Modern businesses spend significant resources analyzing and optimizing the customer journey to understand how customers interact with their brand. However, customer journeys are complex as customers can interact across channels in unpredictable ways. The document discusses the need to view customer journeys from both a macro and micro level. It also identifies some key gaps brands should consider when evaluating customer journeys, such as visibility, interaction intelligence, sales conversion, and the overall experience. The document argues that technology is important to enable brands to actively shape journeys in real-time by surfacing the next best actions based on customer context and operationalizing real-time decisions through advanced analytics.
Engagement Analytics and the right platform for next best action makes for a compelling experience across channels. Regardless of CMS, CRM or MAP systems you have in place Thunderhead is a great way to bring together a unified understanding of your customer journey.
4 proven ways to optimize the customer journeygroupfio1
Hearing a lot about optimizing your customer journey but not sure how to make that happen? Here's a tip: it starts and ends with data, and it's not how much data you have, but how you use it.
Our latest blog gives you some solid tips to start you on the right road to boosting your journey. Find out more here: https://www.groupfio.com/4-proven-ways-to-optimize-the-customer-journey/
Engagement Analytics and the right platform for next best action makes for a compelling experience across channels. Regardless of CMS, CRM or MAP systems you have in place Thunderhead is a great way to bring together a unified understanding of your customer journey.
4 proven ways to optimize the customer journeygroupfio1
Hearing a lot about optimizing your customer journey but not sure how to make that happen? Here's a tip: it starts and ends with data, and it's not how much data you have, but how you use it.
Our latest blog gives you some solid tips to start you on the right road to boosting your journey. Find out more here: https://www.groupfio.com/4-proven-ways-to-optimize-the-customer-journey/
Customer intimacy as recession proof strategyRemco Kroes
Don’t let your business run aground in these challenging times.
Make sure that everyone in your organization is working together in a structured and customer centric way to gain and retain customers.
During this presentation it is argued that e-mail marketing is a powerful method to boost sales to new and existing customers.
There is however a big danger in e-mail marketing: do it right and you can convert more leads. Do it wrong and your customer walks away!
This presentation will provide views on how to get value from e-mail marketing initiatives.
So you've formulated a User Experience strategy for your company from the ground up. Completion rates are way up. Complaint email numbers are way down. Your boss loves you, and you've got the corner office to prove it. What's next?
This session will take the next step and explore how User Experience fits into the business ecosystem alongside fields of Customer Experience and Customer Relationship Management.
What tips can we learn from these fields, and how can we engage with our colleagues to pass on what we as UX professionals have learned from the web, to turn satisfied users into passionate customers.
[Presented at UXLX, Lisbon on May 11th, 2011]
How Simplify360 helps in Providing Banking Solutions Simplify360
Banking is one industry which needs to maintain a constant contact with their customers. Social Media in such a case is extremely useful. It provides access to a huge customer base aggregated in a single place.
Simplify360, helps banks listen to what the customers are talking and where, to make sure the company keeps their communication on a constant check. Here's how it is done.
Becoming Customer Centric: A Business and IT RoadmapPlus Consulting
The rapid rise of global competition, combined with the adoption of Internet-based communications and cloud processing power, has created a state of hypercompetition across most industries. The antidote? Become customer centric. Here's a brief business and IT roadmap to make it happen.
The Power of Clienteling Raymark Case StudyRaymark
The following benefits were achieved within the first 90 days of the project:
• After a comprehensive cultural change management and training program, 95% of the associates were consistently using the system and successfully completing their pro-active selling tasks.
• Migration of all users from manual client books to the new system in alignment with PCI directives.
• A 1000%+ increase in the number of outbound e-mails and calls to prospective customers by sales associates.
• A 9% Increase in total sales revenue by associate over a period when new customer acquisitions were down 12%.
• Number of repeat customers increased by 33%.
• A 21% increase in average spend per transaction over 3 months with customers that were “clienteled.”
... and more!
50 Facts That Will Make Businesses Rethink their Customer ServiceDesk
Take a look at these cold, hard facts that might persuade you to rethink how you run your organization's customer service.
Curious about Desk.com? Download this free kit to get started: http://bit.ly/FreeCustomerServiceKit
Ransys Feedback Technology is a leading global provider of Enterprise Feedback Management solutions that has developed Attentive ACE® (Attentive® Customer Experience); a platform that allows organizations to reduce costs by managing all of their feedback needs using one consolidated feedback platform.
Attentive ACE® is a daily operational tool for front line mangers that improves employees’ and customers’ engagement by utilizing the voice of the customer at the right time and place. Attentive ACE® built-in coaching, recovery, and change requests workflows, which are based on aggregated front line managers’ conclusions and recommendations, drives higher customer satisfaction, loyalty and retention and leads to operational cost savings and improved revenues.
Redefine the Delivery of Financial Services Journeys That Clients LOVE! [inQu...Antony Adelaar
This is the slideware used in a live inQuba & Microsoft webinar hosted on the 23rd of September 2020.
Recording here: https://youtu.be/J89zWhnpCb4
Do you want to learn how to use digital platforms in the FSI industry to stay relevant to your customers in the Digital Economy?
Join inQuba MD, Trent Rossini, and Microsoft FSI Sales Lead, Servaas Venter, in an upcoming webinar, where you’ll learn:
• When and why customers are likely to lapse
• How to nudge customers to achieve their signup goals
• The actions you can take to retain high risk customers
• How to obtain continuous customer feedback during their journey
• How to augment your legacy systems with modern digital platforms
• How to kick off conversion and retention programmes for your customers
Learn how to redefine the delivery of Financial Services client journeys that customers LOVE!
Communications Service Providers (CSPs) live in a world where penetration rates are over 100 percent in most markets and consumers have multiple different — yet relatively similar — choices.
As CSPs strive to retain customers, they are finding that traditional marketing techniques no longer generate sufficient returns. Instead, they are turning to the concept of Customer Value Management with one-to-one personalization as a way to generate more value from their existing subscriber base.
