Creating a Stellar Retail Customer Experience — My Complete Guide

In marketing, where I’ve spent my career, my mission is to nudge customers to buy. But sometimes marketers focus so much on the funnel that they forget about making a great experience. When retail customer experience (CX) is poor, customers may walk away.

But when you create a memorable experience, you’ll earn a brand advocate and repeat business. 81% of customers say a positive customer service experience increases the chance they’ll make another purchase, so CX impacts your bottom line.Download Now: Free Customer Journey Map Templates

I spoke with three CX leaders to find out what makes a great customer experience, how to take an omnichannel approach to bring technology and in-store spaces together, and retail CX examples to inspire you.

Table of Contents

What is retail customer experience?

Retail CX is how a customer perceives your brand, influenced by every customer interaction before, during, and after a purchase. Both digital, phone, and in-store experiences contribute to your CX. Retail CX can be positive or negative — a value-add or a detractor — so it’s important to get it right.

Why a Good Retail Customer Experience is Important

CX is about much more than giving customers the warm touchy-feelies. Here’s what CX can do for your retail business.

1. Differentiate your brand from customers.

Your customer can find the exact same product at many stores, so how do you differentiate yourself to gain their business? When I shop, I weigh price, convenience, and shipping options, but I also weigh customer experience. How easy will my shopping process be, and what kind of support will I have if there’s an issue?

2. Drive customer loyalty and repeat purchases.

When customers have a good experience, they’re more likely to return and buy again. Inversely, just one bad experience will prompt one in three customers to walk away from a brand they love.

“Ultimately, if you are not elevating your customer experience strategy to be the strategic part of your business, you won’t have staying power. You will see a significantly large percentage of what I call lapsed customers— who buy from you one time, and then they never repeat the purchase,” says Zack Hamilton.

Hamilton is a senior vice president and head of growth strategy and enablement at parcelLab. Hamilton has advised companies from Apple to Dick’s Sporting Goods on retail CX.

Simply put, good experiences create customer loyalty, repeat purchases, and customer advocacy. It’s simple for retail customers to walk away, so bad experiences create customer churn.

3. Reduce customer acquisition costs.

Your customer acquisition cost (CAC) is the total cost of sales and marketing to gain a new customer. When your CX is poor, like a disorganized store or a bad online checkout experience, you’re less likely to convert them to make a purchase. That means you need to spend more money bringing more customers to your store or website before making a sale. Bringing back an existing customer costs much less than acquiring a new one, keeping your costs lower.

4. Grow revenue.

I don’t have to spell it out for you. Happy returning customers plus lower costs equal more revenue and lower costs. Good CX contributes to a healthy, growing business. Companies with poor CX will always struggle to thrive.

“If you don’t elevate your customer experience, you won’t have engaged customers that drive loyalty,” cautions Hamilton. “So your customer acquisition cost will always be very high, and you won’t be able to compete with your profitability margins. Ultimately, you will go out of business because you’re not making the margins that you need to make.”

How to Improve Your Retail Customer Experience

The last decade has brought fundamental change to retail. Self-checkouts, mobile apps, membership programs, ecommerce, and curbside pickup have reinvented how people shop. But is all of it beneficial? Here’s how to improve your retail CX and create a stellar shopping experience.

In-Store Customer Experience

Four out of five purchases still take place in a store, so brick-and-mortar is still king. Here’s how to create a welcoming, efficient store experience that drives sales.

1. Design around what your customers want.

First, recognize that there is no one-size-fits-all approach when it comes to retail experiences. When I walk into a small boutique, I’m looking for a different experience than I get at Target. I’m likely looking for specialist recommendations and advice, rather than shopping an entire aisle of choices and picking up some groceries with my makeup.

I have a mission, and your job is to design an experience that helps me accomplish it. Resist the impulse to be swayed by every new trend or imitate what big box stores are doing — it may not be what your customers want.

2. Empower your frontline staff.

Staff members are responsible for delivering your brand experience, and they can make or break it.

“My interaction with your employee is my brand experience. A great store experience has to be wrapped up in an incredible experience with the frontline team,” advises Hamilton. “If you‘re a luxury boutique like a Neiman Marcus, your goal is for a customer to feel bold and empowered coming out of the boutique. If your employees don’t feel bold and empowered, they can’t help the customer feel bold and empowered.”

To empower your frontline staff, consider the employee experience as well as the customer experience. Keep appropriate staffing levels, train and treat your staff well, and empower them to make decisions that will turn a negative customer experience around.

3. Enhance your store layout and design.

Create an inviting atmosphere in your store with wide aisles, clear signage, and visual merchandising. You can use lighting, furniture, music, wall color, and even scents to create your ideal atmosphere. Strategic product placement encourages customers to explore the store more and find relevant products.

You can also consider immersive experiences like dining at Restoration Hardware’s showroom in a real-life historical estate.

4. Integrate technology.

Technology can play a huge role in improving a customer’s experience. For instance, it can help them navigate the store to find what they need faster.

The Home Depot pioneered an app feature to help customers locate an item by aisle and bin number. Now, Target and many others have adopted this feature. Digital signage, interactive displays, and price-check kiosks also help customers to find relevant products and check out faster.

Alex Campbell, co-founder and chief innovation officer at Vibes, believes that mobile technology can improve the customer experience and help customers achieve their mission. 75% of people say that text messages routinely drive them to purchase from brands, but these texts need to be on-brand, personalized, and useful.

For example, a shopper can add an offer to their phone’s mobile wallet at home. Then, when they walk in the store, geofencing reminds them with a prompt to use the coupon and save money.

“It‘s interesting to take a step back and look at what a customer’s mission is when they get to your store. How do we use mobile to make it easier?” says Campbell.

Online Customer Experience

With ecommerce, it’s harder to keep shoppers’ attention and easier for them to comparison shop. It would take you all afternoon to drive to five stores, but you can shop at five ecommerce sites in a tidy half hour.

Here’s how to catch and keep your customers’ attention online and create a great experience.

1. Nail your online store design, navigation, and checkout.

Three-quarters of ecommerce sites have mediocre to poor performance when it comes to homepage and category navigation, according to Baymard Institute. Simply put, customers can’t find what they need. The categories may be too confusing, or the filtering options don’t work well.

Checkout is another sticking point for customers, with a 70% cart abandonment rate in 2024. Customers give up when the checkout process is too long, the shipping and return policies aren’t clear upfront, or when unexpected fees show up during checkout.

Create a user-friendly website, offer a guest checkout option to let customers checkout without creating an account, and offer multiple payment options for a great customer experience.

2. Meet your customers where they are.

When customers have a product question or need support, they’ll reach for whichever communication channel is most familiar and convenient. In many cases, that’s text and social media.

While I managed social media for a consumer brand, I saw people reaching out on Facebook Messenger or X for just about anything, from product requests to complaints.

With social commerce, customers are completing their entire shopping experience through platforms like TikTok or Instagram — they may never come to your website. More and more, we as consumers want to reach brands on whichever channel is most convenient, whether that’s messaging or social media.

“People don’t want to make 1-800 calls anymore. We’re seeing the trend that calling is massively going down, and traffic on your websites and apps is massively up,” shares Gaurav Passi, founder and CEO at Zingly.ai. “It’s super critical for brands to engage where their customers are, and right now, that is websites, messaging, digital properties, texting, and WhatsApp.”

