Robert Gonye
According to Customer Science Digest emotions rule your customers’ buying decisions. Rationality weighs in sometimes, too, but often, it’s the emotional side that drives customers to buy. These two parts of us, the emotional and the rational represent the two ways of thinking that serve as the foundation for understanding customer behaviour.
Knowing how these two systems of thinking work together and, in some cases, against each other to make decisions is vital to achieving customer-driven growth.
The systems represent the fast and emotional system and the slow and deliberate system. The way these two systems process information is critical to understand to optimise your customer experience management. It makes logical thinking and solutions to math problems possible.
The two systems work together and against each other
Both of these systems are crucial to understanding customer behaviour. Each of them has a job to do and criteria that trigger it.
Moreover, they also work together to make decisions or overrule one another, as the case may be. As customer experience managers, it’s critical to know how all of this works to respond appropriately to get customers to do what you want them to do.
Recently, I experienced a time when the two systems were working against each other on a buying decision. I bought an IT equipment unit 2 years ago that is now falling apart and needs to be replaced. I went to the website to check out the new models and learned about a subscription service where, for a monthly fee of about 8 dollars, you can trade in your unit every few months for a new one.
My two systems had very different reactions to this service. My rational system weighed in that this program, while attractive, wasn’t great for me. There would be months where I couldn’t use the unit at all, even though I was still paying the fee. However, my intuitive system didn’t care and just wanted to use the shiny new home support IT unit. The rational system won. Or, at least it has so far!
Your customers have similar “conversations” going on as well. The result of these system interactions is the decisions you see play out in your experience every day. It is also why you should recognise how they work together and appeal to each of them in the appropriate moments of your experience to help customers make better decisions for themselves.
Another example of appealing to the two systems is the Covid-19 Vaccine roll-out. Some people need persuasion to get the vaccine.
However, it would not be enough to make people feel good about it, which would appeal to the intuitive system. It is also necessary to back up the good feelings with facts and figures that would appeal to the rational system.
Likewise, you can’t only give facts and figures; it is essential to recognise and address the feelings of reluctance some people have for the vaccine to make them feel secure.
Another critical element to understand about the two systems is that you can train your mind — system with your customer experience.
I bring this point up to explain that there is sometimes value in training your customers’ Intuitive thought process to navigate your complex customer experience. It becomes part of the process and being “in the know” becomes something your customer’s value.
However, having a challenging experience that your customer’s workaround can be a negative also. If you are going to try this, make sure it is deliberate and doesn’t create a feeling that your customers remember as a negative.
Anticipate how you will appeal to customers
Knowing that people have both systems at work in decision making, you can sometimes anticipate which approach is more important at any moment in your experience. For example, in customer segmentation, you may have customers that don’t care a lot about this purchase in your experience. That means these customers likely handle this automatically, which is governed by the intuitive system. You can then respond by appealing to the intuitive system with your design to make it as easy as possible for them to make a buying decision for your product or service. However, some people might care a great deal about this decision, so they might need more appeals to the rational system to move forward.
Different segments might make this decision in a different setting, which can be distracting or occur when they have fewer resources to devote to the decision (like when they are tired). Appealing to the easy and automatic Intuitive System would be beneficial here also. It is also essential to understand that you can meet customers where they are, or move them to where you want them to be.
You can design into your experience ways to accommodate for their predominant system at any given moment, or you can opt to change your process to look for a better time to move forward. You cannot ignore the customer’s state of being and charge ahead because that is what is best for you. If you are appealing to the rational and need more emotional appeals, or vice versa, you will fail.
So what should you do with this information?
People all have both systems working during decision-making to different extents and with varying amounts of collaboration. Here are a few practical things you can do to improve your customer experience to influence customer behaviour in your favour:
Understand where your customers are coming from mentally.
What process are customers bringing with them to the decision? If you are segmenting, consider whether your target customer is likely to be more rational or emotional in the setting you have.
Can you move them to one or the other if necessary? Figuring out where customers allows you to meet them where they are or move them where you want them to be.
Design it into your experience. Once you understand where the customer is mentally, determine how they got there. Think about what happened right before this decisive moment. Is there any way you can modify that moment to make this moment easier for them?
Ensure you understand the different customer segments. Will different segments need different prompts to get them in the proper environment for making a decision? Some customers might not think this decision is that important; others might feel the opposite.
These feelings will affect which system of thinking they employ in the decision-making. Ensure that you have the right ones cued up for the varying types of customers you have to make it easy for more of them to do business with you. Understanding how customers make a decision is a critical part of any customer experience behaviour.
Customer behaviour is the result of interactions between the intuitive system and the rational system. Appealing to both of these systems in different ways is essential for your customers to make the decision you want them to, which is the kind that delivers customer-driven growth.
Robert Gonye is a Business Growth Expert and Influencer. He writes in his personal capacity.




