Welcome, one and all, to this beautiful, sometimes baffling Age of the Customer! Your clients/customers are informed, they’re savvy, and they expect a lot from your brand and your product or service. If you want to blow them away with a kick-ass customer experience—the kind that fosters repeat business and brings referrals through the door—we highly suggest mapping your customer journey. Besides shaping and perfecting the customer experience, journey mapping can also help you accomplish other business goals, like improving customer retention or discovering why (and at what point in the journey) sales are falling through.
The customer journey is a person’s full and complete experience with your brand or business, which begins with that person’s first inkling that they have some sort of need or problem. (This may occur before they even know your brand exists.) A customer journey map is a visualization tool that helps you and your team really get a handle on every step of this winding, often nonlinear journey from the identification of a need or problem to the ultimate purchase decision and, if it’s useful (as it often is), beyond.
A customer journey map can be sticky notes on a big piece of paper, it can be an Excel worksheet, or it can be a gorgeous graphic-designer-level diagram. Truth be told, it doesn’t matter what it looks like. If it’s gorgeous but doesn’t nail it (aka, you’re not really in your customers’ heads), or if it’s gorgeous but you can’t figure out how to use it effectively, then it’s a dud.
Tips for creating a customer journey map so it’s not a dud:
Here’s the thing: The map is just the beginning. Research shows that less than half of the organizations that have created customer journey maps are actually using those maps effectively. Eek! Don’t let that be you.
Need help mapping your customer journey in a way that accomplishes business goals? We’ve got you.