Most of the time, customers only engage with a brand when something is wrong, which means your interaction isn’t starting in a positive place. Find the balance of proactive communicating with customers without annoying them — and that’s where personalization comes in.

3. Personalize, personalize, personalize.

With millions of website pages and products at their fingertips, people need a way to cut through the clutter. HubSpot’s research shows that 78% of customers expect more personalized interactions than ever before.

personalization in retail customer experience

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“It is not about you. It’s about the consumer who’s coming in, what their likes are, where their dislikes are, and what they’ve bought with you in the past,” explains Passi. “Understanding your consumer in-depth and applying that knowledge in real time, I think, is the most important thing right now.”

With personalization, you can show customers more relevant products to buy. You can speed up customer service interactions by pulling up a customer’s conversation and purchase history in real-time and seamlessly switching between channels.

“I personally hate it when I get messages that aren‘t personalized to me, because I know you can do it, or you should be able to do it,” offers Campbell. “We do a customer concern survey every year where we ask people how many text messages are too many messages. Around a third of people say it doesn’t matter how many messages they get as long as they’re personal,” he shares.

Just 35% of CRM leaders say their customer data is fully integrated with their service tools. “There’s been a huge push over the past five or ten years of collecting data. Now we’re at this point of figuring out how to use it,” Campbell says.

4. Bring in AI the smart way.

One way to leverage all of your customer data is to integrate AI into your customer interactions. The catch, though, is figuring out how AI can be additive instead of subtracting value. A bad AI interaction is still a bad experience. However, AI can bring scale customer service and recommendations to help customers day or night, on any channel.

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“When brands have all their data together, we’re already starting to see how AI can sift through millions of pieces of data in real time and offer up those personalized recommendations online drive the personalization strategy,” says Hamilton.

“I think AI can be an incredibly powerful tool for customer experience, but it can’t fix a broken process. If you already have really bad processes in place, AI is only going to make those processes worse,” says Hamilton.

The key is to find when to make the switch from an AI interaction to a human one.

“We are automating 60 to 70% on the buying and services sides, but the other 30% of the time, automation isn’t always good,” shares Passi. “You might be over-automating; the customer is not happy, and their sentiment is off. We’ve been designing a technology which understands based on customers’ records, emotions, and real-time sentiment, when and how to bring a human in the loop.”

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When you get it right, you can scale personalized recommendations and customer service for a stellar customer experience.

The Omnichannel Approach to Retail CX

Above all, I’ve learned that the brands who get CX right treat online and in-store CX as separate strategies. They design one cohesive experience because that’s how the customer perceives it — as a single experience from one brand. They expect the same voice, service, and excellence across all channels, whether in your store, on your website, or on mobile.

Use a CRM and an integrated messaging inbox to ensure consistency across all touchpoints for your customers. SMS and AI-powered interactions can be powerful tools, but they need to be personalized and consistent in your brand voice. 75% of people say that text messages routinely drive them to purchase from brands. Chipotle is a great example of sending personalized text campaigns in its distinct brand voice.

Apple is another brand that does an incredible job of creating an omnichannel retail experience, integrating digital and physical spaces. If you’ve visited an Apple store, you know that it’s easy to make an appointment in advance to avoid a wait. In the store, a team member comes to you while you test out their products and can complete your purchase from their iPad — no need to head to a checkout line. If there’s a problem later, you can get the support you need by chat or email.

Retail Customer Experience Examples

I’m always blown away by a good customer experience, like when an employee goes above and beyond or an app helps me find what I need or save money. Here are three brands getting it right — and what makes them stand out.

Walmart

Love it or hate it, you have to admit that Walmart is convenient. 90% of Americans live within 10 miles of a Walmart, and you can find almost anything you need there. Over the past few years, they’ve transformed their CX with mobile technology and omnichannel experiences that integrate digital and physical spaces.

While all shoppers can take advantage of same-day curbside pickup, Walmart+ members have access to same-day grocery delivery and other perks. The brand redesigned hundreds of stores with a modern, more aesthetic look to encourage browsing and engaging with products.

They’ve also built their own proprietary large language model (LLM) called Wallaby, trained on decades of Walmart purchase data. This technology is enabling omnichannel customer experiences like text and voice shopping and allowing customers to get support like processing returns through messaging. By the end of 2025, they even expect to create personalized homepages for each shopper.

Dick’s Sporting Goods

If you walk into a Dick’s Sporting Goods, you might be surprised to find more than racks of products. Climbing walls, immersive virtual golfing centers, and multi-sport HitTrax cages in select stores are engaging customers in a new way and giving them a reason to stick around and shop.

That’s just one way Dick’s has revamped their CX. They’ve added free shipping for most items, one-hour in-store pickup, and a price match guarantee. More than six million people use their GameChanger app to manage team sports and stream games to friends and family.

The brand now uses targeted surveys to collect feedback and act on it in real-time. That’s led to significantly lower bounce and exit rates, and significantly higher conversion rates on in-cart exercise equipment.

Carvana

As someone who bought a car this year, I know how painful the car-buying experience can be. Time-consumer dealer visits and haggling over pricing isn’t very convenient or comfortable. Enter Carvana, a disruptor in the automotive space. Carvana’s main focus is a frictionless buying experience for customers.

“Ordering a car from Carvana was the easiest thing ever,” shared customer Rebecca Garner. “The online experience was so easy we barely had to think about it. We got access to the warranty information, car registration, and anything else we could need in the app. Any information we weren’t able to find ourselves, we could find through the chat. They delivered the car right to our door in the city, and our interactions with the person that delivered it were fantastic.”

How to Measure the Success of Your Retail CX

Because it deals with human emotion, CX can be tricky to measure. Here are a few of the top metrics to gauge how good of an experience you’re creating.

Engagement Rate

One way to measure CX is to look at how much customers engage with you and in what way. How often are they reading your emails, for instance? Are they reacting to your social posts or SMS messages? Are they clicking through to your website or unsubscribing?

Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT)

CSAT is a metric that describes the percentage of customers who are satisfied with their purchase. This helps you track CX performance over time and segment your audience to send personalized messaging to satisfied or less-than-satisfied customers.

Net Promoter Score (NPS)

NPS is a popular measure of customer sentiment and advocacy. The measurement simply asks customers on a one of 10 how likely they are to recommend the brand to a family or friend. It’s more of a result of good CX than anything else — a high NPS usually reflects a positive customer experience.

Customer Retention Rate (CRR)

CRR measures what percentage of customers you retain over a set period. The opposite of this is customer churn, which is how many customers you lose over a set period.

One caution I heard from the CX leaders I interviewed is to avoid the fallacy of vanity metrics. Rather than boasting about a CSAT score of 80, dig into the remaining 20% to understand why they weren’t satisfied — and take action.

How to Create a Customer-Focused Company

So, how do you create a CX focus at your company? One half is technology, which I’ve already covered. Your tech stack and how you implement it every day can make or break your CX. The other half comes down to people and culture. How do you design a customer-centric culture and embrace change to meet customer priorities?

1. Create an org structure and culture for success.

One problem working against CX is internal siloes. Marketing, sales, and customer services are all working separately instead of as one team. I’ve seen teams set up competing for resources, so they aren’t incentivized to work together toward a common goal.

