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Personalization 101: What it is, importance, and examples

Use consumer data to perfect the customer experience (CX) with personalized products, customer service, and messaging.

Af Patrick Grieve, Contributing Writer

Senest opdateret August 21, 2023

Abstract art

If you’ve ever felt disappointed when someone you care about gives you a thoughtless gift (making you feel like they didn’t listen or care), you already know how important personalization is. Your customers are no different: People like knowing that somebody is paying attention to their preferences, meeting their expectations, and creating a special customer experience (CX).

In this article, we’ll explain what personalization looks like for businesses, why businesses shouldn’t underestimate its value, and how to carry out a CX personalization strategy. If you want to jump ahead, click on the section that interests you most for a quick answer.

What is personalization?

Personalization in business and marketing is the act of using known information about a customer to tailor that individual’s experience or interaction with your brand.

“I look at personalization as adding familiarity for end-users,” says Jason Maloney, a customer success manager at Grafana Labs.

“As humans, we are drawn to the familiar. We are drawn to our comfort zone. So, whenever a person is interacting with a company, they want that sensation of, ‘Oh, I feel like they know me, and they understand my wants and needs.’”

Of course, getting to that level of personalization is challenging. It requires lots of data to meet customer expectations and the ability to manage the CX throughout each stage of the customer journey.

Personalization vs. customization

Both personalization and customization refer to the process of making adjustments to suit individual preferences. The difference lies in who controls the change.

  • Personalization: Businesses use customer data to understand consumer preferences, tailor content, and personalize service.
  • Customization: Customers make modifications to control their own experience.

Why is personalization important?

Businesses should make an effort to personalize customer-facing content and communications. Personalization is an integral part of sales and support processes, and consumers continue to expect relevant content and contextual experiences.

Personalization is important for a few reasons:

  1. It’s the standard across several industries. Today, personalization is everywhere, and if you aren’t offering it, customers may feel underwhelmed by your organization.
  2. It impacts customer sentiment. Customers like to feel that the places they shop appreciate their patronage. Companies prioritizing personalization can often turn buyers into repeat customers and encourage customer loyalty.
  3. It increases customer retention. Consumers are more likely to become repeat buyers when they receive personalized experiences; 77 percent of business leaders now recognize that more personalization leads to higher customer retention rates.

How can businesses tailor the customer experience using data?

Think about how TikTok recommends the perfect videos for you on your For You Page (FYP), how Netflix knows which shows you’ll like based on your viewing history, or how Spotify curates playlists using your listening history and information about your favorite artists.

Your business can also create a hyper-personalized customer experience for each customer by collecting certain types of customer data metrics and related CX key performance indicators (KPIs).

Use various types of customer data to prioritize product updates and personalize content, messaging, gifts, and sales offers.

5 top data types for improving personalization
  • Attitudinal: Conduct surveys and feedback forms to understand a customer’s opinions about a product or service. Use this information to brainstorm ideas for new products and upgrades.
  • Behavior: Track customer behaviors throughout the sales process to understand the why behind their purchase decisions. Armed with this information, implement strategies to reduce cart abandonment rates, speed up the sales journey, and encourage customers to try new products.
  • Demographic: Create customer segments based on age, income, relationship status, gender, education, or other personal factors. Use this information to identify segment trends and get your messaging right and give your sales team an edge.
  • Firmographic: Hone in on individual business leaders with data about their company’s industry, location, size, or number of customers. Share this information with your sales team so they pitch products and services to the businesses that are most likely to make a purchase.
  • Interaction: Monitor when and how customers interact with your product, website, or employees. Using this information, investigate service gaps and add resources that help cultivate a better CX.

How to build an effective personalization strategy: 7 best practices

Even if you apply personalization efforts to sales and support endeavors, it all boils down to marketing. Businesses must collect and analyze data to understand separate customer segments and succeed in personalizing customer experiences.

In this section, we will discuss seven considerations you should keep top of mind as you develop a personalization strategy. They include:

  1. Leveraging service data
  2. Protecting customer privacy
  3. Providing proactive support
  4. Tailoring the user experience
  5. Personalizing support on your customers’ favorite channels
  6. Customizing knowledge base articles
  7. Personalizing content with sales objectives in mind

1. Leverage untapped service data across marketing, product, and sales

It’s easy for different departments to silo themselves (and their data) off, but personalization is most effective when the people spearheading campaigns can see the whole picture.

That’s why teams need to utilize software that stores customer data in a single, centralized location. By creating a 360 customer view, employees can access key information and personalize interactions with their customers.

