This article is a deep dive to different funnel logics for marketing and sales specialists.
Customers have various paths to purchase depending on their intensity, market awareness and desire.
There are several types of purchase funnels that can be modeled as habit and impulse purchases, pre-determined buying processes, and learning buying processes. The logic has meaningful impact on customer's customer journey and consideration time as well as your capacity to influence customer's decision:
This type of of customer path defines customers with little to no consideration prior to making choices. These are often small, low-cost decisions for customers. When a customer is making higher-level decisions, it is possible to attach impulse decisions as part of a negotiation. By doing so, it is possible to upgrade from a simple product sale to introducing a solution or other case-study model. Doing this further commits the customer to the relationship and can help exclude competition that does not have access to the same offerings and aggregates.
Another approach to connecting decisions is to apply default options as part of the customer journey and position small impulse decisions inside a customer journey. Great examples of these are Airplane tickets and travel in general. The travel market is strongly driven by aggregators like expedia.com, hotels.com, booking.com, trivago.com etc. This is why the brands must look cheap at the surface and input additional revenue drivers inside the booking process. In airline tickets it is now default, that the airline offers you a chance to select your seats already at the booking stage, book luggage, buy canceling insurance etc. These decisions are offered as defaults for customers and are small decisions at individual level but represent major revenue and profit share in the big picture.
The customer is familiar with the market and key players in it. They are also likely to have a favorite from the beginning. When the customers are searching for information about the options, they are using branded keywords and product names more often than category or interest area keywords. In terms of adaptation, these markets are familiar for the customers and they feel comfortable navigating in them. As people are familiar with the options, it also means strong volumes, mainstream markets and often higher buying frequency.
The customer might not feel secure or comfortable about the area of decision making. The area of interest could be new to the customer, the solutions and brands in the market are not familiar, the price levels, characteristics of the available options are new. This kind of situation might represent an established market, but the customer is just learning about it or this could represent a market in which customers only buy very rarely. In these journeys customers mostly search by using keywords about the need, category of subject area solution terms (eg. Mortgage or home financing instead of the bank name).
Understanding the funnel logic is also beneficial for sales and channel development in general. If you create combined insights from market dynamics map and funnels, it will help you determine what kind of digital channel and marketing model will deliver the best results for your specific use case and serve your company best at full portfolio level.
For example, if you are a challenger and operate in a market where people’s behavior is about learning a new path, you need a lot of content and advice on your website. Writing articles and giving clear advice to customers will drive your SEO and page rank higher in search engines and deliver healthy profits. This is something that you can do with rather small amounts without investing a lot in brand building. Depending on your goals, resources, and capabilities, you need to find the tools that suit you best. When you have a portfolio of offerings, they might have different behavior logic and you can make combinations that improve your average deal size and potentially create a competitive advantage that improves conversion rates.