One way to solve this is through establishing a CX leader who can advocate for the customer and bring all these siloes together.

“The best CX leaders are influencers, right? They don’t own the entire customer journey. They have to influence the cross-functional stakeholders to do that. I look at them as problem solvers. They should have a bias for action and report directly to the CEO,” recommends Hamilton.

Beyond your org chart, it’s also a question of culture. Can you create a culture of customer focus that permeates from your frontline staff to website designers to executive leadership?

“​​The customer experience should be owned by everybody at that company. It’s everyone’s problem, everyone’s responsibility,” says Campbell. “That’s the whole reason why you’re there, making sure that your customers have an experience with your brand that matches what you stand for.”

2. Incorporate customer feedback and embrace disruption.

One big mistake companies make in CX is listening and collecting customer feedback — then never acting on it.

“There’s a difference between listening to your customers and doing customer experience,” shares Hamilton. “CX leaders are not connecting the dots between what our customers are telling us, the impact on the business, and why we should do something about it.”

Look at your metrics and change your communication tactics if your opt-out rates are too high. Listen to customers and prioritize redesigning your processes and technology according to your voice of customer research.

That may mean reinvention — radically changing your tech or diverging from others in your industry. But often, that disruption can mean survival in this noisy world competing for attention.

Earn Customer Love with Personalized, Frictionless Experiences

One of the common threads I gleaned from speaking to top CX thought leaders is that while retail CX is complex, your focus should be simple. Design experiences that make your customers feel valued and known.

Align your data to create personalized, omnichannel experiences that make it easy to buy and get support if needed.

“We need to focus on using our data to the customer’s benefit. When you think about the customer, it should be so simple. How can you use data to make the experience better and easier right now?” asks Campbell.

Above all, retail CX impacts the bottom line. As you build a program, don’t forget to measure your success and consider the whole picture of how CX impacts your business.

“I think one of the reasons why customer experience has experienced budget cuts the last few years is the lack of connecting the dots between customer experience and business impact,” explains Hamilton. “If you think about CX of the future, it‘s less about your MPs and your vanity metrics, and it’s more about driving profit and loss. That’s the CX practitioner of the future, those who understand that and can connect the dots.”

Everything I Know About Gap Selling: What It Is And How To Make It Work For Your Sales Strategy [+ Examples]

You’re selling something to someone who just wouldn’t budge. No matter how you angle your pitch, how well you attempt to align your solution with their needs, or how many glowing testimonials you share, they’re just not buying it. Literally. Somehow, the deal slips through your fingers, and so does the prospect. You’re left wondering where it all went wrong. If I just described a familiar struggle – one you might know all too well – I’m here to share a solution that might be the answer to your prayers: Gap selling.

Free Download: Sales Plan Template

Truthfully, gap selling takes patience, practice, and persistence to master. However, once you’ve done so, you won’t be stuck in the endless loop of pitching and hoping something sticks. Instead, you take on the role of a fearless problem-solver — no capes required. In this blog post, I’ll break down what gap selling is, why it’s the secret sauce for successful sales, and how you can use it to connect with prospects on a deeper level.

Let’s get into it.

Table of Contents:

The framework “gap selling” was coined by Keenan (yes … just Keenan; before you question me, he only goes by his last name) in 2018 in his best-selling book titled — yep, you guessed it — Gap Selling. In his book, he explores how gap selling has the potential to:

  • Generate more leads
  • Increase customer conversion rates
  • Minimize sales cycles
  • Maximize the average deal size

Despite what you might be thinking, gap selling doesn’t involve a whole lot of strong-arming prospects or dazzling them with fancy features to achieve these results. Instead, it’s all about playing detective.

As a salesperson utilizing the gap selling technique, you’re really responsible for digging into the gap between where your prospect is now (their current situation) and where they really want to be (their ideal situation). The more significant the gap, the more they’ll need you to help them bridge it.

Now, Keenan covers lots of gems in his book … I can’t share all of them, but I can highlight the ones that really matter, check out some of his must-know info below:

1. Know your prospect’s intrinsic motivation.

Keenan advises that every salesperson should know their prospect’s intrinsic motivation(s). This is their definable, objective goal. Whether it be to maximize a prospect’s company growth rate by a specific percentage or to reduce operational inefficiencies to save time and money, this very particular, very strategic reason is behind what Keenan acknowledges as a prospect’s “future state” (more on this later).

Nevertheless, once you’ve identified your prospect’s intrinsic motivation and can understand their desired future state, Keenan suggests that “all that’s left is to make sure they not only believe that that future state can happen, but that you can make it happen better than anyone else.”

2. Consider thinking about your customers’ future state as a three-part entity.

Keenan recommends that salesfolks consider a prospect’s future state in three parts:

  • Technical future state (ex: A new software that could increase sales, improve workflows, simplify the buying process, etc.)
  • Business future state (ex: How technical improvements will increase customer satisfaction, WOM will spread, etc.)
  • The core of the future state (ex: How the technical and business improvements will help your company beat the competition)

Ultimately, the point here is this: All of these individual components contribute to an overall goal, one that positively impacts all parties involved.

The Gap Selling Identification Chart Explained

Additionally, the gap selling problem identification chart emerged as an extension of Keenan’s gap selling methodology. In short, this chart is a tool designed to help sales professionals clearly map out and understand the gap between a prospect’s current situation and their desired future state.

Here’s how it works:

1. It clarifies the future state.

The gap selling problem identification chart helps you detail your prospect’s current situation, including their challenges, inefficiencies, and pain points. This step is crucial for understanding what isn’t presently working for them.

2. It defines the future state.

This part of the chart helps uncover your prospect’s goals, aspirations, and desired outcomes. This is where you learn what the prospect ultimately wants to achieve.

3. It highlights the gap.

In this section of the gap selling problem identification cart, you’ll compare the current state with the desired future state; the chart visually represents the gap, aka what’s missing or preventing your prospect from reaching their goals.

4. It pinpoints the root cause.

At this point, you’ll have completed the chart enough to identify the underlying reasons for your prospect’s problems, which is key to demonstrating how your solution addresses these issues at its core.

5. It quantifies the impact.

Finally, with all of the information you’ve gathered, the gap selling problem identification chart will prompt you to assess the problem’s business or personal impact (e.g., financial, operational, or emotional). This helps to emphasize the urgency of addressing the gap your prospect is experiencing.

And, if you’re more of a visual learner like me, take a look at a version of the infamous gap selling problem identification chart below:

How to Use The Gap Selling Methodology in Your Sales Strategy [With Examples]

As I mentioned above, refining your own spin on gap selling really does take a few tries. But if you’re feeling 100% ready to give it a try, here are a few tips I can offer on behalf of Sean Muccio, Small Business Account Executive at HubSpot:

1. Be constantly curious.

Sean’s biggest piece of advice? “Be genuine when you’re asking a customer questions,” he revealed to me.

In Sean’s eyes, reps should “earn the right” for prospects to give them an honest, real answer, one that’ll help them solve their customer’s problems. “You have to earn the right for them to give you an answer versus brushing you off, and earning this right comes from displaying some relevance.”

