Moving your customers down the funnel from awareness to conversion can make for a winding and treacherous road. Until you fully research and understand the buying process inside and out, it's far too easy to make a misstep. In today's Whiteboard Friday, Rand steps back to take a higher-level look at the path to customer purchase, recommending workflows and tools to help you forge your own way.
Video Transcription
Howdy, Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week we're going to chat about the path to customer purchase and how to research that path. The reason this is so critical is because we have to understand a few things like our content and conversion strategy around where do we need to be, what content we need to create, how to position ourselves, our product, our brand, and how to convert people. We can't know this stuff until we truly understand the buying process.
We've done a lot of Whiteboard Fridays that involve very, very tactically specific items in one of the steps in these, like: how to understand the awareness funnel and how to build your social media audience; or how to get into the consideration process and understand how you compare against your competition; or how to convert people at the very end of the buying cycle on a landing page.
But I want to take a step back because, as I've talked to a lot of you out there and heard comments from you, I think that this bigger picture of, "How do I understand this research process," is something we need to address.
Buyers: Who are they?
So let's start with: How do we understand who our buyers actually are, and what's the research process we can use for that? My general sense is that we need to start with interviews with a few people, with salespeople if you're working with a team that has sales, with customer service, especially if you're working with a team that has customer service folks who talk to lots of their audience, and potentially with your target demographic and psychographic audience. Demographic audience would be like: Where are they, what gender are they, and what age group are they? Psychographics would be things around their interest levels in certain things and what they consume and how they behave, all of that type of stuff.
For example, let's say we're going to go target Scotch whisky drinkers. Now, I am personally among that set of Scotch whisky drinkers. I'm big fan of a number of scotches, as are many Mozzers. In fact, I have a bottle of Ardbeg — I think it's the Uigeadail — in my office here at Moz.
So I might go, "Well, let's see. Let's talk to the people who sell whisky at stores. Let's talk to the people who sell it online. Let's talk to the customer service folks. Let's do interviews with people who are likely Scotch buyers, which are both male and female, perhaps slightly more demographically skewed male, tend to be in a slightly wealthier, maybe middle income and up income bracket, tend to be people who live in cities more than people who live in urban and rural areas, tend to also have interests around things like fashion and maybe automobiles and maybe beer and other forms of alcohol." So we can figure out all that stuff and then we can do those interviews.
What we're trying to get to is a customer profile or several customer profiles.
A lot of folks call this a "customer persona," and they'll name the persona. I think that's a fine approach, but you can have a more abstract customer profile as well.
Then once you have that, you can use a tool like Facebook, through their advertising audience system, to research the quantity of people who have the particular attributes or affiliations that you're seeking out. From there, you can expand again by using Facebook and Twitter. You could use Followerwonk, for example in Twitter specifically, to figure out: What are these people following? Who are their influencers? What are the brands they pay attention to? What are the media outlets? What are the individuals? What are the blogs or content creators that they follow?
You can also do this with a few other tools. For example, if you're searching out just content in general, you might use Google Search. You could do this on Instagram or Pinterest or LinkedIn for additional networks.
There's a very cool tool called FullContact, which has an API that essentially let's you plug in let's say you have a set of email addresses from your interview process. You can plug that into FullContact and you can see the profiles that all of those email addresses have across all these social networks.
Now I can start to do this type of work, and I can go plug things into Followerwonk. I can go plug them into Facebook, and I can actually see specifically who those groups follow. Now I can start to build a true idea of who these people are and who they follow.
What needs do they have?
Now that I've researched that, I need to know what needs those folks actually have. I understand my audience at least a little bit, but now I need to understand what they want. Again, I go back to that interview process. It's very, very powerful. It is time-intensive. It will not be a time-saving activity. Interviews take a long time and a lot of effort and require a tremendous amount of resources, but you also get deep, deep empathy and understanding from an interview process.
Surveys are another good way to go, but you get much less deep information from them. You can however get good broad information, and I've really enjoyed those. If you don't already have an audience, you can start with something like SurveyMonkey Audience or Google Surveys, which let you target a broad group, and both of those are reasonable if you're targeting the right sorts of broad enough demographics or psychographics.