Some different types of customer data that companies can and should collect include:

  • Personal identification (e.g., name, address, or date of birth)

  • Website interactions

  • Previous orders

  • Current order status

  • Prior customer service interactions

  • Device information

  • Payment preferences

  • Plan or subscription details

2. Create a plan to protect customer data privacy

Many people don’t trust big data—the collection and computational analysis of information from a myriad of sources. But data collection won’t harm a business’s reputation or sales as long as employees gather it safely and ethically.

Consumer privacy laws vary by location. But for U.S. businesses that prefer to err on the side of caution, adhere to the European Union’s more stringent guidelines—the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).

In the U.S., businesses must invest in security measures to protect users’ financial and healthcare data, at the minimum. For more detailed information, look up your state’s consumer data privacy laws.

Some general data privacy best practices you should follow regardless of your business or customers’ locations include:

  • Collecting only essential data

  • Encrypting sensitive information

  • Installing firewalls and antivirus software

  • Keeping your system up to date

  • Requiring multi-factor authentication

  • Posting your privacy policy prominently

  • Understanding what information is illegal to store

3. Provide proactive support

Resolve issues before they become problems and lead to customer churn. A major benefit of customer data is that it allows you to provide proactive support to accurately predict each customer’s unique needs for more convenience.

Personalization especially offers added value for longtime customers and those who shop with you often, racking up a large lifetime value (LTV). While many businesses wouldn’t necessarily prioritize one customer over another, these longtime customers do tend to expect businesses to anticipate and accommodate their needs with less oversight.

To prevent certain issues from escalating or ever occurring, be sure to:

  • Reference historical context

  • Review purchase history

  • Assess which knowledge base articles customers read

  • Deliver support on the platforms that specific customer or firmographic segments frequently use

Ultimately, the goal should be to recommend the most relevant resources and to check in at the right times to gauge customer sentiment.

4. Leverage customer sentiment to tailor the customer experience

Don’t just rely on raw demographic data to create unique customer experiences. Strive to understand customer feelings and opinions on an individual level. This can provide insight into what they want from a business relationship and help you support them better.

Then, use the data to personalize experiences. Some examples of this include:

  • Content and product recommendations

  • Segment-based pricing tiers

  • Additional payment methods and plans

  • User-specific interest rates

  • Promotional offers

  • Sales and support messaging

If you’re unsure of the best personalization or marketing strategy to meet your goals, consider A/B testing to flush out the best way to utilize the data.

5. Personalize support on your customers’ favorite channels

When a lead expresses clear interest in a product or service, they expect quick, personalized responses. The same goes for customers who need help using a product or troubleshooting an issue.

According to the Zendesk Customer Experience Trends Report 2023, 59 percent of consumers want companies to utilize their available data to personalize experiences. Communication personalization can come in the form of:

  • Live chats

  • Email marketing

  • Surveys

  • Phone calls

Generally speaking, any time a customer interacts with an agent or a chatbot, businesses should consider it an opportunity for personalization.

6. Create targeted knowledge base articles

Leverage customer data and help center software like Zendesk to identify content opportunities, share useful information, and personalize knowledge base content recommendations.

To predict what information customers will benefit from, track the web pages they visit most often, the calls to action (CTAs) and interactives they click on, and the personalized email subject lines that grab their attention and lead to conversions.

All of this information is useful because it provides insight into customers’ unique needs and interests. With customer experience software, businesses can create a knowledge base for each of their brands, audiences, and regions.

You can further knowledge base personalization by:

  • Creating a personalized content feed based on authors, topics, and tags

  • Recommending content based on reading or purchase history

  • Writing content with specific customer segments in mind

  • Revamping old content to better meet user needs

  • Surveying customers to identify knowledge gaps

7. Personalize in a way that’s helpful for customers

Personalization often starts before a consumer is even a customer, and it can have a high impact on customer satisfaction, or lack thereof. Unfortunately, the Zendesk Customer Experience Trends Report 2023 shows that 72 percent of business leaders are using personalization plans that are extremely misaligned with customer desires.

Successful personalization starts with using data to understand your customers. From there, you can personalize the content, offers, and messaging consumers encounter at various touchpoints.

You can personalize the customer experience through:

  • Outreach: Source prospect data so you can follow up on leads with custom offers and targeted messaging.
  • Gated content: Assess customer purchase history and the help center resources they use to create valuable ebooks, white papers, and other gated content, requiring visitors to fill out a lead capture form to access them.
  • Presentations: Use customer feedback and internal data to hit the points that matter most to prospects to keep them engaged and increase deal-won rates.
  • Landing pages: Cover relevant value propositions on sales pages, and speak your customer’s language to boost conversion rates and your bottom line. To do this effectively, evaluate customer data and craft the landing page with specific customer segments in mind.
  • Ad personalization: Create offers and tweak messaging to cater to the users that search for specific products using analytics.
  • Upselling or cross-selling: Use customer data to share information with customers about the add-ons, upgrades, and additional products that are most likely to be useful to them during customer service interactions. Customer data enables support teams to add personalization to each touchpoint and become high-value revenue drivers.
Stat from trends report

What are the best channels for personalization?

