// description
A customer journey map visualises the complete experience a customer has with an organisation, from initial awareness through purchase to long-term loyalty. The map typically plots stages across the horizontal axis and layers of information vertically: actions, touchpoints, emotions, pain points, and opportunities. The visual format makes it easy to identify moments that matter most and moments where the experience breaks down.
// history
Customer journey mapping emerged from the convergence of service design, UX research, and customer experience management in the 2000s. It draws on earlier work in service blueprinting and experience mapping. The method was popularised by consulting firms including Adaptive Path and became a standard deliverable in customer experience strategy.
// example
A KDP publisher maps the customer journey from first search to review. Awareness: customer searches "nurse planner" on Amazon. Consideration: clicks on three competing listings. Decision: compares covers and descriptions, reads reviews. Purchase: chooses lowest-price option with best reviews. Delivery: receives the book, opens it. Use: tries the layout for one week. Advocacy: leaves a review (or doesn't). Mapping emotions across the journey reveals a sharp drop at "delivery and first open" — customers feel uncertain about how to use undated planners. The publisher adds a "Getting Started" page as the book's first spread, directly addressing the emotional low point that was suppressing both completion rates and review volume.
// katharyne's take
Map the emotional journey, not just the functional steps. The places where your customer feels confused, anxious, or disappointed are your highest-value improvement opportunities — and they're almost always moments you're not paying attention to because they happen after the sale. For KDP books, the "first five minutes of use" is a make-or-break emotional moment that determines whether a buyer leaves a review or not. A simple "how to use this planner" spread at the front of your book can be worth more reviews than any amount of listing optimisation.
// creative uses
- Map the journey from "Etsy search" to "leaves a review" for your best-selling product. Assign an emotion to each stage: searching (hopeful), clicking your listing (curious), reading the description (evaluating), purchasing (committed but slightly anxious), downloading the file (this is where things often go wrong), using it for the first time (uncertain or delighted). The emotional low points on your map are your product and listing priorities.
- Use journey mapping to design your post-purchase email sequence: instead of sending generic "thanks for buying" emails, map what emotion the buyer is in at 1 hour, 24 hours, 1 week, and 1 month post-purchase. Write each email for the specific emotional state at that stage. The 24-hour email addresses first-use anxiety; the 1-week email asks for feedback before the review window closes.
- Map the journey from "joins email list" to "buys first course" for your audience. The stages between opt-in and purchase are your email nurture sequence — each email addresses the emotion and question your subscriber has at that stage of consideration. This replaces "what should I email this week?" with a purposeful journey design.
// quick actions
- Draw the six-stage journey for your best-selling KDP title or Etsy product on paper (Discover → Consider → Purchase → Receive → Use → Advocate). Under each stage, write one emotion the buyer likely feels. The stages with negative or anxious emotions are your improvement priorities — start with the one that most directly affects whether they leave a review.
- Look at where your review rate sits relative to your sales volume. If you're converting 2% of sales to reviews but expect 5%+, the problem is almost always in the Use and Advocacy stages of the journey — not the product quality. Map those stages specifically and identify what's missing (a setup guide, a follow-up email, a clear review request).
- For your next course launch, map the student journey from "sees the sales page" through "completes module 3" — the point where most students either commit or drop off. Identify the emotional low points between those stages and add one touchpoint (email, video, community prompt) to each low point before launch.
// prompt ideas
Build a customer journey map for a buyer of [my product — e.g. an undated teacher planner on KDP / a Midjourney prompt pack on Etsy]. Map 6 stages from first search to leaving a review. For each stage, describe: the action the buyer takes, the emotion they're likely feeling, and one specific thing I could add or change to improve that stage.
My review rate is lower than expected for [my product]. Help me diagnose where in the post-purchase journey buyers are dropping off. Walk me through the stages from purchase to advocacy and ask me questions to identify where the emotional experience breaks down — then give me 3 concrete fixes.
Design a post-purchase email sequence for [my digital product / KDP book / Etsy template] based on customer journey mapping. The sequence should match the buyer's emotional state at 1 hour, 24 hours, 1 week, and 30 days after purchase — with a specific goal for each email aligned to the journey stage.