How to Create a Survey on Facebook

In the age of social media, capturing real-time user feedback is essential for brands, organizations, and individuals. Facebook, with its massive global reach and built-in engagement features, offers a natural channel for survey distribution and audience interaction. But how to create a survey on Facebook in a smart, effective way that respects user behavior and delivers reliable data?
At SurveyMars, we’ve helped clients design high-quality surveys across multiple platforms for over a decade. Drawing on our experience, and on academic research and industry benchmarks, this guide walks you through:
● Why you might choose Facebook for survey distribution
● The limitations and biases you must watch for
● Step-by-step methods (native and advanced) to create a survey on Facebook
● Best practices and pitfalls
● Example question ideas tailored for Facebook surveys
● How to analyze, report, and integrate your Facebook survey results
● Recommendations for integrating SurveyMars tools with Facebook
Throughout, we reference authoritative studies, platform documentation, and best practices to maintain a high level of trustworthiness and expertise.

Why Use Facebook to Run Surveys?
Before diving into mechanics, here are strong reasons (and caveats) why Facebook is a compelling choice for survey distribution:
Advantages
1. Massive and active audience
a. Facebook still has over 3 billion monthly active users (2024 data), making it one of the largest pools for feedback.
b. The platform’s network effect means sharing or engagement can amplify reach.
2. High engagement context
a. Users are already in “interaction mode” on social media, which lowers friction for participation.
b. Polls and surveys posted in groups often trigger comments and shares, increasing visibility.
3. Targeted audience reach
a. Through Facebook Ads or boosted posts, you can promote your survey to specific demographics, interests, or lookalike audiences.
4. Quick pulse checks and feedback loops
a. For timely decisions (e.g. product features, content topics, event preferences), Facebook surveys/polls can give instant feedback.
5. Ease of sharing and viral potential
a. Respondents may share the survey post/ poll to friends, expanding reach organically.
Limitations & Biases to Watch
Using Facebook for survey research is not without risks. To maintain trustworthy results, keep the following caveats in mind:
● Self-selection / sampling bias
A study comparing traditional vs Facebook-administered surveys flagged that while Facebook surveys did not show major demographic or psychometric biases, there is still self-selection and behavioral bias inherent to platform usage.
● In other words: people who respond on Facebook may differ systemically (e.g. more socially motivated, more engaged) than those who don’t.Limited survey complexity
● Native Facebook polls only allow one or two questions (single poll), limiting depth. For full multi-question surveys, you must rely on external tools.Feature availability and changes
Facebook frequently updates its UI and feature set. Polls may be supported in groups, stories, or events, but not always on business pages—features vary by region and account type.
● Anonymity constraints
Native polls often retain voter identity or limited anonymity settings; respondents may hesitate to share freely.Data export / analytics limitations
Facebook’s built-in analytics for polls is minimal. For rich reporting—cross-tabs, segmentation, open-ended response analysis—you’ll need external survey platforms.Given these tradeoffs, a hybrid approach often works best: use native Facebook polls for light engagement and teaser feedback, and redirect serious respondents to a SurveyMars survey for deeper data.
Two Methods: Native Polls vs Advanced Surveys
When considering how to create a survey on Facebook, there are two main paths:
1. Native Facebook polls / surveys (limited, built-in)
2. Embedded / linked surveys using external tools (SurveyMars, etc.)
Let’s break down each in detail.
Method A: Native Facebook Polls / In-Platform Surveys
Facebook supports poll creation in certain contexts (Groups, Stories, Events, Messenger). These are ideal for short, quick feedback—“pulse checks.” Below is how to do it:
Step 1: Identify where you’ll post the poll
Common placements include:
● Facebook Groups (you must be a member or admin)
● Facebook Story (mobile app only)
● Facebook Event page / event discussion
● Messenger group chat
● (Occasionally) Facebook Page — but support may vary depending on your region/account settings
Step 2: Compose your poll post
● In the group/story/event composer, look for “Poll” option.
● Write a clear, concise question.
● Add response choices (often 2–6 options).
● Configure settings: allow multiple answers? allow respondents to add options? anonymity toggle?
● (Optional) set a time duration for the poll.
● Preview and post or schedule.
Step 3: Monitor and engage
● Track poll responses in real-time.
● Engage by commenting, asking for clarifications, prompting discussion.
