Customer Journey Analysis
Customer journey analysis is the systematic mapping and measurement of the full sequence of touchpoints a customer experiences with a firm, across the prepurchase, purchase and postpurchase stages, in order to understand and improve the end-to-end customer experience. It reflects a shift from evaluating isolated interactions or single satisfaction scores toward seeing the customer experience as a dynamic, cumulative, multi-touchpoint process that unfolds over time and recurs in loops. Katherine Lemon and Peter Verhoef's influential 2016 Journal of Marketing synthesis provided the field's organizing framework, defining customer experience as a customer's cognitive, emotional, sensory, social and behavioral responses across the journey, and classifying touchpoints as brand-owned, partner-owned, customer-owned and social or external. The analysis inventories these touchpoints stage by stage, measures the experience at each, traces the paths customers actually take through them, and identifies the moments and pain points that most shape outcomes such as conversion, satisfaction and loyalty. The result is a diagnostic that connects specific interactions to overall experience and guides where to invest in redesign, integrating behavioral analytics with qualitative experience research.
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