This article discusses the importance of understanding Customer Value Management and offers five key recommendations to improve customer interactions and deliver value back to the business.
These insights are based on a podcast discussion among Jeriad Zoghby of Accenture Interactive, Dr. Rob Walker and Tom Erskine of Pegasystems.
Learn more: http://www.pega.com/solutions/by-industry/communications-and-media
The Journey to Exceptional Customer ExperienceCartegraph
This Loras College Business Analytics Symposium breakout session presented by Cathy Carlson and Bruce Barchus of Vizability LLC described the journey on the way to exceptional customer experience. What does that have to do with analytics? Everything. Data-driven decisions are critical to optimizing the way your organization delights (or not) your customers. Challenging your organization to be great on an end-to-end basis is never ending. Welcome to the journey.
Participants received a guide for getting real world results, including a list of tools to help along the way.
Customer intimacy as recession proof strategyRemco Kroes
Don’t let your business run aground in these challenging times.
Make sure that everyone in your organization is working together in a structured and customer centric way to gain and retain customers.
During this presentation it is argued that e-mail marketing is a powerful method to boost sales to new and existing customers.
There is however a big danger in e-mail marketing: do it right and you can convert more leads. Do it wrong and your customer walks away!
This presentation will provide views on how to get value from e-mail marketing initiatives.
So you've formulated a User Experience strategy for your company from the ground up. Completion rates are way up. Complaint email numbers are way down. Your boss loves you, and you've got the corner office to prove it. What's next?
This session will take the next step and explore how User Experience fits into the business ecosystem alongside fields of Customer Experience and Customer Relationship Management.
What tips can we learn from these fields, and how can we engage with our colleagues to pass on what we as UX professionals have learned from the web, to turn satisfied users into passionate customers.
[Presented at UXLX, Lisbon on May 11th, 2011]
How Simplify360 helps in Providing Banking Solutions Simplify360
Banking is one industry which needs to maintain a constant contact with their customers. Social Media in such a case is extremely useful. It provides access to a huge customer base aggregated in a single place.
Simplify360, helps banks listen to what the customers are talking and where, to make sure the company keeps their communication on a constant check. Here's how it is done.
Becoming Customer Centric: A Business and IT RoadmapPlus Consulting
The rapid rise of global competition, combined with the adoption of Internet-based communications and cloud processing power, has created a state of hypercompetition across most industries. The antidote? Become customer centric. Here's a brief business and IT roadmap to make it happen.
The Power of Clienteling Raymark Case StudyRaymark
The following benefits were achieved within the first 90 days of the project:
• After a comprehensive cultural change management and training program, 95% of the associates were consistently using the system and successfully completing their pro-active selling tasks.
• Migration of all users from manual client books to the new system in alignment with PCI directives.
• A 1000%+ increase in the number of outbound e-mails and calls to prospective customers by sales associates.
• A 9% Increase in total sales revenue by associate over a period when new customer acquisitions were down 12%.
• Number of repeat customers increased by 33%.
• A 21% increase in average spend per transaction over 3 months with customers that were “clienteled.”
... and more!
50 Facts That Will Make Businesses Rethink their Customer ServiceDesk
Take a look at these cold, hard facts that might persuade you to rethink how you run your organization's customer service.
Curious about Desk.com? Download this free kit to get started: http://bit.ly/FreeCustomerServiceKit
Ransys Feedback Technology is a leading global provider of Enterprise Feedback Management solutions that has developed Attentive ACE® (Attentive® Customer Experience); a platform that allows organizations to reduce costs by managing all of their feedback needs using one consolidated feedback platform.
Attentive ACE® is a daily operational tool for front line mangers that improves employees’ and customers’ engagement by utilizing the voice of the customer at the right time and place. Attentive ACE® built-in coaching, recovery, and change requests workflows, which are based on aggregated front line managers’ conclusions and recommendations, drives higher customer satisfaction, loyalty and retention and leads to operational cost savings and improved revenues.
Redefine the Delivery of Financial Services Journeys That Clients LOVE! [inQu...Antony Adelaar
This is the slideware used in a live inQuba & Microsoft webinar hosted on the 23rd of September 2020.
Recording here: https://youtu.be/J89zWhnpCb4
Do you want to learn how to use digital platforms in the FSI industry to stay relevant to your customers in the Digital Economy?
Join inQuba MD, Trent Rossini, and Microsoft FSI Sales Lead, Servaas Venter, in an upcoming webinar, where you’ll learn:
• When and why customers are likely to lapse
• How to nudge customers to achieve their signup goals
• The actions you can take to retain high risk customers
• How to obtain continuous customer feedback during their journey
• How to augment your legacy systems with modern digital platforms
• How to kick off conversion and retention programmes for your customers
Learn how to redefine the delivery of Financial Services client journeys that customers LOVE!
Communications Service Providers (CSPs) live in a world where penetration rates are over 100 percent in most markets and consumers have multiple different — yet relatively similar — choices.
As CSPs strive to retain customers, they are finding that traditional marketing techniques no longer generate sufficient returns. Instead, they are turning to the concept of Customer Value Management with one-to-one personalization as a way to generate more value from their existing subscriber base.
This article discusses the importance of understanding Customer Value Management and offers five key recommendations to improve customer interactions and deliver value back to the business.
These insights are based on a podcast discussion among Jeriad Zoghby of Accenture Interactive, Dr. Rob Walker and Tom Erskine of Pegasystems.
Learn more: http://www.pega.com/solutions/by-industry/communications-and-media
The Journey to Exceptional Customer ExperienceCartegraph
This Loras College Business Analytics Symposium breakout session presented by Cathy Carlson and Bruce Barchus of Vizability LLC described the journey on the way to exceptional customer experience. What does that have to do with analytics? Everything. Data-driven decisions are critical to optimizing the way your organization delights (or not) your customers. Challenging your organization to be great on an end-to-end basis is never ending. Welcome to the journey.