The other thing I want to do here is some awareness stage keyword research. I want to understand that this awareness phase. As people are just understanding they have a problem, what do they search for? Keyword research on this can start from the highest level.
So if I'm targeting Scotch, I might search for just Scotch by itself. If I plug that into a tool like Keyword Explorer or Keyword Planner or KeywordTool.io, I can see suggestions like, "What's the best Scotch under $50?" When I see that, I start to gain an understanding of, "Oh, wait a minute. People are looking for quality. They also care about price." Then I might see other things like, "Gosh, a lot of people search for 'Islay versus Speyside.' Oh, that's interesting. They want to know which regions are different." Or they search for "Japanese whisky versus Scotch whisky." Aha, another interesting point at the awareness stage.
From there, I can determine the search terms that are getting used at awareness stage. I can go to consideration. I can go to comparison. I can go to conversion points. That really helps me understand the journey that searchers are taking down this path.
It's not just search, though. Any time I have a search term or phase, I want to go plug that into places like Facebook. I want to plug it into something like Twitter search. I want to understand the influencers on the networks that I know my audience is in. That could be Instagram. It could be Pinterest. It could be LinkedIn. It could be any variety of networks. It could be Google News, maybe, if I'm seeing that they pay attention to a lot of media.
Then once I have these search terms and awareness through the funnel, now I've got to understand: How do they get to that conversation point?
Once I get there, what I'm really seeking out is: What are the reasons people bought? What are the things they considered? What are the objections that kept some of them from buying?
Creating a content & conversion strategy.
If I have this, what I essentially have now is the who and the what they're seeking out at each phase of this journey. That's an incredibly powerful thing that I can then go apply to...
Where do I need to be?
"Where do I need to be" means things like: What keywords do I need to target? What social platforms do I need to be on? Where do I need to be in media? Who do I need to influence who's influencing my audience?
It tells me what content I need to create.
I know what articles or videos or visuals or podcasts or data my audience is interested in and what helps compel them further and further down that funnel.
It tells me a little bit about how to position myself in terms of things like style and UI/UX.
It also tells me about benefits versus features and some of the prototypical users. Who are the prototypical users? Who should I showcase? What kinds of testimonials are going to be valuable because people say, "Ah, this person, who is like me, liked this product and uses it. Therefore it must be a good product for me."
Lastly, it tells me about how we can convert our target audience.
Then it also tells us lastly, finally, through those objections and the reasons people bought, the landing page content, the testimonials to feature and what should be in those. It tells me about the conversion path and how I should expect people to flow through that: whether they have to come back many times or they make the purchase right away. Who they're going to compare me against in terms of competitors. And finally the purchase dynamics: How do I want to sell? Do I need a refund policy? Do I need to have things like free shipping? Should this be on a subscription basis? Should I have a high upfront payment or a low upfront payment with ballooning costs over time, and all that type of stuff?
This research process is not super simple. I certainly haven't dived deep on every one of these aspects. But you can use this as a fundamental architecture to shape how you answer these questions in all of the web marketing channels you might pursue. Before you go pursue any one given channel, you might want to try and identify some of the holes you have in this.
If you have questions about how to do this, go through and do this research first. You'll have far better results at the end.
All right, everyone. Thanks for watching. We'll see you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care.
I think, the transactional journey of a customer needs to be utmost for any site (if their business model required). I think, that needs to be address from the very first instance of any site. Off course, it also has to be maintained throughout. Important and common issue for many folks, Would say Well addressed.
I like you post, Brand Awareness is always matter in conversion rate.
Here is another creative way to research the path to customer purchase: WebGazer.js - eye tracking on the browser.
Rand, what's your take on eye tracking?
Awesome, I have just stared the repo. I don't quite see how this would be useful for the customer purchase tho - I feel it's better to be used for UX/UI. Unless you activate the webcam on your visitors without their permission lol
@Rand,
Great topic on this WBF. Yes indeed, this is a very important aspect while devising the customer journey path. There are certain things which needs to be more focused main is user intent, like, on which keyword more sales is generated and find out what are the money keywords, like, Real Estate Investment Service in Chicago, What are the top rideshare companies in Texas? Then write compelling article on these topics, Share those articles on social media as well for better viral promotion.
