SURVEYS

For Surveys.

An emailed survey is 5% response on a great day. The same survey on a printed QR, handed over at the moment of experience, hits 30-40%. Make a beautiful one. Drop it on the receipt, the menu, the seat pocket, the exit door.

Make Your Survey QR Code →

Where survey QRs work

Restaurant Receipts

The moment-of-experience question: "How was it?" Scanners answer because the meal is still on their lips.

Conference & Event Exits

Last impression poster. Attendees rate the day before they forget what was good.

Hotel Rooms

Tent card or door hanger. Honest in-room feedback beats "please review us" emails after checkout.

Internal Employee Pulse

Anonymous QRs on break-room walls collect honest team sentiment with no email trail.

How to make a survey QR code

  1. Build the survey in Google Forms, Typeform, Jotform, or SurveyMonkey. Copy the public share URL.
  2. Paste the URL into QRKong. Pick "Google Form" or "Link" — they encode the same way.
  3. Style the code to match your brand or your CTA poster. Add a short label like "30-sec feedback" underneath.
  4. Download the PNG. Test on a phone with poor lighting before mass-producing.

Common questions

Google Forms is the workhorse — free, mobile-friendly, and the URL never changes. Typeform, Tally, Jotform, and SurveyMonkey are all equivalent for QR purposes.

Whichever tool you pick, copy the public share link (not the edit link) and paste that into QRKong.

Yes — typical industry numbers say 2-3x. The U.S. Census Bureau measured average QR-to-survey time at about 12 seconds, which is hard to beat with a link in an email.

The reason is friction: the respondent is already standing in the right place at the right moment, holding the device that takes the answer.

At the moment of experience: on the receipt, the back of the menu, the seat in front of you on a flight, the exit poster from a hotel room or museum.

Add a short CTA — "30-second feedback" or "Scan to rate today" — and offer a tiny incentive if you want a 30%+ response rate.

Yes, but the URL has to differ per location. Pass a query string (?location=store-7) on the form URL, and Google Forms / Typeform stores it with each response.

You can generate one QR per location with a different query string in QRKong without re-creating the survey itself.

For a tabletop card or menu insert read at 30-50 cm, 3-4 cm scans comfortably. For a wall poster read across a room, scale up using the 10:1 rule (size = distance ÷ 10).

Anything below ~2 cm starts losing reliability in poor light. Bump it up before reducing it.

Questions? · hi@qrkong.com