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Marketing Trend: Customer Journey Mapping Will Become Smarter and More Useful in 2017


innovent - January 10, 2017 - 0 comments

Customer journey mapping is an important exercise that helps companies understand their customer’s perspective so they can meet needs and expectations. It also drives companies to reach all the business goals for individual customers – such as long-term engagement, buying additional products or services, or becoming a reference. The customer journey map itself is a visual diagram of the way your customers engage with you throughout the buying cycle. From the time they learn your company’s name or find you on Google, all the way to the time they purchase their first product/service from you, and even beyond that.

In 2017, leading organizations will extend the value of customer journey mapping initiatives by doing two things:

1) Operationalize them

Customer journey mapping is a common exercise, but the real challenge is turning the customer journey map from a theoretical framework or tracking mechanism into a practical tool that proactively guides customers throughout their journeys. Many companies have tried to capture every aspect of their business with customer journey mapping, and as a result, created beautiful documents that did little more than sit on the shelf. Operationalized customer journey maps are used, not just by marketing to shape the entire customer experience, but also by every customer facing individual in every customer interaction. That means baking customer journey maps into the CRM tool used by sales and service. By doing this, those customer-facing individuals know exactly where their customer is in the journey; and are also given prescriptive guidance that tells them what they should do next. And, the resulting CRM data can them be mapped back to customer journey analytics and reporting.

At SugarCRM, we now have a Customer Journey plug-in that shows an individual customer’s progress through the journey, and an advanced customer decision workflow panel, which quickly describes every task or action that a customer-facing professional like a seller must complete in order to help a customer advance to the next decision stage. This helps operationalize the customer journey and bake it into the day-to-day work process of a sales or service person.

2) Add cognitive capabilities throughout the customer journey

Engagement throughout the customer journey, and across all parts of the organization delivering that journey – marketing, sales and service – can benefit from cognitive technologies. As one example, SugarCRM is working with IBM Watson and other technologies to add cognitive insight and enrichment for CRM users. You’ll hear more about this shortly.

Here’s an example that illustrates both points, taken from the SugarCRM and IBM Watson “Cognitive Customer Engagement for Banking” solution. A banking customer receives personalized interactions from their bank through the use of marketing automation, behavioral scoring and nurturing. Prompted by those interactions, they log on to their bank account, where they engage in a dialog with Watson about potential retirement funds. After gathering information about age, risk tolerance and investment goals, Watson recommends a specific fund, and then engages a Financial Advisor. The advisor can then continue the dialog in a very personalized and targeted way, and is guided via their CRM with a set of recommendations to propose to the customer. The end result? A more satisfied customer, more revenue for the bank, and lower SG&A costs.

To learn more about this solution, click here.

To read more about other top marketing trends for 2017, check out IBM’s paper on “10 Key Marketing Trends for 2017”.

Looking for a CRM software to drive your customer relationships in 2017, contact InnoventCRM today on 1300 781 681 or info@innoventcrm.com.au