Your website should be the best and authentic authority in your specific industry and niche which people and Google should trust and rely on. The website should act on the simple prinicple of AIDA (Attention, Interest, Desire, Action). By optimizing a captivating title you can bring attention to your prospects, then create interest by providing quality and solution-based content and placing the product pictures on PNG AND JPEG formats, Making desire by providing a call to action and lead form on the page which leads towards the action which is purchase!!
Love it, Rand!
Empathy is the big word. When you can empathize with your audience, you can solve their problems and do so much better marketing! I think you can also draw great results from usability testing on a website if you ask the right questions and setup the right tasks for users to complete. It can be almost as good as interviews :)
And thanks for mentioning FullContact - I hadn't heard about it yet!
Hi Rand.
Good post! A good explanation on the optimization of the funnel.
Thank you.
As helpful as always!
I am currently doing similar search for my website
Good Comment Rodrigo G :-)
Thanks.
Hey Rand,
Thanks for this amazing whiteboard. Great coverage you made, this one! I was just saying that "a buyers persona" (in singular) approach might not be the most accurate. Taking your "whisky" example, we have more than one psycho-social-type who consume this noble tipple. Instead of targeting just a mid-age middle-to-upper class urban citizen, ideally wouldn't we want to include elderly people?
How would you target both, as an example, and track the effectiveness of each campaigns?
Thank again)
seems a perfect post for brand awareness!
Excellent whiteboard as always
I really love reading all post in this website :) Tks authors. I get so many useful knowledge to apply for my business. Keep going on <3
Use a tool to know the hot spots I think is very good option to know what customers want
Great post, thanks!
Once they explained to me that it was making the customer CHOOSE to you as a brand. This is not to offer to offer ... How does one they choose me? Having a great job of brand
The challenge in B2B we have is taking an email and finding people on social is that their work email and their personal email are usually different. The latter being what their use on Facebook, Twitter or Pinterest. Good process though for a lot of brands. Figuring out how to get that social data before Linked In would be key for B2B to win at building a profile that includes touch points from someone's social profile.
Timely update, thanks Rand.
We're just going through the process of creating some new performance landing-pages with a freelancer for our subscription based business. Testimonials play a really big part in highlighting the value of the subscriptions. Our target demographic (the elderly) are fearful of opting into services where the value isn't clear. I get the sense that they are a demographic that needs more convincing than most. This presents its own challenges. We're also looking into video as a way to engage folks.
That was a very informative and valuable Whiteboard Friday. I look forward to sharing the video with my team and utilizing these tips through our current funnel. Thanks again for the great share.
Love this!
I'm already applying these research techniques to understand the buying process of users and..it's really harder than it looks .. We continue testing.. Thanks for the info! :D
One way to investigate the process of buying customers fully with the recommendation of work and forge their own path .
thanks for share
Great explanation on funnel optimization and on right time. I am currently doing similar search for my website to under visitors and how they reacting in each phase of a successful or failed sale cycle.
Thanks!
thanks for share
Hey Rand! I'm a big fan of the concept and execution of whiteboard fridday - great work! Awesome walkthrough of the path to customers btw, and thanks for adding a flow of value here on Moz :-)
Hi @randfish A lot of talk about buyer persona out there, but this is explained in a way that really get's into the details, and I like the way it walks through the funnel.
Thanks
The best of fridays!!!! :
In fact. It is not about creating servivios and needs, but to have what the customer needs. How do we know what the customer needs? Rome was not built in a day ... It is a process where a number of factors that can not be summarized in four lines involved
Very well explained the funnel. The problem is when you want to fill it on your website with Google Analitycs to know where the user is. In some cases it is very easy to configure (for example to meet downloads a file), but instead for subscription achievement never set. Could anyone help me? Thanks.
We need to make the path for buying any product from our website is to easy and user can easily find out the product they are looking for what and the buying process become very simple now a day these types of tips follow by Successful eCommerce websites like Flipkart and more
As helpful as always!
Thanks a lot , Rand.
