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Neighborhood Events Participation & Satisfaction Survey

Measures how residents discover, attend, and rate neighborhood events like block parties, markets, and festivals, plus what would get them out more often. An AI follow-up interview digs into the real reasons behind satisfaction scores and attendance barriers instead of stopping at a number.

Sample questions

A preview of what’s in the template. Every question is editable before you launch.

14 questions · ~7 min
Q01
Message

Hi neighbor! We're gathering feedback to make community events better for everyone on the block. This will take about 8 minutes, and your honest answers — especially about what's kept you away — are the most useful part.

Q02
Multiple ChoiceRequired

In the last 6 months, how many neighborhood events have you attended (block parties, markets, festivals, clean-ups, etc.)?

  • None
  • 1-2
  • 3-5
  • 6 or more
Q03
Multiple ChoiceRequired

How do you usually find out about upcoming neighborhood events?

  • Neighborhood association or HOA newsletter
  • Social media groups (e.g., Facebook, Nextdoor)
  • Flyers or posters
  • Word of mouth from neighbors
  • Local news or community website
  • I don't usually hear about them
Q04
Best–Worst Trade-off (MaxDiff)Required

Which of these event types appeal to you most, and which appeal to you least?

  • Outdoor farmers markets
  • Block parties
  • Multi-cultural festivals
  • Free fitness classes in the park
  • Kids' activity days
  • Food truck nights
  • Holiday light celebrations
  • Community volunteer clean-ups
Pick best & worst per setBest:Most appealing to meWorst:Least appealing to me
Q05
MatrixRequired

How would you rate neighborhood events on each of the following?

5 rows × 5 columns
  • Advance notice / communication
  • Timing (day and time of day)
  • Location and accessibility
  • Cost to attend
  • Variety of activities offered
Columns: Poor · Fair · Good · Very good · Excellent
Q06
Opinion ScaleRequired

Overall, how satisfied are you with the neighborhood events held so far?

Scale: 17
Min:Not satisfied at allMax:Extremely satisfied
Q07
Multiple Choice

What, if anything, keeps you from attending neighborhood events more often?

  • Didn't know about them
  • Timing conflicts with work or family
  • Location is too far
  • Cost to attend
  • Not interested in the topics offered
  • Safety concerns
  • Accessibility needs aren't met
Q08
Opinion ScaleRequired

How likely are you to recommend attending a neighborhood event to a friend or neighbor?

Scale: 010
Min:Not at all likelyMax:Extremely likely
Q09
AI Interview

Anchor on the respondent's overall satisfaction rating and any barriers they selected. If satisfaction was low or they cited timing, cost, or lack of awareness, ask them to walk through the last event they considered but skipped and what specifically would have changed their decision. If they rated things highly or picked a clear favorite event type in the trade-off question, explore what made that experience work so well. End by asking for one concrete change they'd make to next month's event.

Q10
Long Text

Anything else you'd like to share — event ideas, feedback, or things you wish were different?

Q11
Message

Just a couple of quick questions about you, then you're done.

Q12
Multiple Choice

How long have you lived in the neighborhood?

  • Less than 1 year
  • 1-3 years
  • 4-9 years
  • 10+ years
  • Prefer not to say
Q13
Multiple Choice

What is your age range?

  • Under 18
  • 18-24
  • 25-34
  • 35-44
  • 45-54
  • 55-64
  • 65+
  • Prefer not to say
Q14
Message

Thank you for sharing your feedback! We'll use it to plan events that fit your schedule and interests better — no names attached, just patterns across the whole neighborhood.

What’s included

  • AI follow-ups

    Adaptive probes on open-ended answers that pull out detail a static form would miss.

  • Attention checks

    Built-in safeguards against rushed answers and low-quality respondents.

  • AI-drafted copy

    Wording, ordering, and branching written by the AI — tuned to your research goal.

  • Auto report

    Themes, quotes, and a plain-English summary write themselves once responses come in.

How it compares

We reviewed the closest templates from other survey tools. Here’s what they do well — and where this template goes further.

Why this template

  • Includes a best-worst trade-off exercise that pinpoints which event types (block parties, markets, festivals) residents most and least want, not just a generic satisfaction score
  • Pairs an opinion-scale satisfaction question and a barriers multiple-choice with an AI follow-up interview that anchors on the respondent's own rating and selected barriers to dig into the real 'why'
  • Covers the full discovery-to-attendance funnel (how residents hear about events, how often they attend, what stops them) plus a matrix rating and open-ended long-text field for ideas
  • Closes with tenure and age-range questions so results can be segmented by how long someone has lived in the neighborhood

SurveyMonkey

Neighborhood Events Survey Template

A ready-to-field template covering similar ground (attendance, discovery channels, satisfaction) for neighborhood events. It's a static question set built for quick deployment through SurveyMonkey's standard survey and reporting tools rather than any kind of adaptive interviewing. Good for a fast benchmark, but every respondent gets the identical follow-up (none) regardless of their answers.

What it does well

  • Established survey platform with broad template library and familiar builder
  • Fast to launch with pre-built neighborhood-events-specific questions
  • Likely integrates with SurveyMonkey's existing analysis and benchmarking tools

Where it falls short

  • Static question flow only — no adaptive AI follow-up to probe why someone rated satisfaction low or cited a specific barrier
  • No automated per-response quality scoring to flag low-effort answers
  • No published methodology or transparent prompt logic for how deeper insights are derived, because there isn't a follow-up interview layer

Ready to launch?

Open this template in the editor. Every part is yours to change before the first respondent sees it.