Configure
Surveys & CSAT
Ask visitors a short survey when a conversation ends, then track customer satisfaction over time — average rating, resolution rate, how many conversations actually leave feedback, and a per-persona breakdown.
Turn on the survey
CSAT surveys are on the Scale plan.
- Open Analytics → Feedback from the dashboard.
- Pick the widget you want (if you have more than one).
- Flip the CSAT survey toggle on.
That's it — visitors now see a quick survey at the end of their chat. Everything below is optional fine-tuning.
Choose what to ask
With the survey on, a small builder appears under the toggle.
When to ask
- When the conversation ends — the survey appears as the chat closes. Best for most sites.
- After a human hands the chat back to the AI — only ask after a teammate has taken over and handed back, so you measure the assisted experience.
The questions
- Rating (1–5 stars) — always on. This drives your Average rating.
- “Was it resolved?” (yes / partially / no) — optional. Drives your Resolution rate.
- Open feedback (free text) — optional. Non-English answers are auto-translated to English for you in the dashboard, with the original kept too.
Edit the wording of any question, toggle the optional ones off, then press Save survey.
Read your results
The Feedback tab shows four headline numbers:
- Avg CSAT rating — the mean of all star ratings in the period. If only a handful of people have rated, we flag it as directional so a couple of responses never mislead you.
- Resolution rate — the share of responders who said their question was answered.
- Response rate — how many of your conversations actually left feedback. A great average from 2% of conversations means something very different from a great average from 40%.
- Total responses — the raw count in the period.
Below that you'll find the rating distribution (how many 1s through 5s), a responses-over-time trend, a per-persona breakdown (which persona earns the best scores), and your most recent feedback with the visitor's comment.
Real-time sentiment
Surveys tell you how a conversation ended; sentiment tells you how it felt the whole way through — even when the visitor never fills in a survey.
Turn it on in Analytics → Sentiment (per widget, off by default). Sentiment scoring is on the Scale plan.
- Every visitor message is classified — positive, negative, a question, or neutral — by a lightweight model, off the chat's critical path so it never slows a reply.
- The Sentiment tab shows your message-sentiment mix, average sentiment over time, and a “Needs attention” list — the conversations with the longest run of negative messages, so you can step in on a frustrated visitor.
- It works in any language (the classifier reads the visitor's own words; nothing is translated first).
Escalate when a chat turns negative
Don't just measure frustration after the fact — act on it live. When a conversation racks up several negative messages in a row, Quincer AI can automatically escalate it so a human picks it up before the visitor gives up.
Configure it per persona under Personas → (a persona) → Channels → Sentiment escalation. It needs real-time sentiment switched on for the widget (above).
- Negative streak threshold — how many consecutive negative messages trigger an escalation (default 3). One grumpy message won't fire it; a sustained run will.
- Escalate to — pick where it goes:
- Flag for a human — marks the conversation on the Live Conversations dashboard with an “Escalated” badge so your team can take over.
- Slack / Teams / Telegram — posts to the persona's escalation channel (the same one its AI uses when it can't answer), with a Take over button.
- Cooldown — the minimum gap before the same conversation can escalate again (default 60 minutes), so one rough chat doesn't spam your channel every turn.
Sentiment-driven escalation is on the Scale plan, and needs real-time sentiment switched on (above).
Tips
- Keep it short. The rating plus one optional question gets the highest response rates.
- Use the per-persona table to spot a persona that's underperforming and tune its tone or knowledge.
- Watch the response rate, not just the average — a rising response rate means more people are willing to tell you how it went.