Participants received a guide for getting real world results, including a list of tools to help along the way.
Why focus on the customer journey? Because today's digital consumer is engaged and empowered, owns four devices and consumes 60 hours of digital content per week. The majority of this customer engagement happens during a journey.
The difficult task for maketers is to understand how customers interact with their brand and this requires seeing their entire journey and connecting the dots.
IBM is providing solutions to meet these challenges and fully understand the customer journey with Journey Analytics.
Take a look!
Customer Journey Analyses: Requirements and Choices Digital Analytics Day 2014ro11 GmbH
20 min Vortrag "Customer Journey Analyses: Requirements and Choices" von Nic Diefenbach und Roland Markowski auf dem Digital Analytics Day 2014 in Hamburg.
Understand Your Customer Buying Journey with Big Data Datameer
Imagine being able to use insights about your customer acquisition journey to design campaigns that improve conversion rates. What if you could identify points of failure along the customer acquisition path or during product usage?
Today more than ever the role of the marketing and product executives have become data-driven. Business executives who leverage data to understand prospect and customer behavior have gained an edge over their peers. Big Data analytics is the key to unlocking insights from your customer behavior data and empowers you to combine and analyze all of your customer interaction data to drive customer acquisition and loyalty.
Understanding Customer Buying Journey with Big DataAnalyticsWeek
Big Data enables you to combine the vast amount of customer behavior data being generated from mobile, web, social media, transaction systems, Ads and turn them into new insights that drive customer acquisition and retention.
This talk will highlight and showcase how leading edge companies are leveraging big data to:
Combine customer interaction data to understand customer buying journey
Understand high-value customer behavior beyond profile segmentation
Identify the most common path to customer churn
Perform market basket analysis to help with cross-sell and up-sell
Speakers:
Matt Schumpert
Director of Product Management
Matt has been working in the enterprise infrastructure software space for 15 years in various capacities, including product management, sales engineering, sales leadership and strategic alliances. An early employee of Big Data pioneer Datameer, Matt is currently focused on driving the strategic direction and technology strategy for Datameer’s flagship Big Data analytics product. Previously, Matt built the sales engineering organization at Datameer, managed strategic partnerships at Oracle & BEA Systems in the US an Europe, and drove sales of business rules management software at ILOG (now IBM). Matt holds a BS in Computer Science from the University of Virginia.
Organisations that thrive are putting their customers in the driving seat, delivering greater value and ensuring an easy, delightful customer experience, leading to an expanding and loyal customer base and improved, continuous profits.
IBM & Sirius Decisions: Transforming Marketing Through Buyer Profiles and Per...AMASanDiego
Track: Brand Management & Integrated Communications
Topic: PERSONAS
Title: Transforming Marketing Through Buyer Profiles and Personas
Speakers: JACQUES PAVLENYI, Portfolio Marketing Director, IBM & RACHEL YOUNG, Research Director, Sirius Decisions
The convergence of social and data technologies continues to cause disruption in many industries and professions. Marketing is certainly not immune. Customers have very different expectations now, including strong personalization and customization. If the message and offers aren’t tailored specifically to me, the message is tuned out or ignored. This is increasingly true in B2B as well as B2C marketing. And that’s where personas can help.
IBM and Sirius Decisions will discuss practical rationales and methods for applying buyer profiles and personas, and how IBM is transforming not just Marketing, but also Sales, Product Management, and other functions with data-driven, robust buyer profiles.
- See more at: http://sdama.org/events/2015-art-of-marketing-conference/#session-details
Best practice in sales and marketing alignment B2B Marketing
The B2B marketing world has changed dramatically. Today's marketer must be technically proficient, possess strong analytical skills and be innovative in their approach to aligning effectively with their sales counterparts. They must determine how they will increase demand creation through effective lead generation, inbound marketing and more impactful sales enablement with the sales organisation.
In his keynote, John Neeson will review five best practice strategies that are leveraged by high growth organisations for better alignment and effectiveness. Specifically, he will address the following:
•A best practice demand creation framework
•Strategies that best practice organisations are using to effectively align marketing and sales
•A marketing model for inbound, outbound and sales driven demand creation
•Best practice demand creation for the channel
•Identification of buying cycle phases and alignment of marketing activities and budget according to sales requirements in each phase.
Companies that want to turn excellent customer experience into growth need to master Customer Journeys. Customer Journeys (the set of interactions a customer has with a brand to complete a task) and less moments of truth are what matter for a customer. Companies that master not only see an improvement in customer experience, loyalty, and operational productivity; they also see above-market growth.
How Touchpoint Mapping® can help you increase acquisition, boost retention, and drive brand loyalty by moving more of the right customers closer to your organization.
suitecx Thought Leadership: Balancing Customer Needssuitecx
While research has proven that a focus on improving customer experience directly impacts the bottom line, achieving the organizational and cultural change required to become fully customer centric is not an easy process. It is critical to get all key departments aligned on your customer experience strategy.
Customer relationship management (CRM) is a technology for managing all your company’s relationships and interactions with customers and potential customers. The goal is simple: Improve business relationships. A CRM system helps companies stay connected to customers, streamline processes, and improve profitability.
When people talk about CRM, they are usually referring to a CRM system, a tool that helps with contact management, sales management, productivity, and more.
A CRM solution helps you focus on your organization’s relationships with individual people — including customers, service users, colleagues, or suppliers — throughout your lifecycle with them, including finding new customers, winning their business, and providing support and additional services throughout the relationship.
Life cycle marketing for the automotive services industryCatalyst
Whether your goal is to increase ticket size, boost cross-sell, get customers to visit more often, or all the above, an effective life cycle marketing strategy can deliver the competitive difference you want.
