a. Define customer journey stages
No matter who you’re targeting, every customer who interacts with your brand undergoes various
stages before deciding to make a purchase. It’s up to you and your team to define which of these stages is most important to measure and optimize. Once you’ve defined what matters most—like where your customers spend most of their time and which channels lead to the most conversions—you can begin to shift your marketing strategy to further engage customers at each stage.
b. Identify customer goals
Customers have different goals at different stages of their customer journey. The messaging and actions that best suit a new customer are understandably different from what a loyal, repeat customer would expect. Understanding this dynamic process can help you improve your marketing efficiency as you solve for each customer goal. For example, do they want to purchase your specific product or service? Or are they shopping around for the best deal—and if so, what can sway them over? Are they expecting to earn rewards or points for a particular purchase? By identifying customer goals, your team can create an accurate customer journey map and refine messaging.
c. Use customer journey analytics to identify touchpoints
Say you know that one step on your customer journey requires them to call your business and schedule an appointment. You can use
customer journey analytics to make things a little easier for them. With a reliable
customer data platform (CDP), you can use machine learning to collect and analyze information from all relevant channels—both online and offline—to begin anticipating your customers’ next steps, and adjust your strategy accordingly. Many marketers who’ve gone this route have made surprising associations that have helped them capitalize on emerging customer buying behavior. Subaru, for example, was able to discern key differences in the behavior of those who planned to buy a car in a few weeks or months, and those who wouldn’t actually make a purchase for a year or more. Those differences helped
Subaru cater to both audiences in a way that boosted overall advertising ROI and effectiveness as well as sales.
d. Activate customer insights to make customer journeys easy
Data is key to the customer insights process. And the more related data available for analysis, the more actionable your insights will be. Here’s your chance to make the connection—making the right offer, at the right time, to the right customer, on the right channel. And you can do it in a holistic way that shows you have a true understanding of your audience. For example, if you see a repeat customer has abandoned a shopping cart, and you know they do most of their shopping on mobile, you can send them a CTA with a discount code via text to nudge them closer to a final sale. In other words, using deep customer insights, you can prompt the next move on the customer journey.