Volunteer Application & Fit Screening Survey
Screens prospective volunteers on motivation, availability, skills, and role fit, using a best-worst trade-off question to surface which roles they actually want most (not just tolerate). An AI follow-up interview digs into the story behind their top motivation and preferred role so coordinators can place new volunteers well from day one.
Sample questions
A preview of what’s in the template. Every question is editable before you launch.
What best describes why you want to volunteer with us?
- To give back to my community
- To gain new skills or experience
- To meet new people and connect socially
- To support a specific cause I care about
- To fulfill a school, work, or court requirement
Looking at the volunteer roles below, which sound most appealing to you and which sound least appealing?
- Event support and setup
- Administrative and office tasks
- Mentoring or tutoring
- Fundraising and community outreach
- Direct service (meals, shelter, care)
- Skilled/professional volunteering (legal, marketing, IT)
- Board or committee involvement
Which times are you generally available to volunteer? Select all that apply.
- Weekday mornings
- Weekday afternoons
- Weekday evenings
- Weekend mornings
- Weekend afternoons
- Weekend evenings
In a typical month, how many hours could you realistically commit to volunteering?
- Less than 4 hours
- 4-8 hours
- 9-15 hours
- 16-25 hours
- More than 25 hours
Tell us about any skills, experience, certifications, or languages that could be useful (e.g., first aid, teaching, bookkeeping, event planning).
Which best describes your volunteer experience so far?
- No prior volunteer experience
- Some experience with other organizations
- Extensive volunteer experience
- Previously volunteered with us before
Explore the story behind this applicant's top motivation and their most-preferred role from the trade-off question: what specifically draws them to it, and what would a great first month look like for them? If their stated availability seems limited relative to the role they picked, gently probe whether that role's realistic time demands work for them. If they picked 'fulfill a requirement' as their motivation, check whether they have a deadline and what would make the experience meaningful beyond just completing it.
How did you hear about our volunteer program?
- Friend or family referral
- Social media
- Our website
- A community event
- Local news, flyer, or bulletin
Before we can place you, please confirm the following.
What's the best email address for us to follow up with you about next steps?
Which age range do you fall into? (Optional, used only for program planning.)
- Under 18
- 18-24
- 25-34
- 35-44
- 45-54
- 55-64
- 65 or older
- Prefer not to say
Thank you for applying! A volunteer coordinator will review your responses and reach out by email within the next week to discuss next steps and matching you to a role.
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
- A best-worst (max-diff) question forces applicants to reveal which roles they genuinely want most rather than just find acceptable, giving coordinators a real ranked preference signal
- An AI follow-up interview probes the story behind the applicant's top motivation and preferred role, surfacing context a static form field can't capture
- Availability, monthly time commitment, and skills/certifications/languages are collected alongside experience level so fit can be assessed holistically, not just on interest
- Built-in consent step and an optional age-range question support responsible data handling while an auto-generated report and quality scoring speed up coordinator review
Jotform
90+ Volunteer Application FormsThis is a large template gallery/category page listing many volunteer application form variants rather than a single ready-to-field survey with a defined question flow. It's useful for browsing form layouts and field types, but requires manual selection and customization before deployment. No adaptive questioning or interview component is offered.
What it does well
- Wide selection of pre-built volunteer form layouts to choose from
- Drag-and-drop form builder for customizing fields quickly
- Established e-signature and file-upload widgets useful for waivers/certifications
Where it falls short
- Static form fields only — no adaptive AI follow-up questioning to explore motivation or fit
- Being a gallery page, it offers no built-in trade-off/ranking question type like best-worst scaling
- No automated per-response quality scoring or auto-generated applicant reports
SurveyMonkey
Volunteer Application Form TemplateA single ready-to-use volunteer application template with standard fields for contact info, availability, and interests. It's straightforward to deploy but relies on fixed multiple-choice/text questions without any conversational or adaptive layer. Good for basic intake, less suited to deeper motivation screening.
What it does well
- Quick to deploy with SurveyMonkey's established survey infrastructure
- Familiar analytics dashboard for reviewing aggregate response data
- Easy distribution via link, email, or embed
Where it falls short
- No adaptive AI follow-up interview to dig into why an applicant prefers a given role
- Lacks a best-worst/trade-off question type to surface true role preference versus mere tolerance
- No automated quality scoring of individual responses or auto-generated per-applicant reports
Typeform
Free Volunteer Application Form TemplateA conversational-style, one-question-at-a-time template that's pleasant to fill out and covers the basics of a volunteer application. It's a fixed-path form, though — the friendly UX doesn't extend to actually adapting questions based on answers. No trade-off ranking or interview follow-up is included.
What it does well
- Polished, conversational one-question-at-a-time interface improves completion experience
- Free to use as a starting template
- Mobile-friendly design well-suited to on-the-go applicants
Where it falls short
- No AI-driven follow-up interview or voice interview option to explore motivation in depth
- No best-worst scaling question to rank role preference among options
- No automated response quality scoring or auto-generated coordinator-facing report
QuestionPro
Community service agency volunteer survey questions + sample questionnaire templateThis page reads more as a sample questionnaire/guide with example volunteer survey questions than a polished, ready-to-field application template. It's helpful for question ideas but would need to be rebuilt into an actual survey flow. No adaptive or interview-based elements are present.
What it does well
- Provides example question wording useful for drafting a volunteer survey
- Backed by QuestionPro's broader survey platform and analytics tools
- Covers general community-service volunteer topics as a reference
Where it falls short
- Presented as a sample question list/guide rather than a deployable survey, requiring manual setup
- No adaptive AI interview or voice interview to probe motivation and role fit
- No best-worst trade-off question or automated per-response quality scoring built into the template
Ready to launch?
Open this template in the editor. Every part is yours to change before the first respondent sees it.