How do marketers use the customer journey?
Effective marketing is all about reaching the right people at the right time with the right messages — and the customer journey is an essential part of it. Understanding how customers interact with your business can help you tailor campaigns and messaging to their needs and preferences.
Here are a few specific ways marketers use the customer journey.
Persona development
By studying the different stages of the customer journey, marketers can learn more about common customer pain points, motivations, and behaviors and, in turn, develop more in-depth customer personas.
For example, after reading customer reviews, a beauty brand marketing team might discover that many of their buyers learned about the brand on TikTok while searching for natural and organic products. Based on these insights, they could create a targeted TikTok marketing campaign with messaging highlighting their products’ natural and organic ingredients.
Content strategy
The customer journey can help marketers create content that addresses customer pain points and questions based on their journey stage.
A marketer for a software company might create an awareness-stage blog post that educates potential customers about product benefits. They could then create a case study or demo video for consideration-stage prospects that showcases how their product solves a specific problem. This targeted content strategy helps move customers through the journey more efficiently and effectively.
Customer retention
Delighting customers at each journey stage can help boost customer retention rates. For instance, a subscription-based meal delivery service marketer might send a personalized email with recipe ideas and cooking tips to a customer in the adoption stage. This proactive approach helps improve product satisfaction with customers and their overall experience with the brand, increasing their chances of repurchasing.
Sales enablement
Marketers can support sales teams with tailored use case content that aligns with customers in the consideration stage of the journey.
Suppose you’re a marketer for a B2B software company. In that case, you might create a sales enablement toolkit that includes case studies, whitepapers, and product demos to help sales reps support prospects in making an educated purchasing decision.
Cross-channel and omnichannel experiences
Customers today have many tools and platforms to research and engage with brands — online search, customer review sites, social media, and so on. As a result, most businesses need to invest in cross-channel (using multiple channels to reach customers) and omnichannel (creating a seamless experience across all channels) marketing to capture their audience’s attention and convert them into paying customers.
For example, a clothing retailer may use email marketing, social media, and in-store promotions to reach customers. After reviewing the customer journey and marketing analytics, the retailer identifies that customers often click emails, browse online, and then visit the store to purchase. With this information, the store could send prospects coupons to redeem in-store or online based on products they’ve viewed online. Or, the team could trigger a post-purchase email with styling tips and care instructions for their specific item.
Identifying pain points and gaps
Digging into the customer journey also helps marketers identify touchpoints where customers may have pain points or gaps in their experience. For example, capturing demographic and industry data at the adoption stage can inform your onboarding emails and allow you to tailor them to a customer’s specific use case.