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What steps do you take when analyzing the customer journey?

Caroline Walthall
Caroline Walthall
Quizlet Director of Product and Lifecycle Marketing | Formerly UdemyJanuary 14

Build from what you know

If you’re doing this to prepare for a launch, I’d consider whether this new feature or product is for a similar audience that you already target. If are marketing to a large portion of your existing customers, you may already have some journey insights. It helps to plot these on a buyer/customer journey map.

Consider learning more about the competitor journey
If you are expanding to a new audience and/or a new category, you’ll want to analyze the customer journey of comparable competitor products. I'd do this first through surveys and then through follow up interviews.


What are the key trigger points that move a customer further towards a purchase, an action, or a renewal? What are the failure points?

Prioritize the areas that need attention most

Once you have your map of the most common pathways for each major segment, it helps to label sections of the journey map that are more consistent. To the extent you can quantify drop off at each micro-step of the funnel, that's ideal. Often these are moments after they’ve bounced from a sales page and when they haven’t returned to your product in some time. Are the majority of users dropping off at a key step or just one segment? Is that a key segment? Make sure to keep testing the flow yourself so you can find any big technical barriers or intuit points that could be confusing or adding too much friction.

Continuing building stronger/clearer analytics

Then there are moments in the funnel where it's much harder to tell what's going. These are moments when you can't tell if customers are “on track” anymore. 


What bridges are missing there? Why didn’t they find what they were looking for? What data aren't you tracking that could provide more insight into what's going on?

User test new designs before going all in on them
Conduct quick user research to hear potential customers share the honest opinions of how they experience your new version of the upgrade page (or whatever the experience is you're testing). Is there something lacking that is making them feel skeptical? 


Once you learn that, figure out how to proactively provide answers to customers at the right stage of their purchase decison.

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Victoria Chernova
Victoria Chernova
OpenAI Product MarketingDecember 7

Not exactly sure what you mean by analyzing, but building the customer journey for your GTM strategy is essential for ensuring the right segment gets the right message via the right channel. It’s also how you can identify which assets (or bill of materials) to prioritize for the launch.

I’d start with your GTM strategy: Who’s your target audience (including different segments), what are you trying to make them do (objectives), and how will you get them there (channels + assets)?

I’m a visual learner, so I like to build a flow chart for each audience segment to map out their journey. Each journey should culminate with your primary goal. Some questions to think through as you build these out:

  • Based on previous launches or internal marketing knowledge, which channels are most effective in reaching this specific segment?
  • How many touch points do you need to get your audience to achieve your goals?
  • What is the happy path (ideal flow) for each step? What can you do if someone falls off the path?
  • Finally, what type of content is most compelling given your audience, message, and channels? I would lean into other content and marketing teammates to build your bill of materials.
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