The Net Promoter Score (NPS®) has earned its place as one of the most widely adopted customer feedback tools, offering a simple yet powerful snapshot of customer loyalty. But the magic of NPS doesn’t come from the score itself — it comes from what you do next.
Asking customers, “How likely are you to recommend us to a friend or colleague?” gives you a quantitative read on sentiment. But alone, it’s one-dimensional. To turn NPS into a genuine driver of growth, retention, and customer-centric decisions, you need to pair it with well-crafted follow-up questions that reveal the “why” behind the number.
In this post, we explore 5 smart NPS follow-up questions that unlock deep insight, help predict customer behaviour (like churn, likelihood of repeat purchase or growth intention), and offer alignment with complementary measures like Customer Satisfaction (CSAT). We’ll also cover how to structure and time your questions for optimal response and value.
Why Follow-Up Questions Matter
Before we dive into the questions themselves, it’s worth reiterating why NPS follow-ups are so important.
But not all follow-up questions are equal. The best ones are easy to answer, open-ended but focused, and tailored to the score group (promoters, passives, detractors).
Structuring the NPS Flow: A Brief Overview
A strong NPS survey should follow this sequence:
The 5 Smart Follow-Up Questions
Here are five well-crafted follow-up questions that work well across sectors, especially in B2B environments. These questions can be dynamically delivered based on the NPS score bracket (0–6 detractors, 7–8 passives, 9–10 promoters) and adapted to suit your product or service.
Why it works:
This is the single most effective and flexible follow-up question. It's simple, open-ended, and directly invites the customer to explain their reasoning in their own words.
Best used with: All respondents (promoters, passives, and detractors).
What you’ll learn:
How to make it better:
Tag responses by theme (e.g. pricing, product quality, support) using text analytics or manual coding. This enables prioritisation and trend detection across the base.
🔍 Example Insight: “I love the platform’s features, but support response times have been slow.” (Passive, score = 7; issue = support)
Why it works:
Improvement questions push customers to focus on what would move them from detractor to promoter or from passive to promoter. It’s future-oriented and action-driven.
Best used with:
Detractors (0–6) and passives (7–8) but can be useful with promoters too.
What you’ll learn:
How to make it better:
There is the potential to use multiple-choice options with an “Other” field if you want to guide the response (e.g. “Better pricing”, “Faster delivery”, “More training resources”), however we like the freedom of open-ended questioning; your choice will likely stem from your ability to analyse the responses.
💡 Tip: Responses from passives are especially valuable here — they’re not upset, but they’re not loyal either. These customers are ripe for conversion and are a potential goldmine of information.
Why it works:
This helps validate NPS as a predictor of behaviour — not just sentiment. Promoters say they would recommend, but have they? This question adds a behavioural lens.
Best used with: Promoters (9–10).
What you’ll learn:
How to make it better:
Follow up with “Would you be willing to provide a testimonial?” or direct them to your referral program.
🎯 Example: A customer who scores 10 but has never referred might need a nudge or an incentive, or could be a good target for a follow up Voice of the Customer (VoC) interview to deep dive and understand how they are really feeling.
Why it works:
NPS gives an overall loyalty measure, but satisfaction with specific touchpoints, for example onboarding, product quality or support, gives context and helps locate the issue.
Best used with: All respondents, especially when diagnosing low scores or validating high ones.
What you’ll learn:
How to make it better:
Ask this as a 5-point scale (1 = Very dissatisfied, 5 = Very satisfied), then optionally follow up with a short open text field for detail.
⚖️ Link to CSAT: NPS and CSAT can work well together. A promoter (NPS = 9) may still be dissatisfied with support (CSAT = 2). This gap is where churn or negative word-of-mouth can begin.
Why it works:
This uncovers forward-looking behaviour, from risk of churn to likelihood of upsell. It aligns with account planning and growth strategy.
Best used with:
All segments, but especially passives and promoters.
What you’ll learn:
How to make it better:
Offer pre-set answer ranges (e.g., “We’re reducing usage”, “Staying the same”, “Expanding to new teams”, “Unsure”) and allow for comments.
🔄 Pro tip: When this is paired with account data (usage, contract status), you can proactively intervene with success, renewal, or expansion support.
Bonus Tactic: Combining NPS with CSAT for Alignment
While NPS is about loyalty and advocacy, CSAT is about satisfaction at specific touchpoints. They serve different but complementary purposes.
Here’s how to use them together:
This dual approach lets you spot disconnects and act fast.
Tips for Better NPS Survey Design
Turning Insights Into Action
Great follow-up questions mean nothing if they don’t lead to action.
Here’s a simple workflow:
📊 Tip: Build a dashboard that tracks NPS over time alongside common themes and business actions taken.
Final Thoughts
NPS is only as powerful as the conversations it starts. By asking smart, targeted follow-up questions, you shift the score from a vanity metric to a true voice-of-the-customer engine. Whether you’re identifying churn risk, uncovering referral potential, or flagging product improvements, these questions turn vague feedback into precise action.
If you’re not already using these follow-up questions or if your NPS program feels flat, now’s the time to evolve your approach. Insight comes not just from what you ask, but how you listen and act.
Looking to Improve Your NPS Program?
At Kinvale, we help B2B companies design NPS programs that deliver results. From survey design to insight dashboards and follow-up workflows, we can help you turn customer feedback into fuel for growth.
👉 Contact us for a free consultation.