Think of the customer journey as a story that describes your users: how they behave while they are on your website or app, and what you can do to improve their experience so they return.
Detailing the customer journey requires analysis of your existing data so you can map out various behavioral scenarios and understand your users. For example:
By mapping the customer journey you can start to see patterns that help you understand why Shelly left your site the first time, the effectiveness of retargeting, and why she later abandoned her cart.
Mapping prospects across multiple touchpoints allows organizations to understand user engagement, across various stages of their buying journey, and provides both qualitative and quantitative data to help you benchmark the customer experience, optimize your process, and improve your conversion rate.
Mapping the customer journey can help you understand:
Customer journey mapping requires an omnichannel approach in order to give a fully comprehensive visual story of the interaction between your brand and your customers. Your customer journey map should show how customers interact with you via social media, email, your app or website, live chat, paid ads, and more.
A simple visualization for the customer journey might look like this:
At each touchpoint, you can start to see patterns about how customers find you, what types of friction a customer experiences at that touchpoint, and identify processes that can be implemented to push customers through the journey. In doing so, your brand can improve not only your KPI user metrics but your customer experience as well.
Looking to visualize your customer journey for an improved customer experience?
Learn how Scuba can give you 360-degree visibility into your customer journey--through a single pane of glass. Request a demo today.