Most marketing and innovation teams today care deeply about capturing the customer journey - whether they think in terms of competitive analysis, customer experience, path to purchase or product testing. Understanding the customer journey—including the context behind their decisions—helps companies improve their success in many areas including entering new markets, identifying new product innovations, updating brand positioning, identifying retail opportunities, improving customer or user experiences and even responding to competition or market changes.
In today’s fast-paced world, what is the best way to increase your understanding of the customer journey? In this post, we examine specific ways to capture in-depth experiences including attitudes, behaviors and context for decision making.
In our previous post, we explored Seven Ways Customer Journey Research can Transform Your Business. Clearly the more you know about your customers’ path to purchase, usage experience or website experience, the easier it will be for you to optimize them, delivering exemplary customer experiences along the way.
And customer experience understanding is nothing to take lightly considering the following:
Sounds great, doesn’t it? But how exactly can you measure the path to purchase and experiences in an efficient and affordable way?
For decades, companies wishing to research the customer journey would collect observational data and extrapolate from there. Researchers, for example, might set up a camera in a grocery store to observe how customers interact with specific products.
Observational data is undoubtedly important. But it falls short because it doesn’t tell the whole story.
Imagine a customer, who is being filmed, picks up a product, fidgets with it and ultimately puts it back on the shelf. Researchers see the behavior very clearly. But in this instance, they are unable to determine why the customer put the product back. This is the critical context researchers need to truly understand what’s influencing a customer’s attitude and behavior.
To this end, today’s leading researchers rely on ethnographic research to get a firmer grasp on the customer journey. Quite simply, ethnographic research combines observational data with direct engagement. A researcher might observe the customer in the grocery store, to continue the example from above, and then engage with them immediately after they’ve made a purchase decision. That way, they can understand with more certainty why customers act certain ways.
In the past, ethnographic research was mostly confined to expensive in-person interviews. However, thanks to the evolution of technology, there are now modern digital solutions companies can leverage to get the data they need to make informed decisions.
Not only are these innovative tools affordable, they also enable companies to quickly ask the right people the right questions at the perfect times.
Thanks to new agile online research tools, it’s now faster and easier for researchers to capture the customer journey in the depth they need to innovate new solutions.
Agile Consumer Insights Communities assemble qualified research participants in online groups, creating a digital experience that allows for both one-on-one observation and group discussion. Subjects can participate in research on any device from the comfort of their own homes—or even when they’re on the go. Not only is this a more efficient and cost-effective approach for everyone involved, researchers also benefit from more accurate and honest answers, as people are more likely to be honest when they are online compared to when they are sitting face-to-face with a researcher.
How does this look in the real world?
Imagine you want to capture someone who is remodeling their home’s opinion on a set of blinds. Thanks to online solutions like Digsite, you can quickly assemble a group of people who fit your criteria and capture their experiences.
And the best part? Because the research is conducted online, you can ask them questions while they are playing around with the set of blinds. This increases the accuracy, thoroughness and honesty of their feedback; asking research participants to recall their experiences from their memory results in fewer details at best and inaccurate information at worst.
Agile platforms like Digsite provides several different ways to research the customer journey, each with their own strengths for getting deep insights and informing solutions.
Depending on the specific issue at hand, you’ll typically find that a combination of these task types work together to get you the journey details you need. Some researchers prefer to collect all journey information in an “unmoderated” way and analyze the data later. But many are finding great benefits from a more collaborative approach where consumers share experiences privately first, and then react to others experiences and even provide feedback on potential solutions. Consider who on your team to include in observing the data collection. Often you can get much richer insights by taking the time to read results as it they collected so you can ask individuals or the group follow-up questions based on what was learned.
Getting great customer journey insights doesn’t have to be hard,—and you don’t have to reinvent the wheel. Bake agile insights tools into the core of your development process to become a faster, more agile company.
One important consideration in bringing customer journey research in-house. If you don’t think about the analysis before you collect customer journey feedback, you may end up overwhelmed with unstructured data that is time consuming to review and analyze.
Look for agile tools that provides summary charts, uses natural language processing to tag themes for you, and allows you to feature key customer quotes in an automated summary report. Also, if you are capturing video, find a platform that auto-transcribes and timestamps the video for you, so you can easily build clip reels to share with your team. Finally, make sure you have the ability to break out the results by customer segments and create customer segments based on the results. Often capturing experiences leads to identifying new segments of customers. Being able to quickly break out segment results can be a life saver!
When you’ve finished reviewing your customer journeys, consider visualizing results and identifying opportunities using a journey map. You may want to create multiple journey maps by customer segment to bring to life their unique needs. Here are some examples of customer journey maps (https://conversionxl.com/blog/customer-journey-mapping-examples/) that might give you some ideas of how to structure your results.
Thanks to newer agile research tools like Digsite, you can gather the actionable customer journey information you need to make the best decisions—quickly and affordably. What’s not to like?
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