Show the right survey
to the right visitor, every time.
Control exactly which pages your survey appears on, who sees it, and when it triggers — all from inside your WordPress dashboard. No code, no plugins, no third-party rules engine.
Everything targeting can do.
Six controls for deciding where, when, and to whom your surveys appear — without writing a single line of code.
Custom Trigger Settings
Choose when your survey widget appears — immediately on page load, after a set number of seconds, or after the visitor has scrolled a specified percentage of the page.
Page-Level Targeting
Display a different survey on each page of your site. Show a bug report form on your app page, an NPS survey on your checkout confirmation, and a general survey on your blog.
Audience Rules
Target surveys to specific visitor segments — logged-in users, new visitors, or returning customers — so the survey is always contextually relevant to who sees it.
Non-Intrusive Display
Surveys appear as a subtle slide-in widget, never blocking the page or disrupting the visitor’s task. Respondents can dismiss and continue without losing their place.
Delay Triggers
Set a time delay in seconds before the survey widget slides in. Give visitors time to engage with your page before asking for feedback so responses are more considered.
WooCommerce Compatible
Target surveys on WooCommerce product pages, cart, or order confirmation screens to collect post-purchase feedback from shoppers right after a transaction.
Context makes feedback actionable.
Contextual feedback
A survey shown on the page that prompted it gets far more useful responses than a generic survey shown sitewide. Targeting makes every response contextual.
Trigger rules without dev
All targeting and trigger settings are configured from the AllFeedback dashboard. No JavaScript conditions, no custom hooks, no developer involvement needed.
Visitors stay on task
A delayed, dismissible widget means visitors can choose to respond without feeling interrupted. Response quality improves when timing and placement are right.
Who uses Targeting — and how.
Three scenarios where precise targeting turns a generic survey into a highly relevant one.
Post-purchase feedback
Target an NPS or satisfaction survey exclusively to the WooCommerce order confirmation page. Feedback collected here is from customers who have just completed a purchase.
Exit intent collection
Show a short survey as visitors are about to leave a key page. A one-question “What stopped you?” survey surfaces friction that analytics alone can’t explain.
Page-specific research
Research and content teams target surveys to specific blog posts or documentation pages to gather feedback about whether the content is helpful, accurate, and complete.
Related features.
Survey Builder
Build the survey in the drag-and-drop editor, then assign targeting rules to control exactly where it appears.
→ Survey BuilderNPS Surveys
Use targeting to show your NPS survey after checkout or on high-intent pages for more relevant loyalty scores.
→ NPS SurveysAnalytics
See how per-page targeting affects completion rates and response volume across all your targeted surveys.
→ AnalyticsAll features. Free.
Native. Yours.
Every feature ships in the free plugin and runs entirely on your WordPress site.
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