Moving Beyond Customer Experience Towards Customer EngagementSeymourSloan
In a changing market, we need to look at how customers are managed within businesses. For too long the debate was around experience, which ignored the richness of the opportunities available to really build relatioinships with customers. Rather, we suggest looking at the model from an engagement perspective and understanding how to make the relatioinship multi-way.
بازاریابی چندکاناله یکپارچه ( Omnichannel Marketing) چه تفاوتهایی با بازاریا...Martech Academy
بازاریابی چندکاناله چیست؟
بازاریابی چندکاناله تقریباً همان چیزی است که به نظر میرسد؛ فعالیتهای بازاریابی که در بیش از یک کانال اتفاق میافتد. حتی اگر این عبارت برایتان جدید باشد، احتمالاً در بازاریابی چندکاناله مشارکت کردهاید.
تقریباً هر کسبوکاری، حتی کوچکترین شرکتی که با یک نفر اداره میشود، بازاریابی چندکاناله انجام میدهد.
برای مثال، تصور کنید که یک کسبوکار صنایع دستی کوچکی دارید و محصولات کاغذی سفارشیسازیشده را از خانۀ خود عرضه میکنید. اگر در استی (Esty) فروشگاه دارید (حضور آنلاین)، فروشگاه خود را در رسانههای اجتماعی تبلیغ میکنید (باز هم آنلاین) و در نمایشگاههای هنری شرکت میکنید (حضور آفلاین)، در بازاریابی چندکاناله مشارکت دارید.
بازاریابی omnichannel چیست؟
ایده اصلی omnichannel نه تنها باعث شناسایی همه کانالهای ارتباط با مشتریان میشود، بلکه تمام تعاملات مشتریان با کانالهای مختلف را در کل فرایند خرید (قبل، در حین و بعد از خرید) در نظر میگیرد. تجربه مشتری در تمامی کانالها یکسان و یکپارچه است. دغدغه بازاریابی omnichannel فقط معاملات انجام شده توسط مشتریان نیست؛ بلکه از طریق گردآوری دادههای رفتاری کاربران در کانالهای مختلف و آنالیز همزمان آنها، نیازهای مشتریان، تعاملات آنها با هر یک از کانالها و محصولات و برند را هم بررسی میکنند. به همین دلیل، انتقال پیامها و پیشنهادها به صورت یکسان و یکپارچه در تمامی کانالها، اعم از وبسایت، کمپینهای ایمیلی، شبکههای اجتماعی و فروشگاهها از اهمیت بالایی برخوردار است. بدیهی است که این نوع بازاریابی نیازمند سرمایهگذاری بیشتری است. بخش زیلدی از هزینه برای فراهم کردن زیرساختهای مناسب و هوشمندسازی و مدیریت ارتباط با مشتریان صرف میشود.
3 تفاوت مهم Omnichannel و Multichannel
بازاریابی omnichannel رویکردی است که تجربهای کاملاً مشابه و یکپارچه را برای مشتریان از اولین نقطه تماس کاربر با برند تا انتهای سفر مشتری فراهم میکند. بازاریابی Multichannel رویکردی است که برند را در محوریت استراتژی قرار میدهد و تلاش میکند پیام برند را در همه کانالهایی که کاربر در آنها حضور دارند، توسعه دهد. تفاوت اصلی این دو استراتژی، این است که مرکز توجه بازاریابی omnichannel ، مشتری است، در حالی که تمرکز بازاریابی multi-channel، روی این موضوع است که تمامی کانالها تحت پوشش قرار گیرد. در واقع، کانالها در روش بازاریابی multichannel به صورت مستقل و جدا از هم کار میکنند و هر یک از آنها استراتژی و اهداف خود را دنبال میکند؛ در حالی که کانالها در روش بازاریابی omnichannel با یکدیگر و با کاربران اینتگریت هستند. یعنی، تصویر کفشی که در وبسایت یک برند مشاهده میکنید، همان تصویری است که هفته بعد با یک درصد تخفیف از طریق ایمیل دریافت میکنید یا در تبلیغات اینستاگرام مشاهده میکنید.
Afinium.com Big Data Big Sales White Paper 2014 Afinium
Customer centricy drives sales, and real time data analytics allows creation of uniquely personalized buyer experiences to convert even casual browsers into loyal customers.
Learn about consumer intelligence to enhance consumer experience
Optimizing the Customer Journey
1. OPTIMIZING THE CUSTOMER JOURNEY
With Next-Best-Action Analytics
Matt Nolan, Director of Product Marketing,
Marketing Solutions, Pegasystems
Nicholas Gent, Practice Lead – Intellectual Property,
Comet Global Consulting, A Merkle Company
2. Contents
01 Introduction: The Customer Landscape
02 Macro vs. Micro-Journeys
06 Identifying Your Customer Journey Gaps
09 Where Technology Becomes Important
15 The Financial Impact
16 Conclusion
3. Their objective is to build the “perfect”
journey – to design an elegant,
seamless experience that eliminates
all of the noise and distraction
disrupting the customer engagement
process. The problem is, while some
journeys are simple – customers
interacting in a single channel, with
easy-to-understand problems and
goals – those simple journeys are the
exception, not the rule.
Today’s connected customers choose
their own path – researching and
interacting with the brand on
their own terms. They flow across
channels, shift their preferences,
and take unpredictable routes to a
fluid destination. They expect the
brand to know and understand them,
adapting constantly even as they
change course and advance down
hundreds of possible paths. And
while so much data is available about
customers, the brand is blind to much
of their experience – they often have
no insight into 1-1 conversations with
personal contacts, interactions with
Modern businesses spend tremendous
time and resources every year –
mapping, analyzing, and
optimizing the customer journey.
Introduction: The Customer Landscape
Modern businesses spend tremendous time and resources
every year – mapping, analyzing, and optimizing the
customer journey. They want to understand the paths
their customers take to purchase products, learn which
channels, offers and treatments are most effective at
certain stages, and understand where individuals get
“stuck”, and drop off the grid completely.
