DocHub allows you to add sheet in Patient Satisfaction Survey quickly and conveniently. No matter if your document is PDF or any other format, you can effortlessly modify it leveraging DocHub's user-friendly interface and powerful editing features. With online editing, you can alter your Patient Satisfaction Survey without downloading or installing any software.
DocHub's drag and drop editor makes customizing your Patient Satisfaction Survey simple and streamlined. We securely store all your edited documents in the cloud, enabling you to access them from anywhere, whenever you need. On top of that, it's effortless to share your documents with people who need to go over them or create an eSignature. And our native integrations with Google services enable you to transfer, export and modify and endorse documents directly from Google apps, all within a single, user-friendly program. Plus, you can easily turn your edited Patient Satisfaction Survey into a template for repetitive use.
All processed documents are securely stored in your DocHub account, are easily handled and shifted to other folders.
DocHub simplifies the process of certifying document workflows from day one!
Lets take a look at a practical way of visualizing survey results in Excel, especially those that follow a typical Likert format such as employee surveys that have responses going from strongly disagree to strongly agree or even simpler ones with just disagree, neutral, and agree. This is sample survey data that we want to visualize. So we have statements like I feel valued in my team, The work is distributed evenly in the team. In this case, for example, 4 people said they strongly disagree. 32 people agree with that. So based on this, I want to create a quick chart to visualize this. One option is to insert a stacked bar chart. By default, its giving me these categories on the axis. I actually want to see my questions on the axis. I have to go to Select Data and switch the row and the column. Thats one way of visualizing the survey data. Now, another method, as specified by Jon Peltier, is to use a diverging stacked bar chart. It centers the neutral responses in the middle. This m