Customer journey optimization: How to drive customer action
By Zach Links|5 min read|Updated Oct 7, 2024
In today's competitive business landscape, understanding and optimizing the customer journey is crucial for success.
A well-crafted customer journey map can lead to increased customer satisfaction, improved retention rates, and ultimately, higher revenue.
According to one study, companies with strong omnichannel customer engagement strategies retain 89% of their customers. But, without seamless experiences at each touch point, that number drops to 33%.
Here’s a look at how you can optimize your customer journey and plot your prospects’ path to purchase.
Phases of your customer's journey
To effectively optimize your customer's journey, it's essential to understand the five key stages they typically go through:
Awareness: The customer becomes aware of a problem or need they have.
Consideration: The customer researches potential solutions to their problem.
Decision: The customer chooses a solution and makes a purchase.
Retention: The customer uses the product or service and receives support.
Advocacy: The satisfied customer recommends the product or service to others.
It’s important to note that these stages are not always linear. Customers may move back and forth between them.
The duration of each stage can also vary depending on customer familiarity with the industry and the complexity of your product or service.
Regularly mapping and analyzing your customers' journeys can reveal bottlenecks or drop-off points, allowing you to focus your optimization efforts where they'll have the most impact.
Differences in B2B vs. B2C customers
While the overall journey structure remains similar, B2B and B2C customers often have different needs and behaviors at each stage:
Decision-making process: B2B decisions typically involve multiple stakeholders and longer sales cycles, while B2C decisions are often made more quickly by individuals or small groups.
Information needs: B2B customers usually require more detailed, technical information, while B2C customers may be more influenced by emotional factors and brand perception.
Relationship building: B2B relationships tend to be longer-term and more complex, often involving ongoing support and account management.
Purchase value: B2B transactions are generally higher in value and may involve customized solutions, while B2C purchases are usually lower in value and more standardized.
Understanding these differences is crucial for effectively mapping and optimizing the customer journey for your specific target audience.
How to Optimize Your Customer's Journey
Now that we understand the phases of the customer journey and the differences between B2B and B2C customers, let's dive into the steps for optimizing your customer's journey.
Step 1: Find out who your customer is
The first step in optimizing your customer's journey is to develop a clear understanding of who your customers are.
Create detailed buyer personas that represent your ideal customers by:
Analyzing your existing customer data: Look for patterns in demographics, purchase history, and behavior. Segment your customers based on these characteristics to identify distinct groups. Use tools like CRM software to organize and visualize this data effectively.
Conducting surveys and interviews with current customers: Ask open-ended questions to uncover their motivations, challenges, and goals. Focus on understanding their decision-making process and what factors influenced their choice to use your product or service. Consider offering incentives for participation to increase response rates.
Using social media analytics to gain insights into your audience: Examine which types of content resonate most with your followers. Look at engagement rates, comments, and shares to understand their interests and pain points.
Leveraging website analytics to understand user behavior: Analyze user flow, time on page, and conversion rates to identify how visitors interact with your site. Use heat mapping tools to visualize where users click and scroll. Set up goal tracking to measure specific actions that align with your business objectives.
HubSpot found that using buyer personas made websites 2-5x more effective and easier to use by targeted users.
By creating accurate buyer personas, you'll be better equipped to tailor your customer journey to meet the specific needs and preferences of your target audience.
Step 2: Identify key touch and pain points
Once you have a clear picture of who your customers are, the next step is to identify the key touchpoints and pain points throughout their journey.
Touchpoints are any interactions a customer has with your brand, product, or service, including:
Website visits
Social media interactions
Email communications
Phone calls or live chats with customer support
In-store experiences
Pain points are areas of frustration or difficulty that customers experience during their journey. You may uncover issues like:
Confusing website navigation
Long wait times for customer support
Fragmented customer service experiences
Complicated checkout processes
Clunky checkout processes are pervasive and they can slow your sales. According to the Baymard Institute, the average cart abandonment rate is over 70%, largely due to poor checkout UX.
To identify these touchpoints and pain points, start by analyzing customer feedback and support tickets. This will help you uncover the thorniest issues straight away.
From there, you can consider in-person or remote user testing on your website and app. Or, for abandoned carts, you can implement exit surveys to find out why customers may have left you at the altar.
Step 3: Brainstorm solutions
With a clear understanding of your customer personas and the key touchpoints and pain points in their journey, it's time to brainstorm solutions to improve their experience.
Gather a cross-functional team including members from marketing, sales, customer support, and product development to ensure a holistic approach. Use techniques like:
1. Mind mapping
Mind mapping is a visual brainstorming technique that helps organize ideas around a central concept. Start with your main topic in the center and branch out with related ideas, creating a tree-like structure.
This method is valuable because it encourages free association, identifying connections between ideas and providing a clear overview of the brainstorming session.
2. SWOT analysis
SWOT analysis (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats) helps evaluate internal and external factors affecting your customer journey.
Ask customers in your target market to evaluate SWOT for you and your competitors. By systematically analyzing these areas, you can identify areas for improvement and potential competitive advantages.
3. The "5 Whys" technique
This method involves asking "Why?" five times in succession to dig deeper into the root cause of a problem.
Start with a specific issue and keep asking why it occurs until you reach the fundamental cause. The "5 Whys" technique is valuable because it helps move beyond surface-level symptoms to address underlying issues, leading to more effective and lasting solutions.
