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“If you really want to stand apart, give your customers the greatest experience and satisfaction.”I usually do shopping from an app where I’m a premium member and I get benefits like free delivery on all the orders, the first one to get access to hot sales, throughout-the-year discounts, best customer service, birthday month special offers & much more. Each time I buy anything from there feels like I’m “winning in life”.
“As a brand and a product, making your customers feel like they’re winning in life does a few things. When people feel that way, they want to brag about it.”
Isn’t it the best feeling when all you do is provide the world-class best experience for your users and they do marketing for you — organic, enthusiastic endorsements?
The outcome was lower than expected because some customers didn’t even reach the final onboarding step, they didn’t want to spend a lot of time setting up, and they wanted quick access. I wanted to get as many insights by asking them questions about the problem and the product.
But they didn’t even want to go through the “get access” step and fill out the form, they didn’t want to wait in line to get approval. All these limited my growth, and reach at the initial stage.
Every product, for survival, depends on delivering personalised in-product experiences. So, here are some things you can try.
Building a great product experience means you need to be customer-centric. It’s like knowing what goes inside their life and designing the product that fits their lifestyle. Because they probably won’t have time for you.
So, know what could frustrate a user, it can be emailing the team to cancel the subscription or deleting the account, having to wait for a customer service response, not being able to see the exact price, etc.
You can know more by collecting and soliciting customer feedback by engaging with them or interviewing them. Instead of looking just at the transaction part of the user journey, try to go beyond and document the complete journey to satisfaction.
While working with a startup, which I only joined because I was personally looking for that kind of product & I was excited to build it, we spent around 40% of the budget improving the product through customer experience. Because when I was asked to try out the product it took me 15 mins to set up. I felt frustrated. It made me think about how many people might have dropped out even before trying the product.
So, if you’re building something try to keep product experience as the best customer acquisition and retention strategy, this will increase their satisfaction and grow your business fast + enabling competitive advantage.
Most of the time, I enjoy working as a product advisor because I get to work with teams with the primary focus on customer lifecycle framework rather than product lifecycle or any marketing funnel. We use in-product behavior to deliver the relevant experience to each customer which helps us build a customer base, acquire, retain, and grow over time. That being said companies, should carefully design the journey toward satisfaction and they should do so in the shortest time possible.
Thanks for reading.
Also published here.