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The Hidden Half of Every Customer Journey
July 12th , 2025
When You Need a Customer Journey Map?
The golden rule: Any service process that steps outside your app or system even for a moment needs a full customer journey map.
Chat with support, phone calls, emails, or any other touchpoint? Map the entire process, not just the screens.
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Why It Can Be Helpful?
Mapping beyond digital touchpoints helps you:
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Uncover failure points and edge cases you hadn't considered
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Identify all stakeholders involved in the service process
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Understand each participant's role and how they should behave in this specific context
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Spot operational inefficiencies before they become customer problems ​
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A Few Tips
1. Define Who Does What, Where, and How
For every step in your service process, specify:
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Who performs the action
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How it's performed (phone, email, in-person, etc.)
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Where it happens (which system, platform, or location)
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2. Use Active Voice and Clear Ownership
Write each step as an active action with a clear owner, not passive descriptions.
Bad: "Customer receives SMS"
Good: "Service rep sends pre-written SMS to customer via help desk system"
The second version answers: How? Who triggers it? Which system? This clarity identifies potential failure points.
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3. Color-Code Participants
Use different colors for customers, service reps, automated systems, and third parties. This shows when each participant is involved and helps balance workload.
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4. Eliminate Ping-Pong Interactions
Watch out for this common pattern:
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Ask customer for information
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Customer provides information
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Review internally
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Get back to customer
This creates delays, frustration, and higher operational costs.
Look for ways to reduce these back-and-forth interactions wherever possible.
Example:
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Collecting customer information through a form
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Using automation to analyze it immediately
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Providing personalized recommendations based on their data
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Eliminating the need for service rep intervention
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The Bottom Line
If your customer journey only shows what happens on screens, you're missing half the story. Map every touchpoint to design smoother experiences for everyone.​
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