01
4. competitors, research done on third-
party platforms, and so on, and while
these interactions might be highly
valuable to the customer, to the
brand they make the customer’s
journey seem more complex, erratic,
and disjointed.
In addition, organizations themselves
are also very fluid, which adds
complexity. The journeys they enable
must balance customer needs with
a variety of corporate objectives such
as customer acquisition, growth,
retention, and risk mitigation; however
these objectives change from quarter
to quarter, as do the tools used to
action them. For example, an upsell-
oriented journey may change multiple
times within a given year as new
lines of business, offers, and shifting
commercial drivers are introduced
into the landscape.
In essence, trying to predict and
script out these modern, complex
journeys beforehand is impossible –
you’re effectively scripting a “journey
to nowhere”.
Instead, the optimal customer
journey must be dynamic – flowing
and changing with the customer,
and at the same time maintaining
accountability to the business. As an
individual interacts across channels,
the organization must constantly learn,
reading and reacting to that customer’s
signals, resisting the temptation to
push them, rather than guide them.
The best journeys – those that are both
profitable and sustainable – shape
a relevant, timely, and consistent
experience for the customer, while also
furthering the brand’s business goals.
Macro vs. Micro-Journeys
At a high level, the concept
of customer journey
management seems very
simple – enabling the
customer to progress down
the “right” path – but in
reality, a customer’s journey
must be viewed from at
least two perspectives.
02
5. Macro-Journeys
The series of consumer/brand
interactions through which a
consumer progresses from awareness
and consideration of a brand, to
evaluating that brand, to a product
purchase, potential advocacy, and
eventual re-purchase from that brand
has been coined by McKinsey &
Company as the “Customer Decision
Journey” 1
,and can ultimately be
considered as a form of Customer
Experience Management (CEM).
Gartner, a US research and advisory
firm that’s well known to technologists
and customer experience
professionals, defines Customer
Experience Management as:
“The practice of designing
and reacting to customer
interactions to meet
or exceed customer
expectations and, thus,
increase customer
satisfaction, loyalty
and advocacy.” 2
Proficiency in customer experience
is mission critical for every type of
organization, as it is a major factor in
optimizing Customer Lifetime Value
(CLV), and ultimately both revenue and
profit margin.
The components of customer
satisfaction, loyalty, and advocacy are
each highly-desirable end goals, but
only represent the “customer side”
of the equation; ultimately a brand
must build a sustainable balance
between the needs of its customers
(who require the brand to provide
value through relevant, timely, and
consistent interactions that are
aligned to situational context), and its
own business needs – which include
cost-effective customer acquisition,
retention, growth, and the attainment
of acceptable risk levels.
Proficiency in Customer Experience is
mission critical
for every type of organization.
03
1
McKinsey & Company
(Edelman & Singer), “The New
Consumer Decision Journey”,
2015 http://www.mckinsey.
com/business-functions/
marketing-and-sales/our-
insights/the-new-consumer-
decision-journey
2
Gartner Inc, http://www.
gartner.com/it-glossary/
customer-experience-
management-cem/
6. To achieve this balance, every
customer interaction becomes critical,
and must be seen as a potential
tipping-point through which the brand
can either reinforce its value or create
barriers between itself, the customer,
and financial success. To ensure each
interaction is positive, they must
be governed by a centralized, fully-
informed, intelligent, and “always
on” decision-making process, which
takes into account all of the available
information about the customer,
their context, and their value to the
business – then arbitrates through
each of the possible interaction
options, and makes a prescriptive
“Next-Best-Action” decision.
The following are a few examples of
high-level, “macro” customer journeys,
each of which is comprised of a series
of customer interactions, which occur
over a period of time:
• A first time customer purchasing a
product or service from a company.
• A customer purchasing cross-sell
“add-ons” to the original purchase.
• A customer upgrading to a new
service or product level.
• A customer renewing a subscription
service at the end of a contract.
• A customer “opting” into a brand
loyalty program.
• A customer advocating directly
on behalf of a brand.
This list is simple and in no way
complete, but even within this limited
set, there are many situations in which
the experience is inherently non-
standard, more complex, or more
“painful” than is desired. In these
situations, a brand must dive deeper
to ensure the balance – a focus on the
micro-journey is required.
Micro-Journeys
Each customer journey is made up of
many, many interactions through a
variety of channels, with multiple steps
and stages. Together, the net of those
experiences makes up the whole and
any one difficult step by itself can
become a major barrier to customer
satisfaction. These “micro-journeys”
are the level at which a brand must
04
7. focus and operate – taking care to
streamline the process, being mindful
not to push the customer where
they aren’t ready or willing to go, and
constantly adapting to that individual’s
shifting context.
Any basic product purchase can
potentially be broken down into
dozens of micro-journeys. For
example, when purchasing a new
tablet computer, a consumer’s
engagement with product and brand
extend far beyond the initial point of
purchase, and may ultimately impact
the purchase decisions of other
consumers down the road. Customers
may choose to:
• Use a search engine to identify
brands and models of interest.
• Read online reviews to gauge
past owner satisfaction.
• Use online comparison tools
to evaluate features.
• Build a virtual product with
personalized features and pricing.
• View current offers and upcoming
promotions on retail websites.
• Read online ads from dozens
of brands and retailers.
• Opt-into email, SMS, or direct
mail offers.
• Enter a retail store to touch and
feel the product.
• Talk with a sales agent to learn more
about the product, and ask questions.
• Purchase the product online,
in store, or via a call center.
• Purchase add-ons at the point of
purchase, such as batteries, a data
plan, or a warranty.
• Utilize a coupon or loyalty card.
• Register their product with the
retailer or manufacturer.
05
Any basic product purchase can
potentially be broken down into
dozens of micro-journeys.
8. • Activate their product on a
wireless network.
• Download applications to use
on their device.
• View brand ads for up-sell and
cross-sell products.
