Are you losing potential customers because of bad user experience?You can have the greatest product ever, but if the user experience is poor, you’ll lose out on sales.
To help you know how to improve the customer experience on your site, I interviewed an expert on the matter, Darren Krape, Senior UX Designer at Amazon.
I meet Darren when I led a seminar on Digital Diplomacy at the Dept. of State and he was a guest speaker. He had played a critical role in assisting the US Embassy in Cairo with digital communications and is an expert on social media and the Arab Spring.
Darren Krape presenting to senior Foreign Service Officers in my 2-Day Digital Diplomacy Seminar at the Foreign Service Institute just outside DC.
But now, he works on user experience design at Amazon.
In a world where there’s no data like more data, Amazon is an e-commerce gold standard, having optimized their user experience against terabytes of data about how people use their site.
Photo by Jerry Wang on Unsplash
At Amazon, the CX team certainly knows that, in order to pull in more sales, you need not only good marketing, but a rock-solid user interface, and ease-of-use.
As you dig more into your conversion funnel, it becomes clear that UX is the customer journey. It is where branding, design, usability, and function come together or collide.
So, before you launch a product, test. Test different versions of the same page and see which one converts better. Swap out calls to action text, buttons colors, images, and headlines.
“If you have a user test with 5 or 6 people and 3 of them struggle with it, it’s pretty clear evidence that that particular thing needs to be fixed,” said Darren.
Narrow down what is or is not an issue. It's as important for Amazon as it for those building a B2B customer journey.
There are many reasons people will choose one product over another. But if your potential customers are consistently going to the competition, it may be time to learn how to improve the customer experience by decreasing any friction in the buyer journey.
How to improve your customer experience
Creating the least amount of friction as possible at each stage of the marketing funnel is the secret to a seamless customer journey. It’s about breaking the process down into a bunch of micro conversions.
“For example, the less information you collect during the sign-on or purchase process, the better. Any additional bit of information is additional friction to the user,” Darren pointed out.
When trying to get sign-ups, make it easy. All they really need is an email address.If you’re offering a free demo or trial, don’t ask for credit card information upfront. Nothing kills a freemium model quicker than requiring a credit card to sign up. You don’t need a credit card to try Zoom or Slack. B2B growth marketing is about getting customer trials.
“The incredible power of free is a valuable tool for distribution and virality,” writes Reid Hoffman in his book Blitzscaling: The Lightning-Fast Path to Building Massively Valuable Companies.
Once they’re in your system, you can nurture them through email cadences and work to onboard them.
In the early stages of Amazon, one friction point was shipping times.
“I don’t want to have to wait 7 days for my thing when I can just go down to the local store and get it in 20 minutes,” said Darren.
After they realized it was a key purchase considerati...