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For a Better Customer Experience, Make Your Buying Process Less Efficient

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We ordered Domino’s pizza last weekend.

I know, I know. But hang with me for a moment.

Do you know the scene in the movie Reality Bites where they order Domino’s pizza and Lelaina, played by Winona Ryder, asks, “Do they take checks?”

The last time I ordered Domino’s, that movie was a year old. That’s right. It’s been 28 years.

In the mid-1990s, apps, websites, and pizza trackers didn’t exist. Someone would hang a Domino’s magnet showing its menu on your doorknob, and you’d take it inside and attach it to your fridge. On that menu was … wait for it … pizza. Large or small. 11 toppings. Thick or regular crust.

In 1995, ordering Domino’s pizza was an inherently efficient transaction. I called, ordered the number of pizzas, and specified the toppings. Thirty efficient minutes later, the pizza arrived at my door.

Domino’s became known for that – average, efficient pizza.

@Robert_Rose delivers a #ContentMarketing lesson after he orders @Domino’s pizza for the first time in 28 years via @CMIContent. Click To Tweet

So last week, after three neighbors said we were “missing out,” we ordered Domino’s. I approach the 2023 experience with a 28-year-old expectation for the Domino’s customer experience – an average, efficient pizza.

Domino’s iPhone app stepped up on the “efficient.” The menu has expanded to include chicken, tater tots, sandwiches, pasta, salads, and desserts plus five pizza crust options, but the app got me through all those choices efficiently. I ordered a few pizzas and went a little wild by ordering the cheesy tater tots (don’t judge). The GPS-suggested delivery address was spooky in its accuracy, and away my order went.

Less than 30 minutes later, Domino’s average, efficient pizza and tater tots arrived at my door.

Meh.

The ‘right’ way to buy

When I shared the experience with the friends who recommended Domino’s, they scoffed. “You didn’t do it right,” they said. “You have to customize and always ask for double cheese. You need to add garlic. The basic tots are fine, but the cheddar bacon tots are killer.”

I was fascinated. They indicated the “meh” experience was somehow my fault. I had manifested the suboptimal experience because I didn’t take enough time to order.

I don’t necessarily disagree. But my experience with Domino’s is a great lesson for B2B marketers who facilitate complex sales.

Can friction be a good thing?

Over the last 20 years or so, marketers have worked hard to reduce or remove friction in the buying process. You may have implemented digital technology that said it would “remove the friction from the customer journey.” You’ve streamlined your websites, thinned the product pages, and provided sales enablement scenarios so tightly scripted as to eliminate any ability for a sales rep to “read the room.”

But B2B products and services are complex. Your many “toppings” and “sides” can differentiate your solution or at least make it more contextually valuable to a customer. For example, “marketing cloud” and “marketing hub” technology products offer so many choices. Whether it’s HubSpot, Oracle, Salesforce, or Adobe, their clients haven’t a clue of all the components in the complete package.

Balancing the B2B customer’s journey presents a challenge: How do you offer customized choices without overwhelming the customer?

You introduce friction that may slow down – or pause – the buyer’s journey and provide value that ultimately enhances their overall experience.

Introduce friction to slow down buyers so they appreciate customized choices without being overwhelmed, says @Robert_Rose via @CMIContent. Click To Tweet

I’ve seen a few successful methods used by B2B companies.

Use content-generated data to tailor and prioritize

Many B2B companies use first-party data to get personal rather than to help them target a solution for the person. They focus on the data fields that capture the who and almost ignore the buyer’s why or what.

A smarter B2B content marketing strategy tags data with attributes so you can refine the suggested solutions or highlight unique features that will prompt the customer to pause and become aware of that unique combination.

Default feature packages can differentiate

I learned this lesson the hard way. As the CMO of an enterprise web content management company, I believed one of the greatest features was our flexible approach to content translation and localization. Our customers couldn’t dream up a scenario that we couldn’t meet. We thought it removed friction because if a customer asked, “Can you handle our translation and workflow process,” we would confidently say, “Yes.” However, the brand continually lost customers to solutions with only one translation and localization method.

It turns out customers – on the whole – sought an alternative because they were dissatisfied with their translation and workflow process. They wanted to learn the competition’s default way of doing it rather than make their existing technology bend to their perceived bad process.

By recommending options with verbiage, such as “many customers choose this,” “recommended for you,” or even “editor’s choice,” you slow the customer’s decision, but you also provide easier ways to make their decision.

Sustained audience engagement: Marketing after the transaction

What I call the “dead zone” presents a fantastic opportunity for B2B content marketers to slow the process. The dead zone occurs after the customer says “yes” to your solution and before and/or during delivery and implementation. Emotions run high on both sides. Remember, the endpoint for marketing and sales is the beginning point for the new customer. So the elated sales side usually says, “Leave the customer alone. Don’t slow things down.” While the buyers, though usually happy, can be uneasy. They may lose the “new-car-smell” happiness well before they use the product.

Slowing down by adding friction to this process can actually help. During the dead zone, thought leadership can sustain engagement. Experiences can help the customer get ready, learn, prepare, and generally understand how they can get the most out of what they just bought.

More than upselling the vinyl mats or undercoating for the new car, valuable content marketing experiences enhance the customer’s experience to prevent second thoughts or a lack of enthusiasm when recommending the brand to their peers.

Slower can be easier

Your overall goal should not streamline the buyer’s journey so efficiently that you miss opportunities where the customer could benefit from a pause. In my Domino’s experience, the app was remarkably efficient. It took me through identifying the delivery location and scheduling a delivery time before it even asked what I wanted. Then, the super-efficient configurator zoomed me through the process. Pizza. Big. Thin Crust. Pepperoni and Onions. Tots. Checkout. Done.

Your overall goal should not streamline the buyer’s journey so efficiently that you miss opportunities where the customer could benefit from a pause, says @Robert_Rose via @CMIContent. Click To Tweet

When I selected the first three attributes, it could have replied, “Whoa, did you know that many of our customers in your area say ‘double cheese’ really makes their pizza special?” What if it recognized I hadn’t ordered in a while and offered a welcome-back special, using the most popular orders as a default? I would have had to pause to learn about that package, but perhaps I would have purchased more.  Or maybe I would have made more enjoyable choices.

Remember, sometimes your customers don’t know what they want exactly or have preconceived notions that don’t match the optimal experience. You and your major competitors may offer almost the same thing. But you can differentiate by slowing down the buying process to make it easier for the customers to understand the combinations that make your solution better for them.

As you double down on creating more valuable customers who stay longer and evangelize more loudly, remember it’s better to slow down and delay the right decision than speed up the wrong one.

It’s your story. Tell it well.

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Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute





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