Now, “earning the right” to chat with a prospect could be done in many ways. Sean recommends sticking with the “show them you know them” technique (aka heavily researching a customer before you cold call or email them, then leading with that specific information in your prospecting conversations). This technique can also be done through social proofing.

2. Use the “probe and provoke” method (coined by Ronan Pessar).

I asked Sean about any other Sean cites Ronan Pessar’s “probe and provoke” methodology as a great way to implement the basics of gap selling into your sales approach.

“It starts with basic generalized questions to understand where the prospect is currently at from a tech adoption standpoint. Then, sales reps can ask ‘probing questions’ to uncover any potential value,” he explained. “Questions should be so clear and simple — with no marketing jargon — so they can make the prospect really think.”

Here’s an example of what the probe and provoke method could look like:

3. How you say things is way more important than what you say.

Sean’s last recommendation for employing the gap selling approach is, believe it or not, pretty simple. It doesn’t involve memorizing complex scripts or following rigid sales tactics. Instead, it’s all about syntax.

“How you say things is more important than what you say,” he told me. Oftentimes, rephrasing information can completely change the way it’s received. It’s not just about the words themselves but the tone, delivery, and timing that make an impact.

So, whether you’re tailoring language based on who you’re prospecting with or adjusting your delivery to fit the sales situation, the way you communicate can mean the difference between connection and confusion. In sales especially, mastering how you say something is a game-changer.

Sales Statistics You Should Know Before Trying Out Gap Selling

If you’re curious whether adopting the gap selling approach is worth it, check out some HubSpot Sales Trends Report statistics. These insights shed light on what prospects are both thinking and doing pre-discovery, as well as how sales professionals are strategizing to close deals:

  • The top methods for building rapport on a sales call are being attentive and engaged (38%), finding common ground (29%), and researching the prospect before calling (25%)
  • 42% of B2B sales pros say researching a prospect’s company to determine its challenges and opportunities is the most effective way to make the sale
  • Only 25% of prospects do significant research before taking a sales call
  • 66% of sales professionals believe AI helps them better understand customers and provide personalized experiences
  • 48% of sellers struggle with effectively communicating value to potential customers
  • 36% of sales managers think follow-ups sent to high-quality leads are the most important tracking metric
  • 82% of sales professionals see building strong relationships as the most crucial and rewarding aspect of the sales process

Given all of this information, it’s clear that gap selling aligns perfectly with building strong relationships and deeply understanding your prospects, all of which, according to HubSpot’s Sales Trends Report, are non-negotiable for successful selling in this day and age.

Gap Selling: Benefits and Challenges

1. Pro #1: Gap selling can deepen your relationships with your customers.

Gap selling focuses on understanding your prospect’s current challenges and goals and the “gap” between them, naturally fostering a deeper connection. By taking the time to listen and uncover what truly matters to them, you position yourself as a trusted advisor, not just another salesperson pushing a product.

2. Pro #2: Gap selling takes a value-driven approach, which makes prospects feel more seen.

Instead of leading with tangents about product features, gap selling highlights how your solution solves specific problems and delivers real value. This approach makes your prospects feel understood and validated, demonstrating that their challenges are important and not just another checkbox on your sales call agenda.

3. Pro #3: Gap selling positively impacts close rates.

When you identify a meaningful gap between your prospect’s current situation and their desired future state, the urgency of solving that problem becomes clear. By focusing on outcomes and impact, you create a compelling reason for prospects to take action, which can lead to faster decisions and higher close rates.

1. Con #1: Getting good at gap selling takes some time.

As I’ve already noted, gap selling is a skill you have to polish. Over time, you learn to ask the right questions to uncover root problems. If you’re an emerging sales professional, developing the confidence and expertise may take a few attempts to execute this method effectively.

2. Con #2: Gap selling doesn’t always work for every sales environment.

Gap selling shines in consultative or complex sales where uncovering problems and solutions is key, but it’s less effective in transactional environments. This approach can feel overly involved or unnecessary for quick, low-cost sales with minimal decision-making.

3. Con #3: Your prospects may put up a fight.

Truthfully, not every prospect will be open to discussing their challenges or admitting a problem to solve. Some people may resist answering probing questions or present as defensive, making it harder to identify their gaps and effectively align your solution. If the gap selling technique will become a regular strategy that you revisit, this is something you’ll need to get used to.

Pro Tip: To make things easier, build a solid prospecting strategy using HubSpot’s Sales Plan Template. You can also refine and identify lots of other sales essentials with this resource, including a budget, your target market, and a sales cadence.

So, Does Gap Selling Really Work?

So, does gap selling really work? Absolutely. Will it require you to do a lot of work to secure your prospects? Yes, it will.

But when done right, gap selling shifts your focus from pushing a product to solving real-world problems. It helps you connect with prospects on a more meaningful level and drives results that matter. By leaning on gap selling, you can effectively discover what your prospect needs, what challenges are holding them back, and what success truly looks like for them.

Everything considered, gap selling is worth giving a try — because who doesn’t want to go from just selling to actually solving?

Sales Compensation: What a Plan Can Look Like & How to Implement Yours Effectively

No one accepts a position at a company without knowing how much money they’d be making. Sales compensation is an important factor when attracting and retaining talent on your sales team.

Free Resource: Sales Compensation Calculator

You want to give the best talent a reason to accept a position on your sales team and stay with your company long-term. In this guide, I’ll discuss the importance of a sales compensation plan, the types of sales compensation plans, and the steps you can take to create one of your own.

Table of Contents:

Creating a solid sales compensation plan has tons of benefits — let’s go through them together next.

Benefits of Sales Compensation Plans

1. Sales compensation plans create structure within the team.

Sales teams are known for their high turnover. The stresses of selling to uninterested prospects and the general lack of advancement opportunities can make even the most seasoned of salespeople hop from team to team.

One way to lower turnover is to create a sales compensation plan that adds structure to the team, differentiating between junior, mid-level, and senior reps. In doing so, you’ll communicate to the reps that there are advancement opportunities within the team, and they won’t feel like they should leave.

Pro Tip: With HubSpot Sales Hub’s Breeze Prospecting Agent, newer sales reps (and more seasoned ones) can sell smarter and focus their outreach efforts on the leads that matter most. Plus, they’ll be able to develop personalized prospecting strategies designed to complement their efforts, helping them close deals faster and more efficiently.

2. Sales compensation plans incentivize individual reps.

Knowing that they could earn more if they sell more will be enough to incentivize reps. Plus, if you include additional benefits — such as an educational stipend — your reps will be way more incentivized to seek additional training, making them more effective salespeople.

3. Sales compensation plans help you budget better.

By knowing how much you’ll pay each rep, depending on their experience and performance, you can create budgets that better align with your company’s financial standing. That way, you know how much of the company’s earnings will be allotted for your sales reps’ compensation. This will allow you to better prepare if the team underperforms one quarter.

The structure of a sales compensation plan varies by business and is typically based on team organization, resources, and goals. For example, one sales organization might offer a higher base salary, while another might prioritize commission based on their budget, business structure, employee needs, and team targets.

There should be a compensation plan for every member of the sales team based on their role, experience, length of the sales cycle, and the type of deals they engage in. Here are some other factors to consider while thinking about your sales compensation plan:

  • What’s your budget?
  • Does your company culture impact how you compensate employees?
  • What’s your competition paying?
  • What are living costs like in your area?
  • What are your team’s and organization’s goals?

