Austin Guanzon is the Tier 1 Support Manager for Dialpad, the leading AI-powered customer intelligence platform.
All customers are unique, and there is no one-size-fits-all approach to converting them.
It can be easy to see this as a problem to overcome, but we're here to put a more positive spin on it. Think of these unique attributes as new opportunities to improve your conversion rates.
By identifying different types of customers, you can learn more about them and develop better marketing and selling techniques that target even the most reluctant buyer.
In this article, we’ll break down seven different types of customers and give you the strategies to convert them.
When identifying different types of customers, it can help to look at the customer journey and sales funnel. Where a person is in their buying experience is a good indicator of the type of customer they are and how you can reach them.
Converting customers can be as easy as implementing AI customer service to boost your customer support game. You just need to know who they are and what they expect.
For this guide, we’ll use these tools as a roadmap to identify and target different customer types most effectively.
Interested customers are in the awareness and consideration stage of their journey.
They might be doing research on you, browsing your website, reading online reviews, and comparing prices across different stores. They might even have signed up to your mailing list or downloaded a free software trial.
They’re interested, but they’re not quite ready to purchase yet.
Interested and curious customers have high expectations, and your job is to woo them. With this in mind:
If you have someone’s contact details through an email sign-up or free software trial, you can also:
Regular engagement, proving the value of your products and services, and a streamlined browsing experience can help guide customers along the consideration stage.
Unsure customers are interested, but they’ve gotten sidetracked somewhere in their journey. They were in the consideration stage, and they have yet to make a purchase from your business.
An unsure customer can take a few different forms.
So you were on their radar, but they’ve moved on.
Converting an unsure customer is all about re-engagement.
Strategies like re-targeting and re-engagement can remind an unsure customer about what your brand has to offer.
New customers have left the consideration stage and have made their first purchase. They have the potential to become repeat customers, with opportunities for cross and up-selling. They can also become loyal brand advocates.
Now, your job is to keep converting them. You want to turn new customers into repeat and loyal customers.
Cloud modernization and website or app testing can ensure you’re providing a positive shopping experience that will turn new customers into repeat customers.
Loyal customers purchase products from you and don’t consider going anywhere else. These are active customers who value your brand and what it offers them. They’re not necessarily brand advocates—not yet—but they are loyal to you.
It’s all about maintaining that conversion by cultivating engagement and rewarding customer loyalty. If you can turn loyal customers into brand advocates, even better.
Repeat customers who benefit from that loyalty are much less likely to switch to other brands.
These are similar to loyal customers but even more enthusiastic about your brand. Customers who become brand advocates will refer you to friends and family, sing your praises on social media, and engage with you frequently. They offer powerful social proof that your brand can be trusted.
You already did, so it’s important to go further with advocating customers by proving that you value their ongoing support and feedback. You want to encourage and reward their advocacy.
Brand advocates are one of your most powerful marketing tools, so make sure your conversion strategy includes them.
Lapsed customers are people who have purchased from you in the past but haven’t in a while. You have their contact information, but you don’t have their business right now.
You need to think about why these customers leave. They might have found a cheaper product elsewhere, been enticed by another brand, or simply become busy with day-to-day life.
The thing to remember is that they’re primed to return, given the right incentives.
You already have a relationship with lapsed customers, so re-converting them can be easier than converting new customers.
Dissatisfied customers run the gamut, from complaints to your customer service team to angry social media posts lambasting you to their followers. They have purchased something from you, and they aren’t happy with your products or services.
Angry customers can become a real problem. They will leave you negative reviews, spread bad sentiment, and generally become the opposite of a brand advocate.
It sounds obvious, but disgruntled customers can be difficult to convert. Here’s the good news: unhappy customers can be a blessing in disguise.
Angry customers can convert, and how you handle them can bring other customers with them. If potential customers are conducting research into your brand, they’re bound to come across reviews and social media posts. You can use this as an opportunity to showcase your brand’s dedication to customer experience.
Think of disgruntled customers as an opportunity to be humble, rectify mistakes, and create more conversions in the process.
A customer’s unique attributes and experiences are opportunities to increase conversion rates. By understanding different customer types, you can target them more effectively by meeting them where they are in the customer journey. Insights into your customer also allow you to add personal touches to customer outreach and personalize the customer experience. These factors increase their likelihood of conversion and improve your overall conversion rates.
Start identifying each different type of customer and put these conversion strategies to good use to improve the customer experience and grow your business.
Austin Guanzon is the Tier 1 Support Manager for Dialpad, the leading AI-powered customer intelligence platform. He is a customer retention and technical support expert, with experience at some of the largest tech service companies in the US. You can find him on LinkedIn.