● Consider republishing or boosting to reach more people.
Important notes:
● Once votes start, question/options may not be editable.
● On Stories, poll stickers disappear after 24 hours.
● You may not get demographic breakdowns or cross-tab insights from Facebook’s native interface—thus limiting deeper analysis.
This native option is best for quick engagement, asking a single question, or gauging audience sentiment. But for multi-question surveys or more robust data, you'll need Method B.
Method B: External Surveys Embedded or Linked (Using SurveyMars)
To overcome the limitations of native polls, you can build a full survey on SurveyMars (or another tool) and then distribute via Facebook.
Step 1: Build the survey in SurveyMars
● Create a new survey (choose from templates or from scratch).
● Add multiple question types (multiple choice, open-ended, rating scales, etc.).
● Configure logic, branching, skip logic as needed.
● Style the survey (theme, branding).
● Enable anonymity or respondent tracking, as desired.
● (Optional) integrate with Facebook Pixel / Meta Pixel for tracking conversions, drop-off, attribution.
Surveysparrow’s guide mentions they support Pixel integration when connecting surveys with Facebook.
Step 2: Generate a shareable link or embed code
● Once survey is ready, SurveyMars will provide a share URL or embed code.
● Optionally, shorten the link or use UTMs for tracking.
Step 3: Share via Facebook
● Post the link on your Facebook Page, Group, or timeline.
● Use call-to-action text motivating users to click.
● Optionally, boost or promote via Facebook Ads to reach your desired demographic.
● You can also embed the survey link in Facebook’s “call-to-action” buttons or pinned posts.
Step 4: Monitor responses and analytics
● Use SurveyMars’ dashboard to track response counts, drop-off rates, time taken per question, etc.
● Integrate with your CRM, analytics system, or marketing tools as needed.
● Use cross-tab functions to segment responses by demographics or user cohorts.
This method gives you full control over question complexity, deeper analytics, cross-question logic, and richer data export. Combined with Facebook’s reach, it becomes a powerful mechanism for survey distribution.

Step-by-Step: How to Create a Survey on Facebook (with SurveyMars) — 2025 Workflow
Below is a modern, best-practice “how to create a survey on Facebook” workflow from SurveyMars’ vantage point.
Phase,Tasks, Tips & Considerations
Planning & Objective
Define your survey goal, target audience, expected outputs
Use SMART goals (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound).
Survey Design
Write crisp questions, choose format (multiple choice, open-ended, rating), add logic/branching
Keep survey ≤ 10 minutes; avoid “survey fatigue.”
Setup Integrations
If needed, set up Facebook Pixel or analytics integration
This helps you attribute survey starts/completions to ad campaigns.
Survey Launch
Publish or schedule, get share link / embed code
Use Facebook post formats, auto-post scheduling tools, etc.
Promotion & Distribution
Share in relevant groups, boost with ads, pin post
Use targeting (location, interests) and UTM tagging for measurement
Monitoring & Engagement
Monitor drop-off, push reminders, respond to comments
Use partial completions or reminders to re-engage respondents
Data Analysis
Export data from SurveyMars, segment, cross-tab, visualize
Use open-ended coding, sentiment, clustering, charts
Reporting & Action
Share results, derive insights, iterate on next survey
Publish summary to your Facebook audience to show transparency
When done carefully, this workflow helps you combine Facebook’s reach with SurveyMars’ analytical strength.

Best Practices & Pitfalls
To maximize response rate, data quality, and trust, follow these best practices—and avoid common mistakes.