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Before I share how to create your compensation plan, let’s take a look at some important sales compensation terms to know.

Sales Compensation Terms to Know

Depending on how you structure your sales compensation plan, the following terms and concepts may come up as you start the development process.

1. Sales Quota

A sales quota is a time-bound revenue target set by sales managers — either individually or as a group. The most common time constraints for quotas are monthly, quarterly, and annually. They can be measured as the sales managers and company leadership see fit, whether that’s by profit, deals closed, or overall activity.

2. Sales Accelerators

A sales accelerator kicks in when one of your reps hits a specific amount over their quota. Quota attainment, number of products sold, and contract length are the most common types of sales accelerators.

This type of payoff is exponential for your reps. With this compensation plan framework, they may end up with a huge commission check if they have a highly successful month or quarter (so be aware of your resources and budget).

For example, let’s say a rep has a base salary of $100,000 and earns a 10% commission on their sales. If their monthly quota is $50,000 in revenue and they hit 110% of their quota (bringing in $55,000 in revenue), you’d pay them 1.0x on their performance above 100%.

Essentially, this means they’d earn their regular 10% commission on the $50,000 ($5,000) plus an additional 10% commission on the extra $5,000 ($500). In total, your rep would take home $5,500 in commission for that month.

However, if commission accelerates further for over-quota performance (e.g., 1.5x above 100%), that extra $5,000 could yield $750 instead of $500, bringing their total monthly commission to $5,750.

3. Sales Decelerators

Sales decelerators have the opposite effect as accelerators — they penalize underperforming reps. A decelerator may kick in between 40% and 60% of their quota. In other words, if a rep only hits 60% of their quota, their performance would be multiplied by a decimal (like 0.5) to calculate their compensation.

4. Clawbacks

A clawback kicks in when a customer churns (i.e., stop using your product or service) prior to hitting a specific benchmark. They cause the rep to lose their commission and are common among subscription companies in an effort to keep customer retention rates high.

5. On-Target Earnings

On-target earnings (OTE) provide salespeople with a realistic view of their total compensation for a position when their expected and reasonable goals and quotas have been reached. Typically, OTE would include the base salary and the realistic commission resulting from closed deals.

6. Sales Performance Incentive Fund or Sales Contests

Sales performance incentive funds (SPIFFs) or sales contests are ways to incentivize high performance among your salespeople.

These tactics are often used to change behavior and include monetary (such as a $500 cash prize to the first rep who closes 10 deals of a certain product) or non-monetary (a nice dinner for every team that increases their retention rate by the benchmark percentage).

These sales incentives and contests should run for short periods of time — about one to four weeks in total. If you run them any longer, reps will lose the necessary sense of urgency for this tactic to work.

Also, keep your sales contests limited. The more behaviors you reward, the likelier your team will be pulled into conflicting directions — making it difficult to drive specific outcomes.

Now, let’s review a sales commission structure template and examples of different types of compensation plans.

Sales Compensation Structure Template

Structuring your sales compensation plan is simple with this free template. In it, you’ll find seven different types of comp plans that could work for your business. Each of them is made up of several factors that create the total compensation plan:

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  • Base Salary: The compensation provided to a sales rep before they meet quota.
  • Projected Sales: The number of deals that the sales rep is expected to close by the end of the selling period.
  • Commission Rate: A commission amount expressed as a percentage of the revenue brought in by the sales rep.
  • Bonus Amount: The compensation provided above the base salary that compensates a sales rep for the deals they’ve closed during the selling period.
  • Commission Per Sale: The compensation amount paid to a sales rep per unit sold.

These are some of the most common sales compensation factors you’ll take into account when developing your comp structure, but you may not use all of them in the same plan.

Below are some examples of compensation plans and how each of these elements fits into them.

Sales Compensation Plan Examples

There’s no one specific way to pay employees in sales. Many companies tailor their plans according to how they conduct business. Generally speaking, there are four main types of compensation: hourly wages, salary, commission, and bonuses. Compensation plans are more detailed and can contain different forms of commission or no commission at all. They are all tailored to the size and scope of the business it applies to.

The following examples include the most common types of sales compensation plans. Each example has a different structure, so you can tailor your plan to your specific sales team and business based on your needs, resources, and goals. Check them out below:

1. Base Salary Plus Commission Plan

a chart graphic detailing how a base salary plus commission sales compensation plan works

Create a custom version of this compensation plan with HubSpot’s free Sales Compensation Calculator Kit

The most common sales compensation pay structure is the base salary plus commission plan. This structure provides reps with a fixed yearly base salary as well as commission. They get the security of a steady income with the economic incentive to sell.

In this plan, the commission percentage is lower because of the base salary.

To determine your base-variable (or fixed) compensation split, think about the following factors:

  • How difficult the sale is
  • How much autonomy is needed (i.e., are you providing your reps with leads, or are you asking them to generate their own? Are you giving them technical support or none?)
  • How much experience is necessary

To determine the variable compensation, think about the following factors:

  • How complex your sales cycle is
  • How much influence the rep has over the purchasing decision
  • How many leads reps work with at a given time
  • Your team’s selling function

Essentially, the shorter and simpler a sale is and the less impact a rep has over the customer’s behavior, the smaller the percentage of variable compensation should be.

One standard ratio across industries is 60:40 — meaning 60% fixed to 40% variable. A less aggressive ratio (think 70:30 or 75:25) is common when reps are required to teach the prospect because they’re most likely selling a highly complex or technical product.

Account managers may have a similar ratio of fixed to variable pay, driving them to spend more time helping their existing customers than finding new ones.

Best for: Most businesses, as it provides greater clarity into expenses and allows for hiring highly-motivated, competitive salespeople while ensuring reps fulfill non-selling tasks. With this plan, you benefit from greater clarity into your expenses (since there’s less variability) and the opportunity to hire highly-motivated, competitive salespeople.

2. Base Salary Plus Bonus Compensation Plan

A base salary plus a bonus compensation plan is common when your reps tend to consistently hit their pre-set targets.

For example, you might pay $30,000 base and $15,000 for selling X amount per year. If you know about eight of your 10 employees will consistently hit quota, and total earnings are $55,000, you can set aside $440,000 in your annual budget for the bonuses. But again, this prevents reps from feeling any motivation to over-perform.

Best for: Companies with reps who consistently hit their pre-set targets. It offers a high level of predictability and motivation to close sales. This sales compensation plan approach offers a high level of predictability and still motivates your reps to close sales.

3. Commission Only Compensation Plan

a chart graphic detailing how a commission only sales compensation plan works

Create a custom version of this compensation plan with HubSpot’s free Sales Compensation Calculator Kit

A commission-only structure means you pay reps purely based on their performance. If they don’t sell anything during a month, their salary is zero. If they sell $50,000 worth of products in a month, their salary may be anywhere between $15,000 and $22,500, depending on the commission percentage you offer your employees.

This type of plan also motivates reps by giving them the freedom to earn as much money as they can while saving you time trying to identify any poor performers on your team. However, commission-only plans can make it challenging to forecast your expenses and stick to a tight budget.

In terms of the commission percentage to pay reps, you may decide it’s anywhere between 5% to 45%, which is standard.