You can find success through personalization on most social media and messaging platforms. However, some common channels businesses use to optimize the digital experience include:

  • Website

  • Mobile apps

  • Email

  • Text messages and live chat

  • Knowledge base

3 successful personalization examples

Now, let’s look at how three Zendesk customers use data to create exceptional customer experiences.

1. GlassesUSA.com

GlassesUSA.com

GlassesUSA.com integrated the Ada chatbot with Zendesk to deliver personalized conversations at scale. The glasses retailer’s chatbot can also help customers with their orders, prescriptions, and insurance. Along with hundreds of chatbot flows based on customer data, the bot can answer most simple questions around the clock.

But perhaps more importantly, the chatbot captures key information about the customer, equipping agents with contextual information that helps them prompt meaningful conversations and speed up resolution times.

2. BoxyCharm by IPSY

BoxyCharm by IPSY

BoxyCharm by IPSY is a popular makeup subscription service that mails users full-sized beauty products to their door each month. The beauty company blends personalization and customization to provide a novel customer experience and introduce subscribers to buzzworthy brands.

Here are a couple of ways IPSY impresses with personalization:

  • Interactivity: Users take the Beauty Quiz so BoxyCharm can send the best, most relevant products to customers. Also, with access to social messaging and customer data, agents are empowered to enrich customer conversations.
  • Customization: Each month, IPSY allows BoxyCharm subscribers to handpick a deluxe product to put in their Glam Bag.

3. Upwork

Upwork

Upwork, a popular freelancing platform, shares a personalized job feed with freelancers so they can quickly apply to the most relevant opportunities.

The platform asks users questions when they create their accounts to collect data about their preferences. Some of these questions include:

  • Have you freelanced before?

  • What’s your biggest goal for freelancing?

  • How would you like to work?

The platform uses freelancer answers to recommend jobs. It also allows for customization, as users can filter openings or toggle between the best match, most recent listings, jobs in their country, and previously saved jobs feeds.

Business administrators can also see best matches based on factors such as experience or pay rate.

This year’s biggest CX trends point to a desire for greater personalization and more immersive experiences.

Shifting toward privacy and transparency

The personalization-privacy paradox isn’t going away anytime soon.

While many customers expect businesses to use the data they have to personalize experiences, 75 percent of consumers still feel wary about sharing their personal data for the sake of personalization because they don’t know how companies will use it.

To ease these worries, companies should tout their commitment to privacy and protection to reassure customers. They should also be more upfront about how and why they capture customer data to build trust and comply with regulations.

Don’t just ask customers to click “accept” on a consent form written in miles and miles of legalese. Instead, provide a clear, concise explanation of what data you want to collect and how you’ll use it to improve the customer experience to reassure skeptical customers.

Moving toward messaging

Many companies have quickly embraced the consumer trend and prioritized adding messaging channels—a move that’s paying off.

Customer service messaging continues to surge in popularity. Nearly 70 percent of customers say they feel more confident doing business with a brand that offers live chat because users perceive the business as reliable and transparent.

A 2022 Zippia study found that 41 percent of customers prefer live chat and messaging over other communication methods due to convenience and immediacy.

Zippa stat

As a communication method, messaging seamlessly fits into the customer service personalization model by allowing customers to reach companies through their preferred social media platforms, including apps like WeChat, WhatsApp, and Messenger.

But perhaps most importantly, messaging can help bridge that gap between data collection and transparency. When a customer provides information, human agents and chatbots can ask if the customer consents to your business storing their data.

Focusing on leveraging customer data across departments

The Zendesk CX Trends Report 2023 found that 80 percent of organizations plan to train and equip their support teams to aid in revenue generation in the near future. The key to this, and better support experiences, is eliminating data silos and encouraging cross-functional collaboration.

“We know that customers hate repeating themselves,” says Sam Chandler, director of startup success at Zendesk. “But that doesn’t just mean having to repeat themselves in conversations with customer support—that’s a really old-school way of looking at it.”

Strive to create experiences where customers never have to repeat themselves in any context. To do that, you’ll need a powerful platform for recording every interaction and personal detail customers share.

Keep customer context at your fingertips

In today’s digital landscape, businesses have more access to customer data than ever before. Leverage these tools to gather context and use the data to craft memorable and engaging experiences.

An open and flexible platform like Zendesk is a great place to house customer data. When connected to sales and support software, Zendesk automatically captures each customer’s interaction history. Sales reps and support agents can then easily access this data to provide faster, personalized experiences. Show your customers just how well you understand and value them to earn their trust and loyalty.

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