• Post feedback about the product
on social media, or an online forum.
• Talk to a call-center agent to fix a
problem, change information, ask
a question, etc…
This macro-level journey, a relatively
simple tablet purchase, has more
than a dozen different parts or
“stages” – each of which introduces
both opportunity and risk for the
brand. Each tiny step that the
customer takes can impact not only
whether the organization makes a sale
– but how that individual perceives
and interacts with the brand moving
forward, and differentiates the brand
from its competition.
Essentially, “The journey
itself is becoming the
defining source of
competitive advantage.” 3
Identifying Your Customer
Journey Gaps
Ultimately, when evaluating the
effectiveness of any journey and
deciding whether it needs
optimization or how to do so,
a brand must consider, from a
customer perspective, questions
like the following:
Brand Visibility & Access
• Is the brand visible on paid
third-party networks, with a viable
value proposition, and is the
consumer aware?
• Is the consumer able to search
for and navigate to the brand
easily, using keywords and terms
linked to their value proposition,
in a compelling and relevant way
that differentiates the brand
from competitors?
06
3
McKinsey & Company
(Edelman & Singer), “The New
Consumer Decision Journey”,
2015 http://www.mckinsey.
com/business-functions/
marketing-and-sales/our-
insights/the-new-consumer-
decision-journey
9. • Is the transition from paid-to-
owned channels easy to navigate
for the customer?
Interaction Intelligence
• When interacting directly through
the brand’s “owned” channels,
are individuals able to find the
information they need easily,
without distraction or interference?
• Is content personalized based
on their individual interests and
propensities?
• Is the brand empowered to collect
quality data about the customer
before, during, and after
an interaction?
• Can the brand instantly translate data
into relevant actions or offers that
are timely, align with the
consumer’s needs, and match
the context of specific interactions?
Is the actual purchase process
simple and elegant?
• Is data collected about
the customer on one channel
immediately used to add
intelligence on other channels?
• Can customers move across
channels and still maintain
their “conversation”?
Sales Conversion
• Is the actual purchase process
simple and elegant?
• Is the sales process the same in
every channel (or optimized for the
nature of each), or do individuals
have to jump through hoops to
make a purchase in their
preferred manner?
• Are customers forced to re-start as
they cross channels?
• What barriers exist that may stop
the consumer from completing
the sales process?
07
10. Onboarding & Support
• Is the activation process simple?
• Is a new customer able to start
using the product quickly, and
immediately receive value?
• How does the brand optimize non-
transactional experiences, such
as resolving service or hardware
issues, changing account
information, or resolving login issues?
• Is the brand easy to do business with,
or does the concept of “nurturing”
customers fail to expand beyond
the initial purchase?
Cross-Sell & Upsell
• Is it simple for the customer to
expand the relationship? Do they
receive incentives for doing so?
• Can customers add products or
features and upgrade seamlessly?
• Do customers know what’s available to
them, do they see relevant offers,
and are those filtered based on
their eligibility?
• Can information be relayed
pro-actively by the brand, leveraging
the customer’s channel preferences,
in a subtle way that doesn’t push?
The Holistic Experience
• In a world where a brand is only as
good as its last customer interaction,
does the sum total of those
interactions resolve to a positive
customer experience?
• Is the experience consistent across
channels and business divisions?
• Are customers willing, able and
enabled to advocate on behalf of
the brand and product? Do they
have a forum to do so?
Like most things in life and business,
optimizing the customer journey is not
necessarily a “big picture” initiative –
It’s more likely a series
of small, focused efforts,
which, when strung
together shape a positive
customer perception
of the brand.
08
11. Where Technology
Becomes Important
Unfortunately, technology supporting
the customer journey has historically
struggled with the dynamic nature
of the customer: the market has
been saturated with solutions that
oversimplify the journey concept,
essentially creating more problems
than they solve. They use pre-
calculated propensity scores, static
“best practice” templates, canned
visualizations, and pre-scripted
journey paths that rely on just
one or two customer channels for
engagement – and by doing so,
completely ignore the individual needs
of the customer, and ultimately “turn
them off," to the point where they
disengage from the brand.
But as stated in a recent article by
McKinsey and Company, current
technology has improved to the point
where brands today cannot only react
to shifting customer needs, but must
09
also “actively shape” those journeys.
That technology can enable your
organization to engage with customers
in a more progressive way… but must
allow brands to apply intelligence in
the following ways:
1. Surface Next-Best-Actions,
Not Just Offers
In journey design, it is mission critical
that the software recognize the
context of the customer interaction,
adapting as necessary to educate,
service, retain, or initiate a collections
process with a customer, rather
than simply attempting to “push” a
product to them. When the customer’s
situation (their context) dictates a
non-sales action, very little diminishes
the experience more than a badly-
timed, irrelevant offer. For instance,
different strategies are required when
a customer is calling because of a
service outage or hardware problem,
or when they’re searching the website
for an instruction manual, as opposed
Current technology has improved to the point
where brands today can not only
react to shifting customer needs, but
“actively shape” those journeys.
4
McKinsey & Company
(Edelman & Singer), “The New
Consumer Decision Journey”,
2015 http://www.mckinsey.
com/business-functions/
marketing-and-sales/our-
insights/the-new-consumer-
decision-journey
12. 10
to when they’re clicking through on an
email offer or chatting with an agent about
a new promotion they just saw online.
For deeper information on Next-Best-
Action analytics and its potential value
to a brand, we’d recommend the
following materials:
• Video: Contextual Next-Best-Action
• eBook: Next-Best-Action Marketing
2. Operationalize Real-Time
Decisions (Advanced Analytics)
To stay in tune with the customer,
analytics must be executed in real-
time, at the exact point of interaction
with the customer (or as close to it
as possible): a great experience can’t
use pre-defined model scores and
“wisdom of the crowd” algorithms
to guide the brand’s actions. These
approaches fail to capture changing
customer needs and context, and
can’t manage rapid-fire series of
cross-channel interactions: so your
calculated next action becomes
irrelevant each time the customer
makes an unexpected decision, or
suddenly changes directions.
