10 Ways To Provide A Better CX Journey For Your Customers

personalization digital experience

EDITOR’S NOTE: The customer experience, or CX journey is one of the most important elements of your store, as it dictates how customers interact with your site while they’re on the way to making a purchase. A stronger CX journey can lead to increased sales. This blog post by Design Shack gives 10 tips on how to create a better cx journey on your website. A good CX journey starts with good content. Make sure product descriptions are easy to find and enticing, all pricing information is clearly displayed, options such as different colors are listed, and answers to FAQs are listed.  Showcase products in a natural way so customers can see how the product would be used to benefit them. Encourage they share the product with their friends on social media, and always take customers feedback into consideration. Level up your online store by using some AI such as chatbots or product recommendations. Keep reading to learn more ways to create a better CX journey. If you have any additional questions or want us to handle your strategy for you, reach out to us at Prebuilt Sites or The BBS Agency. We’d love to help you out!

The customer experience, or CX, journey can be one of the most important elements of an online store. It dictates how people interact with the site in the path to making a purchase, and even if they make a purchase at all.

The more technical definition of CX is all the cognitive, affective, sensory, and behavioral responses that a consumer has in the buying process from pre-purchase to the sale to the post-purchase process.

Let’s look at ways that you can improve the customer experience journey in website projects.

1. Start with Great Content

Photo: Design Shack

The key to any online experience is content. When it comes to content for potential customers that includes a few different elements:

  • Product information and descriptions that are unique and easy to understand
  • Credible, error-free writing and microcopy to instill trust
  • Product videos or photos at multiple angles
  • Ordering information, including delivery options, costs, and returns
  • Product options, such as color or size
  • Additional needed elements if they are not included (such as batteries)
  • FAQs to help with questions potential customers might have
  • Sizing, specifications, or dimensions of products

2. Include Personalization

Personal shopping experiences can help increase sales by helping customers find additional products they would like to purchase. Even if your online platform doesn’t allow for a 100% customized checkout, there are a variety of small personalizations you can add to create a better CX journey.

  • Use geolocation to automatically detect location or ZIP code for easy shipping calculation
  • Show recently looked at items or past purchases
  • Use shopping history or data to send personalized surveys
  • Allow users to toggle between elements like dark and light mode
  • Ability for shoppers to save favorites or most-liked items
  • Provide a shopping history for logged in users

3. Develop Clear Navigation

Photo: Design Shack

There’s nothing worse than an e-commerce website without a shopping cart icon in the main navigation.

Incorporate key shopping features into the main navigation for ease of use. Navigation elements should include:

  • Shop (or primary shopping categories)
  • Cart
  • Account sign in
  • Sale
  • User information or blog (if guides or instructions are necessary)
  • Favorites or saved items

4. Use a Little AI

Artificial intelligence can impact your website’s CX journey as well. You may already have a touch of AI as part of your plan or might be watching what some competitors are doing.

Common AI strategies for customer experience journeys include:

  • Chatbots
  • Natural language processing
  • Recommendation systems for personalization
  • Better voice search
  • Pricing optimization to offer discounts before abandonment

5. Showcase Products in a Natural Environment

Photo: Design Shack

A shopper is more likely to make a purchase if product photography is clear, descriptive, and informative. The latter provides plenty of reason to include at least one product photo in a natural environment.

This doesn’t mean taking a photo of your product outside. It means taking a photo of the product in a real-world use situation. This can provide a ton of information for potential shoppers:

  • Size and scale of the item (if someone is holding a book, for example, it is easy to see the size)
  • How it is typically used
  • Who typically uses the item
  • How it works with other things, such as attachments or to solve a problem

6. Make Customer Service a Priority

This part of the CX journey should do without saying, but there are so many places that customer service ruins an experience, that it must be mentioned.

Customer service – from chats to phone calls to emails to returns – needs to be a seamless and easy experience if you want to maintain that customer long-term. A poor customer service experience will run this and any future CX journey (if they even return to your website).

7. Leverage Social Proof and Sharing

Photo: Design Shack

Are you showing reviews and allowing shoppers to share their experiences with your company?

Social proof and sharing can be the greatest one-two punch to help generate new sales. Shoppers like to know what they are buying is of a high value and recommended by peers. They also like to see real people with products and share their own photos.

Leveraging reviews and social media can make the CX journey more enjoyable and engaging for repeat and new customers.

8. Ensure Messaging is Clear and Direct

Tell users and shoppers what they should do with your website design. Clear and direct calls-to-action and buttons that entice users to help set the tone with clear and direct messaging.

Don’t use flowery language or leave customers guessing. State everything as clearly and succinctly as possible.

It’s ok to repeat key messaging elements and help direct users through the journey in the way that’s most appropriate. Provide opportunities for lost users to get back on track, find what they are looking for, and complete the customer experience successfully.

9. Ask for Feedback

Photo: Design Shack

Ask customers for feedback on the website and shopping experience and implement recommendations as needed. Not only will this feedback help your site run better but it will also make customers feel like they matter.

Feedback happens in a variety of ways:

  • Using website analytics and data (places that shoppers abandon carts is a place for improvement)
  • Returns and repeat purchases
  • Surveys
  • Reviews
  • Comments on social media

10. Think Omnichannel

Online shoppers are accessing websites from everywhere, and often back and forth between desktop and mobile devices. The CX journey needs to be the same and consistent to make this an enjoyable and seamless experience.

Quite simply, customers expect the digital journey to be the same no matter what device they pick up and they don’t have the patience to play with your website if it doesn’t conform to this simple rule.

Conclusion

The most important thing to think about in terms of CX, is that a strong journey can lead to increased sales. It’s important to continue to improve customer experience journeys and feedback loops to help maximize the potential of your store online.

Originally posted on Design Shack.

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