Combining CX and Content Marketing is essential for optimizing the customer experience and driving business growth. Discover how we do it at Raven:
In order to delve into this path, it's necessary to first understand, from my own experience, what Customer Experience (CX) and Content Marketing are.
CX is defined as the broadest scope of a customer's experience throughout a journey, which can involve experiencing a complete service or even purchasing a product from scratch. In both cases, there are different touchpoints with varying characteristics and stakeholders involved. However, they all share the same goal: delivering an experience with attributes aimed at meeting business goals and customer satisfaction.
On the other hand, Content Marketing is the strategy that involves creating relevant and valuable content to introduce a product or service, as well as to attract and/or retain new customers. This strategy is present in the direct interactions customers have when learning about or purchasing a product or service. Therefore, content is not limited to text; it also includes graphic and sometimes physical elements. It serves to inform, educate, and entertain potential customers.
Analyzing, building, optimizing: How has this worked in practice?
Today, many companies often work on these two strategies in silos and not unified. Furthermore, marketing departments often have too much data and may not be focused on optimizing the total customer experience effectively. At Raven, we operate a data-driven Growth strategy, focusing on capturing value.
This is why we emphasize the importance of combining CX with Content Marketing within a Growth strategy for our clients, whether it's about attracting, acquiring, or retaining to capture value. The goal is to adapt to the global customer's needs rather than solely focusing on generating sales from a purely business perspective.
This should be done by maximizing the existing data collected by Analytics departments in companies, which includes current customer segmentation, demographic data, conversion data, NPS, branding, and more. These data are enablers that allow us to propose solutions at each touchpoint a user has with the product or service. Understanding these data helps us optimize and test the experience to enhance it.
Finally, this combination allows us to propose solutions more aligned with both specific customer needs and business goals, always with a Customer-Centric Approach.
Let's get to work: How is it put into practice?
In practice, let's imagine that we have a flow in which the goal is to lead the user to acquire a credit card. The customer has two access points: one that is 100% online and another by phone, combining both online and offline worlds. For both cases, there are different touchpoints:
Illustrative example, not exhaustive