Additionally, the more support you expect reps to give customers (such as implementation help or account management), the higher their commission should be. Remember to factor in their level of involvement in the sale as well, meaning if they’re only producing leads (rather than closing them, too), you should allocate a smaller commission.

Best for: Companies looking to minimize risk and motivate reps to earn as much as they can while saving time by identifying poor performers. Due to the simplicity of a commission-only compensation plan, you forgo a lot of risks. Plus, when your salespeople succeed, revenue increases; if they fail, you lose nothing.

4. Gross Margin Commission Plan

Maybe your company will pay reps based on profit rather than sales. In other words, a rep would be compensated more for selling a product with a $2,500 gross margin than one with a $1,000 gross margin.

Additionally, gross margin commission plans promote the sales of specific product lines. Not all products are created equal, but paying on gross margin motivates your salespeople to sell more of your most profitable products.

However, there are three main things to keep in mind when it comes to gross margin commission plans.

  • Revenue must be your priority if you use this plan. Perhaps you’re trying to build market share or attract the top 20 logos in your industry. You want salespeople to focus on those goals — compensating them for profit may distract them and cause them to pursue the wrong customers.
  • Reps must have control over pricing. Reps have to be either selling multiple products at different price points or have discounting power.
  • You must be able to track your gross margins. Shifting product and/or distribution costs, rebates, and territory changes can make calculating this extremely hard.

Best for: Companies prioritizing revenue and looking to discourage discounting, promote specific product lines, and motivate salespeople to sell more profitable products. This sales compensation plan works well because it discourages discounting. Reps can become reliant on discounts to close deals, which isn’t good for your business. Tying commission to the product’s final cost encourages reps to give fewer and smaller discounts.

5. Absolute Commission Plan

a chart graphic detailing how a set rate commission sales compensation plan works

Create a custom version of this compensation plan with HubSpot’s free Sales Compensation Calculator Kit

An absolute (or set rate) commission plan requires you to pay your reps when they reach specific targets or milestones. For example, you might pay your salespeople $1,000 for every new customer they obtain or 15% of upsell and cross-sell revenue.

However, this structure doesn‘t take into account market penetration or the number of opportunities. For example, one rep may be getting twice as many leads as their peer, but they’d both be treated equally.

Additionally, you’ll need to carefully consider what’s best for the overall company when determining the commission. If you’re trying to drive the sales of a certain product line, you’ll need to compensate reps accordingly (hint: reps will often do whatever is most lucrative for them, regardless of greater business objectives).

Best for: Companies aiming to drive good results with easy-to-grasp plans that directly tie output to salary without setting quotas and instead focusing on benchmarks or recommendations. Because the output is directly tied to salary and there are no quotas involved, reps are usually highly motivated to perform.

6. Straight-Line Commission Plan

A straight-line commission plan rewards reps based on how much or little they sell. For example, if a rep reaches 86% of their quota, they’ll receive 86% of their commission. If they reach 140% of their quota, they receive 140% of their commission.

Although this approach is relatively easy to calculate, it’s not perfect. So, what’s the issue? You want to encourage over-performance as much as possible. If you’re already paying base, getting a rep to hit 140% of their quota from 120% has a greater financial impact than getting an under-performer to hit 100% of their quota from 80%.

Plus, a rep may be just fine making 80% of their quota — you don’t want to disincentivize any of your reps to sell because they’re content with a lower salary (which is when you’d incorporate an accelerator).

Best for: Companies that want to encourage over-performance, as getting a rep to hit 140% of their quota from 120% has a greater financial impact than getting an under-performer to hit 100% of quota from 80%.

7. Relative Commission Plan

a chart graphic detailing how a relative commission sales compensation plan works

Create a custom version of this compensation plan with HubSpot’s free Sales Compensation Calculator Kit

Unlike an absolute commission plan, a relative commission plan uses a quota or predetermined target. This target can be based on revenue (X dollars) or volume (X units).

When a rep hits 100% of quota, they make their OTE, which consists of either base salary plus commission or pure commission. For example, if a rep’s yearly quota is $60,000, their at-plan commission is $50,000, and their base is $80,000, then their OTE would be $130,000.

Best for: Companies that want to use a quota or predetermined target based on revenue or volume, with reps making their on-target earnings (OTE) when hitting 100% of quota.

8. ‘Draw Against’ Commission Plan

DrawAgainst commission plans are regularly occurring payments made in advance to the sales rep or subtracted from the rep’s total commissions. While they seemingly emulate salary schedule payments, they are regular commission payouts given to the employee before they need to earn that money back. If there are remaining commissions after a specific time period, you will pay the remainder.

There are two main Draw Against commission plans:

Recoverable Draws

Recoverable draw payouts are basically loans to employees that you expect to gain back from their earned sales commission. For example, if an employee draws $2,500 per month, they’re expected to earn a minimum $2,500 in commission each month so your business doesn’t lose money. If this threshold is not met, their debts roll over into next month’s pay period.

Nonrecoverable Draws

Typically suitable for newly beginning sales reps, this draw is a payment you will not expect to gain back. It is unlikely for these employees to earn much in commission from the start, so use this draw until their training period is over.

Best for: Companies looking to provide regular commission payouts to employees before they need to earn that money back.

9. Territory Volume Commission Plan

a chart graphic detailing how a territory volume commission sales compensation plan works

Create a custom version of this compensation plan with HubSpot’s free Sales Compensation Calculator Kit

With a territory volume commission plan, sales teams work with prospects and clients in clearly defined regions. Your reps are paid on a territory-wide basis versus an individual-sale basis. Once the compensation period is complete, the total sales are split among the reps who worked in that territory.

Best for: Team-based sales organizations where each rep works towards a common goal and focuses on a specific territory or region, with commissions split among the reps working in that territory. To attract reps to this type of plan and grow your sales teams, you may offer them an attractive commission paired with a well-developed territory.

10. Salary Only Compensation Plan

With a salary-only structure, you decide ahead of time how much you’ll pay your salespeople. It doesn’t matter how much (or how little) they sell; their take-home earnings are set.

A salary-only structure is fairly uncommon for sales teams. That’s because, without commission, reps are usually less motivated to go above and beyond. After they’ve hit quota, they may relax instead of pushing for the next deal because there’s no incentive or reason to continue onward.

Plus, many salespeople love the thrill of scoring commission — the high stakes and competitive nature of earning a commission is often part of the reason reps go into sales in the first place. Not to mention, your top-performing reps may just leave your company so they can make commissions elsewhere.

You’re likely wondering: Well, are there any positives to a salary-only compensation plan?

Here’s your quick answer: Yes. This type of compensation plan makes it simple to calculate sales expenses and predict hiring needs. Additionally, your reps may be less stressed because they don’t have to worry about the financial consequences of missing their target or the weight of the competition.

Best for: Companies that want to simplify calculating sales expenses and predict hiring needs, with reps potentially experiencing less stress due to not worrying about the financial consequences of missing targets or the weight of competition.

11. Multiplier Commission Plan

A multiplier commission plan incentivizes sales representatives to exceed their targets and drive revenue growth. You reward reps by multiplying their commission rate when they achieve a certain percentage above their sales target.

For example, if a rep’s standard commission rate is 10% and they achieve 150% of their target, their commission rate might be multiplied by 1.5, resulting in a 15% commission on all sales over the target.