Best Practices
1. Define a clear objective and keep questions aligned
2. Avoid asking too broadly. Each question should serve your research goal.Optimize for mobile readability
3. Many users will click your survey from mobile Facebook—use short sentences, clear buttons, minimal scrolling.Use a mix of question types
4. While you may start with a simple Facebook poll, follow up with richer questions in your full survey — use multiple choice, Likert scales, and open-ended responses.Limit survey length
5. Longer surveys lower completion rates. Aim for 5–10 minutes or fewer than ~15 questions.Provide incentive or value
6. Offer something (e.g. discount, entry for prize, or reveal summary results) to boost participation rates.Time your post strategically
7. Post when your audience is active. Use Facebook Insights to see when followers are most engaged.Use remarketing / promotion
8. Use Facebook Ads to boost your survey post or remind non-respondents.Segment respondents
9. Ask demographic or screening questions early to allow segmentation in analysis.Ensure privacy and transparency
10. Clearly state how you will use data, whether answers are anonymous, how long data will be retained.Close the loop
Share summarized results or thank participants publicly to build trust and encourage further engagement.Common Pitfalls
● Too many “soft” questions that don’t generate actionable data
● Leading or biased wording
● Survey posted publicly without targeting may attract random or low-quality responses
● Failing to test on devices / preview
● Ignoring drop-off analytics — not tracking where respondents quit
● Not accounting for Facebook’s algorithm changes — a post may not reach all followers unless boosted
Example Survey Question Ideas for Facebook Surveys
To help you implement how to create a survey on Facebook, here are 25 sample questions (both closed and open-ended) you can use in your SurveyMars survey or embed after a native poll. Feel free to adapt or expand.
1. What motivated you to click on this survey link?
2. How did you first hear about our Facebook page or brand?
3. What content topics would you like to see more of here?
4. Which of these product features would you like us to prioritize?
5. On a scale of 0–10, how likely are you to recommend us?
6. What one thing could we do to improve your experience?
7. What challenges have you faced in using our product/service?
8. How often do you visit our Facebook page or content?
9. Which social media platform do you prefer for updates?
10. Which types of posts do you engage with most (video, text, polls)?
11. What’s one idea you’d suggest for our next campaign?
12. How frequently would you like us to post content?
13. What motivates you to participate in a survey or poll?
14. What’s your preferred format for feedback (survey, poll, chat)?
15. What’s one question you hoped we would ask?
16. Which of our product categories interest you most?
17. How satisfied are you with our response to comments/messages?
18. What obstacle prevents you from becoming a paying customer?
19. How much time do you spend on Facebook per day?
20. From your perspective, what makes our brand unique?
21. What would make you unfollow or disengage from our page?
22. Which influencers or brands do you follow in our niche?
23. How much do you trust recommendations from Facebook ads?
24. What’s your age / gender / location (optional) for segmentation?
25. Any additional feedback or suggestions for us?
You can combine such questions with native Facebook polls to drive engagement, then redirect deeper respondents into the full survey.
Measuring Success & Analysis
Once your survey is live and responses start coming in, here’s how SurveyMars suggests you measure success and analyze:
Key Metrics to Monitor
● Response rate (responses ÷ link clicks)
● Completion rate / dropout points
● Time taken per question / average time
● Open-ended response word count and richness
● Segmented response differences (by age, region, device)
● Correlation / cross-tabs between key variables
Analytical Techniques
1. Cross-tabulation / segmentation
2. Analyze how different demographic groups responded differently.Thematic / qualitative coding
3. For open-ended responses, code common themes, sentiments, or categories.Sentiment analysis / text mining
4. Use natural language processing (NLP) to surface tone, key phrases, and patterns.Visualization
5. Use charts, heatmaps, word clouds, Sankey diagrams, respondent flow maps, etc.Attribution (when using Pixel integration)
6. See which Facebook ad campaigns or audience segments produced the most completions.Benchmark against previous surveys / longitudinal tracking
Practical Use Cases & Story Examples
To bring things closer to reality, here are a few illustrative use cases (fictionalized but grounded in practice):
● Community Group Poll → Deep Survey
● A nonprofit posts a poll in its Facebook group: “What’s your top barrier to volunteering (A: Time, B: Knowledge, C: Access)?” Depending on the answer, it redirects people to a 5-question SurveyMars survey asking about preferred schedules, resources needed, and motivations.Brand Launch Preference Test
● A consumer brand polls Facebook fans: “Which packaging design do you prefer: A or B?” Then, send a full survey with images, rating scales, open feedback, and demographic questions.Event Planning Feedback
Before an online workshop, a company polls attendees on preferred time or topics, then sends a post-event feedback survey via SurveyMars to capture detailed feedback, NPS, suggestions.
Conclusion
Knowing how to create a survey on Facebook is more than just clicking “Poll” — it’s about designing a blended strategy where Facebook gives you reach and engagement, while SurveyMars gives you analytical depth and data control.
By following the methods and best practices above, you can run surveys that are both engaging and rigorous. Always be mindful of biases, test across devices, optimize for mobile, and keep respondents’ experience front and center.
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