The JH143 survey confirms strong overall support but highlights clear opportunities for technical refinement. Acting on the top user requests will likely increase satisfaction above 80%.
Most survey reports (including JH143) should contain the following. If yours is missing these, that is your first action item. jh143 survey report
| Section | What to look for | Why it matters | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Executive Summary | Top 3 findings, major red flags, and overall sentiment. | Saves time; gives the “headline” before details. | | Demographics | Who answered (age, role, location, tenure). | Reveals if the results represent the whole group or just a subset. | | Quantitative Data | Averages (mean, median), standard deviation, and histograms. | Identifies central trends and how much agreement or disagreement exists. | | Qualitative Data | Direct quotes from open-ended questions. | Explains why the numbers look the way they do. | | Trend Data | Comparison to previous JH142 or baseline data. | Shows if things are improving, declining, or static. | The JH143 survey confirms strong overall support but
Interpret the findings in relation to the survey’s goals: Example:
Example:
"While the JH143 survey provides valuable insights into [topic], its reliance on online data collection may exclude less tech-savvy populations. Future surveys should employ mixed-methods approaches to enhance data diversity."
A striking 72% of remote and hybrid workers reported missing “critical operational updates” at least once per week. The JH143 survey report found that organizations relying on more than three primary communication tools (e.g., email, Slack, Teams, Asana) had a 41% higher rate of information decay compared to those using a single, unified platform.