Say a rep has a monthly target of $50,000 and earns a base commission of 10%. If they sell $75,000 worth of products (150% of their target), their commission would be:

  • 10% commission on the first $50,000 = $5,000
  • 15% commission on the additional $25,000 = $3,750
  • Total commission earned = $8,750

Best for: Industries with intense competition or high-growth startups. It’s also effective for product launches, seasonal sales, and expansion into new markets where companies want to establish their footprint quickly. This plan encourages reps to push beyond their targets. The higher they go, the more they earn. Ultimately, it’s an excellent option for companies looking to drive aggressive growth and reward top performers.

12. Milestone-Based Commission Plan

A milestone-based commission plan rewards sales representatives for achieving specific milestones throughout the sales process.

Instead of focusing on the final sale, this plan incentivizes reps to complete key activities that lead to successful deals — like setting up demos, securing contracts, or reaching revenue thresholds. Each milestone carries a specific commission amount or percentage.

For example, a milestone-based plan might offer:

  • $500 commission for setting up a qualified demo
  • $1,000 for securing a signed contract
  • 5% commission on the first year’s revenue once the deal closes

This structure keeps reps focused on moving prospects through the pipeline and encourages them to prioritize high-value activities.

Let’s say a rep sets up 10 qualified demos ($5,000), closes 5 contracts ($5,000), and generates $100,000 in first-year revenue ($5,000) in a quarter. Their total commission would be $15,000.

Best for: Industries with complex sales cycles, like B2B or financial services, where multiple touchpoints and milestones are required to close a deal.

Now, let’s look at how to implement one of these types of sales compensation plans on your team.

How to Implement a Sales Compensation Plan

1. Use a sales compensation planner.

There are dozens of potential approaches to and combinations of sales compensation strategies. To ensure you land on the best plan for your sales team, use a sales compensation planning template to calculate how much revenue you can expect and how much reps will be paid.

Featured Resource: Sales Compensation Planner

a screenshot of hubspot’s sales compensation planner

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2. Determine your sales compensation plan goals.

The first part of developing a sales compensation plan strategy includes setting your goals — laying out your business objectives is a critical part of any strategy.

So, here are some common primary and secondary goals of sales compensation plans for your consideration. Clarifying your priorities will help you decide how to compensate your salespeople in a way that works for your business.

Remember, your goals may mix the examples below or look completely different — your targets should reflect what you hope to get out of the sales compensation plan and your unique needs. Check out the chart below for some insight on how to segment these goals:

Primary goals of sales compensation plans

Secondary goals of sales compensation plans

Grow revenue

Lower expenses

Increase cash flow

Drive sales for a specific product

Increase average contract length

Attract target customers

Increase average deal size

Reduce discounting frequency

Increase the percentage of repeat customers

Reduce average discount size

Increase retention rate

Acquire seed accounts

Increase upsell or cross-sell rate

Manage deal flow

3. Choose a type of sales compensation plan.

Now that you have your goals, it’s time to choose which compensation plan you’ll implement at your company. Refer back to the sales compensation plan examples to review the most common options.

While determining which plan is best for your business, ask yourself the following questions:

  • What is my overall budget?
  • How many reps do I have?
  • What types of compensation plans do my competition use?
  • What will my salespeople expect out of the plan implemented?

You’ll also need to determine when to pay employees. Typically, there are four standard options for paying commissions:

When a Customer Signs a Contract

Paying when the customer signs the contract is good motivation for the salesperson at hand because they immediately see the monetary impact of closing the deal.

However, this payment plan can also lead to cash flow problems if there’s a significant delay between the signed agreement and the first payment (especially if you’re an early-stage business or it‘s a large deal that’s being closed).

When You Receive the Customer’s First Payment

Compensating reps when you’re paid is the most common payment method. There’s less lag between the time of the commission and revenue payments. You can also use clawbacks to incentivize salespeople to focus on good customer fit (rather than just anyone who will buy), which often boosts retention rates.

Note: If you’re a subscription-based business, this timeline can disrupt your cash flow. After all, if you give a rep commission on the entire contract when you get the first check, you’re paying in advance of the customer’s subsequent payments.

Every Time a Customer Pays

Paying each time you get an invoice is ideal if you want to protect your cash flow. Nonetheless, it can be complex to plan if you’re on a tight budget, especially if you have a large sales team of reps closing and managing deals.

When Deal Goals are Reached

Also referred to as a tiered commission structure, this compensation plan motivates reps and rewards top performers who close a certain number of deals monthly. After reps exceed a predetermined benchmark, their commission rate increases. This model can also implement commission reductions for those who underperform.

4. Base your decisions on research and data.

Collect data on sales rep performance, customer visits, and segmentation using a tool like HubSpot Sales Hub to identify areas where your team’s efforts may not align with your priorities.

Josh Miller, Head of Sales Compensation at CVS Health, explained why this is important, especially when it comes to salespeople gaining trust from their prospects, in The Sales Compensation Show:

“To be successful in sales comp, you have to legitimately understand the business to a certain level of depth,” Miller explained. “We have to be able to speak the language; we have to understand the various factors that they [prospects] have to look out for … I think it requires a lot of listening, it requires a lot of asking questions that may sound dumb … I think when we ask those questions, it sets sales comp professionals apart from other functions.”

Just like Josh affirmed, having this information builds credibility and support for your compensation plan revamp. For example, analyzing the volume of activity and customer visits relative to different customer segments reveals misalignments between your sales team’s efforts and the areas you’ve identified as most important.

Also, create a framework that collects feedback on individual sales rep performance. Sales compensation professionals have visibility across all organizations and teams, allowing them to identify top performers based on the deals they close and the feedback they receive. Compare this information to current compensation rankings to uncover discrepancies you need to address in your plan design.

5. Prioritize simplicity in sales compensation plans.

Keeping sales compensation plans simple is crucial — but it’s especially important for large organizations. At HubSpot, even with 8,000 employees, we keep commission plans straightforward for sales representatives. This is in line with industry best practices since 86% of companies standardize their compensation plans.

Kat Walenty, a Senior Manager at HubSpot, underscores the importance of this simplicity in a podcast:

“There’s a lot of nuances around the other things, the benefits that go with it, how we’re paying against the market, finance, like, what are we looking to stiff on? There’s just a lot more to it,” Walenty said. “Whereas, maybe we go to the reps with a very simple plan, but all of the other things around it and getting there are the things that make it very complex and complicated.”

The larger the organization grows, the more variables involved, making sales compensation an increasingly complex optimization problem.

Trying to incentivize every behavior can lead to incentivizing none, so it’s essential to find the right balance within teams and segments.

For example, your sales compensation plan could consist of a base salary and a commission rate of 10% on all sales. Set a clear quota for each representative based on their territory and experience level. If a representative achieves their quota, they earn their full commission. If they exceed their quota, they earn an additional 5% commission on the excess amount.

Prioritizing simplicity in the front-facing aspects of the plan helps keep sales representatives focused and motivated.

6. Choose a payroll software.

Once you’ve determined your plan goals, type, and payment plan, you can choose a payroll software to assist in compensating your salespeople.

Depending on how long your company has been established and whether or not you have an HR team that handles pay and benefits, you may or may not already have payroll software. If you do, it should be easy for you to incorporate your new sales compensation plan into the software.

