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Best questions for police officer survey about human trafficking awareness

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Adam Sabla

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Aug 22, 2025

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Here are some of the best questions for a police officer survey about human trafficking awareness, plus tips for crafting questions that yield valuable insights. If you want to create a tailored survey like this in seconds, Specific makes it effortless.

Best open-ended questions for police officer survey about human trafficking awareness

Open-ended questions allow police officers to express themselves in their own words, helping uncover depth and nuance that structured questions often miss. They’re especially valuable when exploring personal experiences, attitudes, and real-world scenarios—critical for a sensitive, complex issue like human trafficking. Here are ten of our go-to open-ended questions:

  1. How would you define “human trafficking” based on your own understanding?

  2. Can you describe any situations where you encountered potential indicators of human trafficking in your role?

  3. What challenges do you face when it comes to identifying victims of human trafficking?

  4. In your experience, what are the most common misconceptions about human trafficking among officers?

  5. What additional training, resources, or support would help you recognize signs of trafficking more effectively?

  6. Can you walk us through the steps you would take if you suspected human trafficking during an incident or investigation?

  7. What role do you believe law enforcement should play in the prevention of human trafficking?

  8. Are there policies or procedures at your agency related to human trafficking that you feel need improvement? Please explain.

  9. What impact, if any, do you think existing anti-trafficking legislation has on your daily work?

  10. If you could change one thing about your department's approach to human trafficking, what would it be?

Open responses like these help surface real knowledge gaps and offer a path to tailored training—a point reinforced by recent research showing many officers conflate human trafficking with people smuggling and lack awareness of key policies. [1]

Best single-select multiple-choice questions for police officer survey about human trafficking awareness

Single-select multiple-choice questions are ideal when you need to quantify awareness, attitudes, or training exposure. They give respondents straightforward options and eliminate decision fatigue, making it easier to answer—and for you to compare results. Such questions work well at the start of a survey or as a break from more demanding open-ended ones—plus, they’re great for sparking reflection and follow-up discussion. Here are a few to start with:

Question: Which of the following best describes your current understanding of human trafficking?

  • Comprehensive

  • Moderate

  • Basic

  • Uncertain

  • Other

Question: Have you received formal training on human trafficking awareness in the past two years?

  • Yes, extensive training

  • Yes, some training

  • No training

Question: How confident are you in identifying signs of human trafficking during your daily duties?

  • Very confident

  • Somewhat confident

  • Not confident

When to followup with "why?" After a multiple-choice selection, following up with “Why?” or “Can you share more?” is perfect for understanding the reasons behind the choice. For example, if an officer chooses “Basic” understanding, ask, “What makes you feel your understanding is basic?” This bridges quantitative results and the deeper context behind them.

When and why to add the "Other" choice? Including “Other” captures perspectives not covered by your predefined list. It signals openness and lets officers provide detailed input, which can reveal overlooked challenges or priorities—often surfaced through targeted follow-up questions.

NPS-style question for human trafficking awareness surveys

The Net Promoter Score (NPS) format isn’t just for customer feedback. It can be adapted for crucial topics in policing, like gauging how likely officers are to recommend their agency’s human trafficking awareness training or protocols to colleagues. The power is in the standardized, easily benchmarked scale—and the actionable follow-ups for passives and detractors. To quickly design an NPS survey for this topic, try the NPS template for police officers on Specific.

The power of follow-up questions

Follow-up questions take your survey from basic to truly insightful. They clarify responses, remove ambiguity, and unearth the context behind an answer. This is especially meaningful in complex topics like human trafficking awareness, where motivations and barriers aren’t always obvious. We built Specific to automate this dynamic probing—a feature that distinguishes it from static forms (read how automated followups work).

  • Police Officer: "I sometimes struggle to spot trafficking cases."

  • AI follow-up: "Can you describe situations where it’s especially challenging to identify these cases?"

How many followups to ask? Typically, 2-3 targeted follow-ups deliver enough clarity without survey fatigue. With Specific, you can fine-tune this setting and even let respondents skip to the next question once their answer is clear. This ensures you maximize insights while respecting officers’ time.

This makes it a conversational survey: Each question can spark a back-and-forth—turning your survey into a meaningful, flowing conversation rather than a static checklist.

AI survey analysis, automatic response summaries, and theme detection—all these are possible even with detailed, narrative responses. AI tools like Specific's AI survey response analysis let you analyze at scale; messy or complex answers no longer slow you down.

Because automated follow-ups are still new to many, the best way to appreciate them is to generate an AI-driven survey for yourself and experience how the conversation adapts. Try it to witness the difference.

How to prompt ChatGPT (or any GPT) to generate great survey questions

Building a strong set of questions is much easier if you know how to prompt AI. Start simple:

Prompt for brainstorming:

Suggest 10 open-ended questions for police officer survey about human trafficking awareness.

But the real magic happens when you give the AI more context. For example:

We are a police agency in a large urban area. Our goal is to assess officers’ readiness to identify and respond to human trafficking. Please suggest detailed open-ended and multiple-choice questions that can help us tailor future training.

Next, ask the AI to organize and refine:

Look at the questions and categorize them. Output categories with the questions under them.

Finally, decide which themes to explore in depth:

Generate 10 questions for categories like “field experience,” “policy knowledge,” and “training needs.”

This layered, step-by-step prompting gets you richer, tailored question sets—faster than relying on generic templates. If you want, you can let Specific's AI generator handle the prompt for you.

What is a conversational survey?

A conversational survey feels more like a natural chat than a string of static questions. The AI interacts with respondents, adapting its language, tone, and follow-up queries as the conversation progresses. This makes respondents more comfortable, improves completion rates, and captures context that’s too nuanced for traditional forms.

Let’s compare:

Manual Survey Creation

AI-Generated Conversational Survey

Requires brainstorming, scripting, and endless revisions

Chat with an AI to instantly generate tailored surveys

Static questions with no dynamic follow-up

Responsive follow-ups that probe for clarity and depth

Manual distribution and slow analysis

Automated delivery and real-time analysis with AI

Responses take days/weeks to process

Responses are summarized, categorized, and ready to explore in minutes

Why use AI for police officer surveys? AI survey generators not only save time; they also supercharge data quality and increase completion rates. In fact, conversational AI surveys see completion rates of 70–80%, compared to just 45–50% for traditional surveys—a massive upgrade for anyone seeking officer feedback. [1] The rapid, AI-powered analysis also means insights are actionable immediately, even with narrative responses. [2] This is a game changer for law enforcement, where policy decisions can’t wait for slow reports.

Specific offers best-in-class, conversational survey experiences—making survey creation and feedback not just easy, but genuinely engaging for everyone involved. For step-by-step guidance, check out our guide on how to create a police officer survey about human trafficking awareness.

See this human trafficking awareness survey example now

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Sources

  1. Emerald Insight. “Police understandings of human trafficking: Evidence from Australia.”

  2. theysaid.io. AI surveys boost response rates and data quality, with completion rates up to 80%.

  3. SurveySparrow. “Leveraging AI for deeper survey analysis and actionable insights.”

Adam Sabla - Image Avatar

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.