Hi Rand,
This edition of whiteboard Friday completely focusing on how to create a user friendly sites which converts. We are working on development of some hospital website. We did all these things before creating UI in our UX process. I personally met employees of hospital, their patients of OPD, IPD & International department. I talked to colleagues of our office too about their journey in any hospital website after that we created a UI of website.
YES, this is very very time consuming process, there is no doubt in this thing.
Very Very Insightful whiteboard Friday.
Hey Rand, great WBF again and nice X-cut.
Very nice one! I just found these resources, but I'm already a fan of WBF!
I do have one question: It seems to me that having this kind of funnel is essencial to all online businesses, but is it the same for B2C and B2B? I'm under the impression that for B2B this is even more crucial given the time to purchase being a lot longer than on B2C sites. Am I right?
I would like to know too, except that it's not so obvious in B2B because you will also have to buy the ones that make the decisions.
Hey! Great post!
I 've never really paid this much attention to KW research and overall customer journey. Are there any good literature on the subject?
Love it! This does an excellent job of creating a visual representation of a complex subject. Identifying and understanding users/customers needs, wants & preferences is an important part of any marketing campaign (especially SEO and content marketing). time to enjoy some whiskey!
Hola somos una tienda nueva de venta online de material eléctrico:
www.electricidad-online.com
Hi Rand Fishkin! :)
I promised that I would make quality comments for the community and audience and here I am. So I want to share this to you.
I paid attention to the funnel you described and let me tell you something about the story of the site I'm working.
The name is pixoguias and we design and do "study guides" from people in Mexico.
I can really say that is very difficult to make a guide that satisfies everyone.
You talk about making surveys and having empathy for possible customers. First, I want to talk about surveys.
You talk about MonkeySurveys and I think that's a pretty easy way to ask people what do they like or not about our product. It's a little difficult o make everyone happy. Some people like too much text and some other lots of solved exercises. Last time we made a guide for something called Civil Engineering. We added 120 solved exercises and the customer was very mad.
By the way, we sold that same guide to another guy and he was very happy and satisfied with the product. So, I want to thank you about the advice of Surveys.
Next: EMPATHY. I'm sure this is a concept that not all the marketers have in mind... sometimes I've been part of this.. sadly. In Mexico the little enterprises are called "PYMES" and PYMES can do specialised products compared, for example, to Wal Mart. PYMES should think about the customer's needs... PYMES (or MiPYMES) are dynamic, so a product can be modified quicker than in other great enterprises. THIS dynamism is an advantage to make a customer happy, because having empathy we can manipulate the products easier and quicker. So empathy is a nice point you touched in your video.
About Landing Page: do you think is better to send people to a landing page instead to a purchase page directly? I think that YES because, in my opinion, before introducing prices to people, we have to talk about the VALUE of our product, so then, it will be more difficult for the customer to say NO when he/she is aware of the benefits. Important is to sell the customer an experience, NOT JUST A PRODUCT. In my little enterprise, it makes me happy to see that thanks of the material we design, they pass their exams. That's the experience we sell. With the guide we offer free 7 E-Books from our own to teach customers better ways to study.
Next: Purchase Dynamics... Totally Agree: we have to write politics of purchase.
Finally: you say is simple to design this process (funnel, since meeting people to conversion) and that we can use Facebook for this purposes (for example... Facebook Ads?). In my experience, it is a little difficult to define the kind of people we want to reach BUT, I can say that when we REACH "THE PEOPLE", we are making things right.
Selling to the correct people is better than trying to sell to people is not interested in our products. It is a little anoying to receive e-mails from enterprises that talk about products that I'm not interested in.
Nice Post Rand! Thanks!
Great summary. From all items you mention I think customer interviews are crucial, and also feedback from the customer service team. At our company we receive lots of calls and have a put together a very short script to gather basic feedback. Not all questions in the script are asked to all calls, but at least one. We found it helped a lot.
I am now considering online chatting for the same purpose and would appreciate any comments or experience on it
Thanks
Hi Rand,
Hope you are doing great :)
Again the fabulous white board Friday. That's the right approach that we should interview the various people to recognize that they are serious buyers or not. A buyer can come from your employees, customers, suppliers or competitors etc. People buy businesses for different reasons, and this will affect how you pitch your business to them.
BTW very well written, well explained.
Keep up the good work !!
Thanks