There is significant revenue
opportunity available
to brands that can
operationalize real-time
decision-making.
The ability to adapt instantly to shifting
context, and to offer the most relevant
proposition (that is in tune with
this interaction, right now) is where
businesses see lift in acquisition,
cross-sell/upsell, retention, and
average revenue per user. Traditional
outbound campaigns, where the
brand simply pushes messages at the
target, don’t resonate with today’s
connected customer. Instead, by
listening closely to each individual
in real-time, we can offer delightful
customer experiences – while
building more profitable relationships.
For example, here are a few scenarios
where real-time adaptation/
re-calculation is critical to the journey:
• Guiding agents through an
intelligent conversation when
they’re “live” with a customer in the
call center or branch, interpreting
13. 11
give-and-take dialogue as it happens
to adapt the agent’s script and Next-
Best-Action recommendations.
• Setting email content at the point
the customer opens it, rather than
when it’s sent – enabling a shift
in the Next-Best-Action offer
or treatment to align with any
intelligence / activity that’s occurred
in the interim.
• Personalizing web content as
a known or anonymous visitor
interacts with your website, so that
all of their previous activity is
applied to re-calculate actions
dynamically, as they advance.
• Orchestrating Next-Best-
Actions across multiple channels
simultaneously, as customers often
view or reference online content at
the same time they interact with
an agent.
In each of these instances, the
organization must access, analyze,
The brand must be able to
track the customer through
multiple journeys
simultaneously.
and apply data to make immediate
decisions, which increases the
relevance, timeliness, and consistency
of their actions, and ensures that
they align with the context of the
customer’s situation.
3. Arbitrate Multiple Journeys
Simultaneously, For Each Customer
With customer journeys being highly
complex, it is usually difficult for the
brand to determine what specific
journey a customer is undertaking,
at least until they are well-underway.
In many cases, the customer will
often change their mind, and shift
directions as they receive, collect, and
process new information. To this end,
the brand must be able to track the
customer through multiple journeys
simultaneously, and arbitrate the
Next-Best-Actions associated with
each of those journeys, against all
their other potential actions.
For example, a customer may place
a product in an online shopping cart,
14. 12
then abandon that cart immediately
thereafter (a very common occurrence).
The brand may want to encourage the
customer to complete that transaction,
and thus prioritize actions that incent
the customer to do so… but at what
point does that abandoned cart action
become “stagnant”? When should they
shift from focusing on that shopping
cart conversion journey, to another
journey that customer may also be
engaged in?
This is a good example of why
business rules alone aren’t enough:
it’s the customer’s unique situation
and their response to the brand’s
subsequent actions that must drive
this decision. The accepted approach
is to utilize predictive modeling to
drive complex decisions, rather than
applying static, arbitrary business
rules – but unfortunately most
organizations do not have the
resources to build and maintain the
huge library of high-value predictive
models needed to support contextual,
journey-specific decisions.
Adaptive modeling is a
machine-learning technique
that integrates real-time
predictive analytics within
the customer decision-
making process.
Unlike conventional predictive models,
adaptive models will update themselves
automatically as the system interacts
with customers, gathers responses,
and operationalizes that intelligence.
For example, in the situation above,
adaptive models can be used to
evaluate the efficacy of any offers
used to promote the shopping cart
journey. Those models will take into
account the products, timing of the
cart abandonment, past customer
interactions in that context, etc and
score each option – which will be
used by the Next-Best-Action strategy
to make the best decision possible
for that customer at the moment.
Adaptive models are self-updating,
and do not require up-front FTE labor
for algorithm creation or “model
refreshes” like predictive models do,
15. 13
so they can be used to cost-effectively
evaluate situations that normal
predictive models cannot, and do so
with a high degree of reliability.
4. Integrate All
Customer Touchpoints
Nearly all of the customer journey
tools available on the open market
were originally developed from a
channel-centric point solution (e.g.
by a brand specializing in email
service provision, ecommerce,
web personalization, agent-facing
applications, etc.), and tend to stick
firmly to their roots. They’re geared to
manage either inbound or outbound
interactions, not both – and as such
fail to seamlessly connect data
across all inbound and outbound
touchpoints, to show a holistic
customer progression; this severely
limits their effectiveness in optimizing
anything but a simple journey.
Feedback from marketing
organizations supports this point.
In a 2016 study by the CMO Council,
just three percent of marketing
professionals felt they truly could
get a “comprehensive view” of their
customers’ journeys; most times,
the data was either “too complex” to
integrate, or it was stored and analyzed
in silos – both of which limited their
insight and revenue potential.5
Ultimately, effective software must
track and visualize interactions across
every channel that customers may use
to interact with the brand, show the
flow between touchpoints, and map
those interactions to journeys and
stages that can be optimized.
Also, the Next-Best-Actions on each
individual channel will be significantly
enhanced by integrating data from
other channels – that data provides
product interests, helps identify
situational context, identifies the
In a 2016 study by the CMO Council, just
three percent of marketing
professionals felt they
truly could get a “comprehensive view”
of their customers’ journeys.
5
“Predicting Routes to
Revenue”, Pegasystems and
the CMO Council, 2016,
page 14, https://www.pega.
com/sites/pega.com/files/
docs/2016/Jan/predicting-
routes-to-revenue-report.pdf
16. 14
customer’s current journey stage, can
detect potential retention issues, and
can identify high-potential events to
trigger additional engagement. For
example, the brand can use events
on the website to initiate an outbound
email campaign, then adapt the
timing, cadence and messages of
that campaign dynamically, as they
gather information from other
customer touchpoints.
