We use free-form feedback in two ways: (1) We mostly use it to guide what responses to include in the survey, and (2) we are also starting to introduce publishing the actual free-form insights. While the second is more challenging, we have been developing processes to streamline this.
1. Response Guidance
For example, this year with our Operating System question we noticed a lot of users mentioning Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL, Linux on Windows, etc) within the first day. So we decided to add WSL as its own response.
Same thing for our Learning how to code question. We realized lots of people mentioned books so we added the Books / Physical media response as an option.
There are many more examples like this and internally we have a list of feedback that we will revisit when creating the 2022 survey.
2. Free-form Insights
The most notable example of free-form insights we published is in our "Other communities public or private" questions. We did not provide any of these options, but through text processing, we were able to identify the most mentioned communities. For each community, I counted the times it was mentioned or a synonym was mentioned.
- Reddit == reddit.com == r/programming
- Hacker News == hacker news == hackernews
To address your screenshot of What do you do when you get stuck, the reason we did not include free-form insights is that we were going to do include it in the Community section and wanted to avoid duplicate information within the report.
Our aim was to share the open-ended results in a more digestible format than simply showing free text.