Products produce behaviors

A couple of weeks back I bought a new ereader from Kobo. My goal was to get out of the Amazon ecosystem which has been getting steadily worse and worse.

Since then I've been reading more and more, especially since I found a way to get longer web essays onto it (e.g. 20-30 minute reads that are too long for the computer or on a phone).

Even though I already had an ereader, my behavior and habits locked me into reading in one specific way. The new ereader was different enough that I experimented with how I read and ended up creating new behaviors around it.

When selling or communicating with brand new customers, you should take this behavior creation into account. What new behaviors can your product enable? Are the customers expecting a new behavior to arrive with the product or will that be unexpected? How can you help guide a customer to start and stick with a new behavior?

A customer buying a sample pack of running gels is probably looking to start running marathon distances. One buying easy-on-the-stomach ones is probably already running long and having "issues". The behavior the first expects (e.g. long weekend runs) will vary greatly from the second (e.g. only running with pit-stops nearby...)

We are all bundles of habits and behaviors. The more you can cater to and support your customers' intended and unexpected behaviors, the more satisfied they'll be.

For analyzing buying behaviors, Repeat Customer Insights uses a few different models to tease out what buyers are doing. With a focus on long-term customers, it can help you find and keep your most loyal customers.

Eric Davis

Learn what your customers are actually doing instead of just guessing

One of the best ways to build a sustainable business starts by getting your customers to come back. Mastering that simple process can be difficult, but builds a lifelong business.
Repeat Customer Insights can help you understand your customer's behavior. With its collection of behavior reports, you can see what they're actually doing instead of guessing and having your efforts fall flat.

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Topics: Customer behavior