A user journey represents a prospect’s path when interacting with your brand.
From the moment they first encounter your brand to the point where they become a customer and advocate of your brand.
Traditional sales funnels typically focus on landing the sale. These funnels have four key stages — Awareness, Interest, Consideration, and Purchase.
This is usually when a prospect first encounters and becomes aware of the brand They may also become aware of a problem they didn’t realize they had.
In this stage, the prospect is typically aware of their problem and actively seeks a solution.
They may be researching and looking to learn more about the brand and how the brand’s offers can solve their problem.
In the consideration stage, the prospect is ready to make a decision. They are considering their options.
In this sales funnel stage, the prospect has made a decision and is ready to buy.
On the other hand, a user journey is a more extensive and detailed version of a sales funnel. It takes into account the entire customer lifecycle.
The user journey covers all the stages in a traditional funnel, then goes beyond that to include what happens after a customer makes a purchase.
A brand that uses a user journey approach is concerned with more than just new customer acquisition.
They’re also focused on retention and advocacy.
It’s important to note that a prospect will not always go through every step of the user journey.
A prospect may approach your brand ready to buy and skip the first three stages. This can happen if someone they trust refers them to your brand.
Another example is when a prospect does a Google search for “best project management software.”
The prospect is already problem aware and interested in solving their problem. The Google search simply leads them to your website as the solution.
As customers’ needs evolve, traditional digital marketing needs to evolve along with them.
Your marketing channels need to evolve as the user evolves.
And a shift from a sales funnel approach to a user journey approach is one way marketers can adapt.
A user journey approach values customer retention and advocacy, which can significantly impact your bottom line.
The best brands know that acquiring new customers costs way more than marketing to existing customers.
This makes it increasingly important to focus on the customer’s overall experience at every stage of the customer life cycle.
And a key part of that is the post-purchase experience.
This is because we trust recommendations from our friends and family more than we trust the words from marketers.
When you implement a user journey-focused approach to marketing, you make customer advocacy a part of your strategy.
And that’s an excellent way to market your brand.
When your customers like and trust your product, they will share it with their friends and family.
And that kind of promotion is priceless.
There are many reasons to maintain engagement and provide ongoing value to your customers.
One of the greatest advantages is the incredible voice of customer (VOC) data you can collect from research.
VOC data — taken directly from your customers — is one of the most powerful tools you can use when writing copy for the different stages of the customer journey.
VOC data and understanding the user journey helped the Copyhackers team improve Wistia’s onboarding email sequence.
After the Copyhackers team rewrote the emails, Wistia saw a 350% increase in paid conversions from those emails.
In this Tutorial Tuesdays video, Joanna Wiebe of Copyhackers shares how you can use VOC data in your brand.
Taking a user journey-focused approach to marketing your brand is a solid strategy.
But that strategy also needs to be supported by effective conversion-focused copywriting.
Conversion Copywriting 101 by Copyhackers is a great starting point to learn the basics of conversion copywriting.
Enroll now for free to learn valuable lessons like how to write copy for the different journey phases I covered in this article.