5. Account for Paid Channels
This is part of the “integrate all
channels” concept above, but
because of how these channels are
normally handled, deserves its own
mention. On owned channels, a brand
controls the data – but it can’t afford
to ignore its paid touchpoints. Each
time a customer interacts with an
organization on a paid platform (e.g.
via a mobile Facebook Ad, Google
Search, a banner on The Wall Street
Journal, etc.), that information must
be tracked and accounted for in its
customer interaction history.
Paid interactions are
often ignored because
the information can be
difficult to obtain and
integrate, but that data
is well worth the effort.
It can add tremendous intelligence to
a brand’s owned channels – uncovering
unrecognized customer interests,
preferences, and context. Vice-versa,
data from owned channels is a critical
part of optimizing paid media spend,
as it provides insights to optimize paid
targeting, offer selection, and bid levels.
Some key benefits of integrating
paid media channels/data into the
customer journey include:
• Increasing the relevancy and timing
of paid advertisements.
• Reducing paid spend on ads for
products that customers have
already purchased.
• Increasing conversion rates,
by shifting ads to relevant cross
sell/upsell content.
17. 15
• Adding intelligence to the ad-buying
process, to avoid over-spending on
low lifetime value customers.
For more information on how
technology is evolving to integrate
marketing and advertising analytics
and decision making, we’d recommend
the following materials:
• Video: Paid Media and Next-
Best-Action
6. Evaluate Actions in a
Journey Context
While understanding customer
purchase paths is critical, it’s a
descriptive starting point, not
the end goal. Many journey tools
emphasize form over function –
providing aesthetically rich and
beautiful visualizations, but failing to
provide what’s desperately needed
– a normalized ranking and scoring
of the brand’s actions, offers, and
channels, within that journey context.
To provide real value, journey software
must go beyond simple aggregations
of impressions and click-through by
stage. For example, a system user
must be able to identify a journey, see
all its component stages, and quickly
understand which of their actions were
impactful in each stage, and which
failed to support the customer – so they
can adapt their strategy accordingly.
For example, if a brand typically had
10 possible Next-Best-Action options
available for a certain stage of a
journey, which score well? Which of
those 10 are performing at a high
level? Which are underperforming?
Certain offers, messages, channels,
and content perform well in a general
sense, but add less value in a certain
context. If the customer is trying to
activate their phone, educational
actions will often perform much
better than offers – in this case, the
key is identifying the channels and
treatments through which those are
best positioned to help the customer.
To provide real value, journey software must go
beyond simple aggregations of
impressions and click-throughs by stage.
18. 16
The Financial Impact
Journey optimization will provide
tremendous benefit to your
organization if you’re invested in the
right technology, commit to a focused
approach, and apply the right level
of resources. Those benefits include
significant lift in offer conversion, up-
sell and cross-sell, retention, customer
satisfaction, share of wallet, and both
top / bottom-line revenue.
For examples of how top-tier
organizations are optimizing their
customer journeys and realizing
significant impacts to their business,
we recommend the following:
• Forrester: Total Economic
Impact of Pega Marketing
• Video: EE: Transforming the
Customer Journey Through
1:1 Customer Engagement
• Case Study: Next Generation
Decisioning at British Gas
• Case Study: Award Winning,
Personalized, Real-Time
Marketing at PNC Bank
Conclusion
When embarking on an initiative to
optimize the customer journey, keep
the following in mind:
• You cannot “script” the perfect
journey – customers will choose
their own path, and the ecosystem
is too complex to predict exactly
where, when, or how they’ll act.
• Your journey software must be
able to do six critical things – surface
next-best-actions (not just offers),
operationalize real-time decisions,
arbitrate multiple journeys for
each customer, integrate data
from paid channels, optimize across
all touchpoints, and score all of your
potential actions in a journey context.
• Focusing on “micro-journeys” is
critical – it’s much simpler to fix
small steps in the process than to
try and overhaul a broad-spectrum
journey or experience all at once.
• Identify 3-5 “high-impact” journeys
to prioritize, and as you improve each
experience, you can leverage your
learnings and approach thereafter.
19. • Even after you’ve optimized a
journey, you’re never truly done –
journeys will evolve and change
right along with the customer and
the organizational context, and must
be managed proactively.
• A great customer experience
requires that every interaction
is relevant, timely, and consistent
across channels – and at all times
aligned with the context of the
customer’s situation.
17
20. Pegasystems
US: +1 (617) 374-9600
UK: +44 (0) 118 9591150
AU: +61 2 9581 7000
Request a Demo
www.pega.com/request-demo
Comet Global Consulting
US: +1 (470) 210-0004
UK: +44 20 7151 0685
info@cometgc.com
www.cometgc.com
About Pegasystems
Pegasystems (NASDAQ: PEGA) develops strategic
applications for marketing, sales, service, and
operations. Pega’s applications streamline critical
business operations, connect enterprises to their
customers seamlessly in real-time across channels, and
adapt to meet rapidly changing requirements. Pega’s
Global 3000 customers include many of the world’s
most sophisticated and successful enterprises. Pega’s
applications, available in the cloud or on-premises,
are built on its unified Pega® 7 Platform, which uses
visual tools to easily extend and change applications
to meet clients’ strategic business needs. Pega’s clients
report that Pega gives them the fastest time to value,
extremely rapid deployment, efficient re-use, and
global scale. For more information, please visit us at
http://www.pega.com.
About Comet Global Consulting,
a Merkle Company
With over 10 years designing, implementing and
managing customer interaction programs and
technology, Comet is a leading force in helping
ensure that customers everywhere can experience a
personalized—and personal—real-time relationship
with some of the largest companies in the world. Our
clients include leaders in telecommunications, banking,
insurance, travel, transportation and retail. Leveraging
Pega’s Build for Change concepts, we have developed
best practice logic frameworks to deliver client projects
faster, cheaper and at lower risk. In a marketing era in
which authentic, personalized customer relationships
are not a nice-to-have but a must-do, Comet are the
must-have customer interaction experts.
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