinar we will share, using Excel:

  • How to design your survey analysis plan
  • Generating simple statistics
  • Testing your response rate to ensure you have enough responses
  • Graphing your responses so that they inform not confuse the reader
  • Testing for significant changes in key variables
  • Uncovering the customer satisfaction drivers in your data
  • Prioritising your action plan
    Share:

    Last updated Jan 30, 2024

    Back to Blog

    Related Posts

    View All Posts »
    How to Calculate and Use Survey Sample Size [On Demand Webinar]

    How to Calculate and Use Survey Sample Size [On Demand Webinar]

    You're three minutes into the executive presentation and a senior manager is already attacking the sample size on slide one. It's the laziest way to dismiss customer feedback findings, and it's increasingly common. This one-hour on-demand webinar walks through what sample size actually means and how to defend your numbers without getting drawn into a stats argument.

    The Critical Differences: Qualitative vs. Quantitative Analysis

    The Critical Differences: Qualitative vs. Quantitative Analysis

    Your inbox just delivered a stack of customer feedback — numbers, scales, paragraphs of free text, the lot. Where do you start? Qualitative or quantitative? Both have their place, and choosing wrong wastes the week. Here's the three critical differences, with examples, benefits, and where each shines.