4. Reverse brainstorming
In reverse brainstorming, you flip the problem on its head. Instead of asking how to make something better, ask how to make it worse.
For example, instead of asking "How can we improve customer satisfaction?", ask "How can we ensure customers are dissatisfied?".
This counterintuitive approach can help break through mental blocks and generate novel ideas. It's particularly useful when traditional brainstorming methods aren't yielding the results you want.
Encourage creative thinking and don't dismiss ideas too quickly. Sometimes the most unconventional solutions can lead to the biggest improvements in customer experience.
Step 4: Map solutions and action items to funnel stage
Once you have a list of potential solutions, it's time to map them to the appropriate stages of the customer journey. This ensures that you're addressing pain points and improving experiences at every stage of the funnel.
Create a matrix that aligns your solutions with each stage of the customer journey.
Depending on your industry, your game plan might look something like this.
Awareness
Improve SEO to increase visibility
Create educational content to address customer pain points
Optimize social media presence
Consideration
Develop detailed product comparison guides
Implement live chat for quick question answering
Create case studies and testimonials
Decision
Simplify the checkout process
Offer free trials or money-back guarantees
Provide personalized product recommendations
Retention
Implement a robust onboarding process
Develop a knowledge base for self-service support
Create a customer loyalty program
Advocacy
Implement a referral program
Encourage and showcase customer reviews
Create exclusive content or events for loyal customers
By mapping solutions to each stage, you can ensure a cohesive and optimized experience throughout the entire customer journey.
Step 5: Set KPIs to measure success
To truly optimize your customer journey, you need to measure the impact of your improvements. Set Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for each stage of the journey to track progress and identify areas for further optimization.
Some relevant KPIs for each stage might include:
Awareness
Website traffic
Social media engagement rates
Brand mention sentiment
Consideration
Time spent on product pages
Newsletter sign-up rate
Content download rates
Decision
Conversion rate
Average Order Value (AOV)
Cart abandonment rate
Retention
Customer Lifetime Value (CLV)
Churn rate
Net Promoter Score (NPS)
Advocacy
Referral rate
User-generated content volume
Social media shares of branded content
Regularly review these KPIs and use the insights gained to continually refine and improve your customer journey.
Examples
Let's look at real-world examples of companies that have successfully optimized their customer journeys.
PowerMarket
PowerMarket, a software solution connecting people and businesses with clean energy projects, optimized its customer journey with Tremendous:
Awareness: Offers incentives to new customers for signing up, encouraging adoption of clean energy solutions.
Consideration: Provides customized, branded rewards that reflect PowerMarket's values and those of their partners.
Decision: Streamlines the sign-up process with attractive incentives, nudging potential customers to make the switch to clean energy.
Retention: Uses customer appeasements for issue resolution, quickly addressing complaints and maintaining satisfaction.
Advocacy: Implements a referral program, incentivizing existing customers to recommend PowerMarket to their friends.
By optimizing their payouts process with Tremendous, PowerMarket was able to:
Save over $8,000 on incentives by eliminating per-incentive fees.
Improve customer experience with flexible redemption options, including PayPal, Venmo, and direct transfers.
Reduce customer complaints on a percentage basis.
Enhance brand alignment by customizing reward options and excluding gift cards from retailers that don't align with their values.
Streamline the payouts process, allowing the Director of Marketing and Customer Experience to focus on other priorities.
“It really helps to be able to give customers money via PayPal, Venmo, or direct transfers,” said Leland Gohl, PowerMarket Director of Marketing and CX. "We receive positive feedback all the time.”
By focusing on optimizing their customer journey — particularly in the areas of incentives and customer appeasement — PowerMarket has not only improved customer satisfaction but also added a new value proposition to their business.
Caroo
Caroo, an employee recognition platform, once specialized in physical gifts. But, after evaluating the customer journey, Caroo expanded its catalog to include digital gifts.
Awareness: Expanded their offering to include digital gift cards, attracting a new segment of potential customers.
Consideration: Provided more options for employers, including both physical gifts and immediate digital rewards.
Decision: Simplified the decision-making process for employers by offering a comprehensive suite of gifting options.
Retention: Improved customer satisfaction by providing more flexible and immediate gifting solutions.
Advocacy: Enhanced their value proposition, potentially leading to more word-of-mouth referrals.
After integrating with Tremendous for digital gift cards, Caroo:
Expanded their customer base to include companies that prefer digital gifting options.
Generated significant growth, with over 75% of digital gift card sales representing net-new revenue.
Achieved $1 million in new business within the first 12 months of integration.
Improved their offering to meet diverse customer needs, from physical gifts to instant digital rewards.
Caroo optimized their customer journey, expanded their offerings to meet a wider range of customer needs, and grew their business.
“Now, we can win companies that want to send physical gifts, and those that want to get a digital gift card in their employee’s inbox immediately,” said Jake Moser, Director of Product at Caroo.
Summary
You can improve customer satisfaction, increase retention rates, and drive business growth by:
Understanding the phases of the customer journey
Finding out who your customer is by creating detailed buyer personas
Identifying key touchpoints and pain points in the customer journey
Brainstorming creative solutions to address pain points and improve experiences
Mapping solutions and action items to each stage of the customer journey
Setting KPIs to measure the success of your optimization efforts
Remember, optimizing your customer journey is an ongoing process. Regularly gather feedback and analyze your KPIs to ensure a top-notch customer experience.
Updated October 7, 2024