Satisfaction survey questions

Project management includes a series of processes, templates, tools, and techniques that a project manager applies throughout the project management life cycle to deliver the product/service.

How satisfied are you with regards to the process the project manager followed to manage (create, monitor, communicate, plan for, and maintain) the following project management components? (possible answers: not at all satisfied, somewhat satisfied, satisfied, very satisfied, extremely satisfied, not applicable)

Delivery methodology

The final deliverable(s) of the project, which will be either a product or service, has its own delivery methodology consisting of a series of phases.

How satisfied are you with regards to the process followed to manage (create, monitor, communicate, plan for, and maintain) the following systems life cycle components? (possible answers: not at all satisfied, somewhat satisfied, satisfied, very satisfied, extremely satisfied, not applicable)?

Section 3: Project product satisfaction

Successful project management is equivalent to successfully delivering a change. That change is in the form of an end deliverable, which could be a product or a service. The deliverable should meet the requirements and quality expectations set forth in the project.

How satisfied are you with regards to the project deliverable(s)? (possible answers: not at all satisfied, somewhat satisfied, satisfied, very satisfied, extremely satisfied, not applicable)

Section 4: Project outcome satisfaction

The project outcome assesses the benefit(s) delivered through the project by answering whether people will be willing to use the product/service and does it provide benefit, regardless of whether or not it met requirements established within the project.

How satisfied are you with regards to the project deliverable being used by stakeholders and providing benefit? (possible answers: not at all satisfied, somewhat satisfied, satisfied, very satisfied, extremely satisfied, not applicable)

Section 5: General comments

Lessons learned should be a collection of what went well and what did not go well. It is important to be truthful, but not to use this as finger pointing. The lessons learned should stick to the issue or opportunity so that other projects can take advantage of these findings during their own execution.

In relation to the overall project:

Related links