GLP-1 Weight Loss Wardrobe Resizing & Shopping Habits Survey
Tracks how GLP-1 medication-driven weight change is reshaping clothing size, shopping frequency, spend allocation, and what people do with ill-fitting garments. Built for apparel and resale researchers, with an AI follow-up interview that digs into the emotional and financial decisions behind buying new versus altering or holding onto old clothes.
Sample questions
A preview of what’s in the template. Every question is editable before you launch.
Which best describes your experience with GLP-1 medications for weight management?
- Currently taking one
- Took one in the past but stopped
- Never taken one, but considering it
How long have you been taking (or did you take) GLP-1 medication?
- Less than 3 months
- 3-6 months
- 6-12 months
- More than 12 months
- No longer taking / stopped
How much has your clothing size changed since starting GLP-1 medication?
- No noticeable change
- Dropped 1 size
- Dropped 2 sizes
- Dropped 3+ sizes
- Increased in size
- Not sure yet
How confident are you that you know your correct clothing size when shopping today?
In the last 3 months, how many times have you bought new clothing specifically because your previous size no longer fit?
- Never
- Once
- 2-3 times
- 4-6 times
- More than 6 times
Thinking about money spent on new or resized clothing since your body size changed, how would you split $100 across these categories?
- Everyday/casual wear
- Workwear/professional attire
- Activewear
- Outerwear
- Undergarments/intimates
- Tailoring/alterations of existing clothes
How much do you agree with each statement about shopping and fit since your size changed?
- Finding my correct size in stores is frustrating
- I feel more confident trying on clothes now than before
- I worry my size will change again soon so I hesitate to buy new clothes
- I've had to alter or tailor clothes to fit properly
- I feel pressure to buy an entirely new wardrobe
What have you done with clothing that no longer fits? Select all that apply.
- Donated it
- Sold it (resale/consignment)
- Had it tailored/altered
- Kept it in case my size changes back
- Threw it away
- Given it to family or friends
Where do you MOST often shop for clothing now that your size has changed?
- Online retailers (new)
- In-store at usual retailers
- Resale/thrift stores (in-person or online)
- Tailor or custom clothing service
- Borrowing from family or friends
Rank these challenges of resizing your wardrobe from biggest to smallest.
- Cost of buying all new clothes
- Finding the right size or fit
- Not knowing if my size will keep changing
- Time it takes to shop
- Emotional attachment to old clothes
- Lack of size availability in stores
Explore the real story behind how this person is handling their changing body size and wardrobe. Probe why they chose to buy new clothes, alter existing ones, or wait (anchor on their answer to the challenges ranking and the purchase-frequency question). Dig into the emotional side — how it feels to try on clothes now, any hesitation about committing to a new size, and what would make the process easier. If they say their size hasn't changed yet, ask what they anticipate doing when it does.
Almost done — just a few quick questions about you to help us understand patterns across groups.
What is your age range?
- 18-24
- 25-34
- 35-44
- 45-54
- 55-64
- 65+
- Prefer not to say
What is your gender?
- Woman
- Man
- Non-binary
- Prefer to self-describe
- Prefer not to say
What is your annual household income?
- Under $30,000
- $30,000-$59,999
- $60,000-$99,999
- $100,000-$149,999
- $150,000 or more
- Prefer not to say
Thank you so much for sharing your experience! Your answers will help apparel brands and retailers better serve shoppers going through size changes.
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 dedicated AI follow-up interview that explores the emotional and financial reasoning behind buying new, altering, or holding onto ill-fitting clothes — something static forms can't do
- Combines quantitative measures (constant-sum spend allocation, matrix agreement scale, ranking of resizing challenges) with qualitative depth in one flow
- Specifically built around GLP-1-driven body change, covering size change magnitude, shopping frequency, and disposal/retention behavior for old clothing rather than generic shopping attitudes
- Automated per-response quality scoring and an auto-generated report mean apparel/resale researchers get cleaned, analyzable output without manual coding
Jotform
Shopping Behavior Survey Form TemplateA generic, ready-to-field shopping behavior form covering broad purchasing habits rather than any body-size-change or apparel-fit context. It's a static questionnaire with no adaptive logic, so all respondents see identical questions regardless of answers. Useful as a quick generic starting point but not tailored to GLP-1 or wardrobe-resizing research.
What it does well
- Ready-to-use, easily editable form builder template
- Covers general shopping behavior questions applicable across retail categories
- Low setup effort for broad consumer surveys
Where it falls short
- No adaptive follow-up questioning — fixed question set for every respondent
- No GLP-1, body-size-change, or clothing-fit specific content
- No voice interview option or automated per-response quality scoring
QuestionPro
Retail shopping and search behavior survey questions + Sample questionnaire templateThis is a sample questionnaire/reference page for retail shopping and search behavior rather than a topic-specific fielding-ready survey on body change or wardrobe resizing. It gives researchers question ideas for general retail behavior but requires substantial customization for an apparel-resale or GLP-1 use case.
What it does well
- Broad library of retail and search-behavior question examples
- Positioned as a customizable starting questionnaire
- Backed by an established survey platform with reporting tools
Where it falls short
- No adaptive AI probing into individual respondent stories
- Not built around clothing fit, size change, or GLP-1 context
- No transparent prompt methodology or automated quality scoring per response
SurveyMonkey
Online Shopping Survey: Questions & TemplateA static template focused on general online shopping attitudes — think preferences, satisfaction, and channel usage — not on body-size change, clothing fit, or what people do with ill-fitting garments. It's fielding-ready for generic e-commerce attitude research but would need heavy rebuilding for the GLP-1 wardrobe use case.
What it does well
- Established, easy-to-deploy survey template
- Covers general online shopping attitudes and satisfaction
- Benefits from SurveyMonkey's standard reporting dashboard
Where it falls short
- No mechanism for adaptive follow-up or voice interviews to explore reasoning behind purchase decisions
- No content addressing clothing size change, medication-driven weight loss, or garment disposal behavior
- No transparent, publishable prompt methodology
Ready to launch?
Open this template in the editor. Every part is yours to change before the first respondent sees it.