The Data Responder Tutorial

Data processing formula editor

What Is Customer Journey and How to Use It in Practice

Learn what Customer Journey is - and what it is not - and how to use it as a practical measurement map for managing customer experience.

Share

What Customer Journey is – and why many companies misunderstand it

Customer Journey describes the sequence of experiences a customer goes through when interacting with a company. It is not an organizational process or a list of channels, but the customer’s perspective – from the first contact to the ongoing relationship.

The problem is that in many organizations Customer Journey:

  • is created as a presentation rather than a tool,
  • has no connection to data,
  • is not used operationally.


As a result, a document is created that “everyone has seen” but no one actually uses.


What Customer Journey is – and what it is not

Customer Journey is:

  • a description of experiences from the customer’s perspective,
  • a logical sequence of stages and touchpoints,
  • a framework for analyzing experience quality,
  • a decision-making tool.


Customer Journey is not:

  • an internal company process,
  • a list of communication channels,
  • a CRM workflow or a sales funnel,
  • a one-off workshop artifact.


This distinction is critical if the Journey is meant to deliver real value.


What is Customer Journey used for in practice?

A well-designed Customer Journey helps to:

  • understand where the experience is actually created,
  • identify key touchpoints,
  • define where it makes sense to measure quality,
  • compare experiences across different stages of the process.


Customer Journey does not answer the question “what is happening”, but helps answer: “where and why the experience works or breaks down”.


How is a Customer Journey created?

A Customer Journey is created iteratively and always in a simplified form. The goal is not completeness, but usability.

Basic steps:

  • define the beginning and end of the journey,
  • divide it into logical stages from the customer’s perspective,
  • identify key touchpoints,
  • define the customer’s goal at each stage.


At this stage, you do not need personas or emotional maps. Structure is what matters most.


A simple Customer Journey example

For a brick-and-mortar café, a simplified Customer Journey might look like this:

  • Entering the venue
  • Placing an order
  • Waiting
  • Consumption
  • Leaving


Each of these stages:

  • has a different context,
  • comes with different expectations,
  • requires a different approach to measurement.


Measuring “overall satisfaction” without reference to the stage explains nothing.


Customer Journey in Data Responder – a measurement map

In Data Responder, Customer Journey plays a clear, operational role.

The Journey is used to:

  • place forms and terminals within specific stages,
  • link feedback to a concrete touchpoint,
  • analyze experience quality stage by stage,
  • compare results across different moments of the process.


As a result, feedback:

  • is no longer an anonymous opinion,
  • has a clear context,
  • can be meaningfully aggregated and segmented.


Customer Journey thus becomes the axis of the entire measurement system.


Common mistakes when working with Customer Journey

  • overly detailed, overloaded maps,
  • no connection to real touchpoints,
  • creating a Journey without using it later,
  • measuring everything everywhere.


The simpler and more functional the Journey, the greater its value.


Conclusions

Customer Journey is not a goal in itself. Its value lies in the fact that it:

  • structures how you think about customer experience,
  • points to meaningful measurement locations,
  • enables the shift from opinions to decisions.


In Data Responder, Customer Journey is not a presentation – it is a map of experience measurements. Without it, feedback loses context. With it, feedback becomes a real CX management tool.

Time to hear from customers

Start collecting feedback in minutes.

Free Basic plan with 14 days of full Standard access, no credit card required.