If not, you might consider one of the following three popular payroll software options to help you carry out your plan.

  • Gusto: This software offers an all-in-one service, including payroll, HR, and benefits, so you can handle all payment-related work from a central location.
  • Intuit QuickBooks Payroll: This option offers automatic payroll tax calculations, paycheck accuracy, and native payroll integration for your accounting software, allowing you to focus your time and attention on other important tasks.
  • Patriot Software Payroll: Patriot is a great option for anyone with a low budget who needs the bare minimum payroll-related features and capabilities.
  • Xoxoday Compass: Xoxoday has a ton of different integrations that work well with your existing ERP, CRM, HRMS, HCM, Spreadsheets, or any sales tech stack to centralize and manage all your commission data in one place.
  • Incfile’s Employer Tax Calculator: While not strictly software, this employer payroll tax calculator tool can estimate tax deductions and withholdings. Incfile’s tool can also estimate hiring costs, pay employees accurately and on time, and better manage temporary and/or seasonal employee payroll.

7. Set quotas and expectations for compensation.

Now it’s time to set your quotas for your individual reps and/or your team as a whole. This will allow you to establish expectations for compensation with your salespeople so everyone knows what’s expected of them and how they’ll have the opportunity to make money.

Of course, this begs the question: How do I decide what the quota should be?

Well, there are two main approaches to setting quotas:

Bottoms-Up Approach

The bottoms-up approach requires you to consider your team‘s capabilities and the perceived market opportunity to determine each territory’s or salesperson’s quota. The more data you have, the easier this will be.

Your inputs will vary depending on your product and type of sale, but generally, you’ll want to consider the following when using the bottoms-up approach to establish quota:

  • Average contract value (ACV) or average deal size
  • Average revenue per salesperson
  • Number of salespeople
  • Number of qualified leads (per month or quarter)
  • Percentage of qualified leads that close

These considerations will tell you how many deals a rep should be working on and, thus, what a reasonable quota should be.

Alternatively, you can simply multiply the typical number of closed deals by the average deal size. This will give you a baseline number to use for your quota.

But beware: The more successful and experienced your salespeople become, the more deals they‘ll be able to work on and the bigger their contracts will be. This means their quota may quickly become inaccurate, so you’ll want to consistently evaluate it if you take this approach.

Top-Down Approach

With a top-down approach, you combine market data with your revenue targets to figure out what your team needs to bring in.

So, if most companies in your space pay their salespeople in the X to Y range, and your reps need to close Y amount in total for your business to hit the established goal, you can determine a reasonable OTE and your optimal team size.

8. Maintain your sales compensation plan.

As your business goals evolve, teams grow, product lines change, and competition adjusts over time, your compensation plan will need to be revisited. Like any business strategy, it’s not going to stay relevant forever — what works now might not suit your needs a year from now.

Review and analyze your compensation plan to keep your reps happy and motivated. At the same time, don’t revise your compensation too frequently. Research suggests that confidence drops when comp plans are changed frequently. It shows you aren’t confident in the plan.

Ensure you’re implementing a plan that helps you positively impact your business’s bottom line. Build it right the first time and stick with it unless there are significant changes that require revisions.

Sales Bonus Structure

Many companies offer bonuses to sales reps based on certain criteria to encourage business growth, customer retention, or employee satisfaction.

If you’re confused, here’s a quick disclaimer on how sales bonuses and sales commission differ: Sales reps earn commission based on the volume of units sold or the revenue obtained from a new customer. For instance, perhaps a sales rep earns a 5% commission on every $1 sold (it’s important to note that commission is one type of bonus that you can offer).

A sales bonus, on the other hand, can be tied to revenue (for instance, maybe your sales reps receive a $10,000 bonus for every $100,000 worth of revenue they bring into the company), but it doesn’t have to be.

Sales bonuses can be tied to other achievements as well, such as if a sales rep increases a customer’s lifetime value or if a sales rep has worked at your company for five years.

In 2022, the most popular formula calculation method was a bonus formula tied to quota performance.

There are different ways to structure your bonus structure. These include:

  1. Variable bonus: Your sales rep earns a certain bonus (or commission) for a certain amount of revenue obtained or when they reach a certain pre-identified achievement.
  2. Above-plan incentive (also known as SPIFFs): Your sales rep earns a bonus when they meet certain criteria for a specific product or service.

To explore these two bonus options more in-depth, I’ll share some bonus examples.

Sales Bonus Examples

1. Bonus Off Commission (Variable Bonus)

In this first example, a sales rep will earn a bonus based purely on the revenue they bring to the company. If a sales rep makes a $100,000 deal, they might earn $10,000.

Alternatively, perhaps you give a commission based on units sold. For example, if a sales rep makes 10 deals in one month, they might receive a $1,000 bonus.

2. Bonus Off Customer Lifetime Retention (Variable Bonus)

If your goal is to reduce customer churn, you might want to motivate your sales reps to increase customer lifetime value through up-selling or cross-selling to existing customers. One way to do this is by offering bonuses for customer lifetime retention.

For instance, perhaps you award your sales reps a bonus of $5,000 for every customer who signs a 3-year contract and $10,000 for every customer who signs a 5-year contract.

3. Bonus Off Annual Performance (Variable Bonus)

This type of bonus awards employees who’ve gone above and beyond for the business over the past year.

An example of this would be a bonus given to each sales rep who reached 120% of the quota over the past year.

4. Bonus Off Sales for Specific Products or Services (Above-Plan Incentive)

If you’ve just launched a new product, it could be a good opportunity to offer SPIFFs to your sales reps.

SPIFFs have pre-defined time frames and criteria. For example, perhaps your sales reps earn $500 each time they sell your new product to a customer. Alternatively, maybe every sales rep who sells 100 units of your new product receives a $1,000 gift card.

SPIFFs typically last only a short period of time. For instance, you might offer SPIFFs to your sales rep for six months to encourage a quick burst of sales on a new product.

a graphic detailing the types of sales compensation bonuses with examples

Begin Creating Your Compensation Plan

Remember, no sales compensation plan is perfect. Your priorities are constantly shifting, your reps are always looking for new loopholes, and your prospects are periodically changing their preferences.

Follow the tips above and develop a sales compensation strategy to fit your specific business needs and resources to help drive your bottom-line success.

This post was originally published in July 2020 and has been updated for comprehensiveness.

Sales Compensation: What a Plan Can Look Like & How to Implement Yours Effectively

No one accepts a position at a company without knowing how much money they’d be making. Sales compensation is an important factor when attracting and retaining talent on your sales team.

Free Resource: Sales Compensation Calculator

You want to give the best talent a reason to accept a position on your sales team and stay with your company long-term. In this guide, I’ll discuss the importance of a sales compensation plan, the types of sales compensation plans, and the steps you can take to create one of your own.

Table of Contents:

Creating a solid sales compensation plan has tons of benefits — let’s go through them together next.

Benefits of Sales Compensation Plans

1. Sales compensation plans create structure within the team.

Sales teams are known for their high turnover. The stresses of selling to uninterested prospects and the general lack of advancement opportunities can make even the most seasoned of salespeople hop from team to team.

One way to lower turnover is to create a sales compensation plan that adds structure to the team, differentiating between junior, mid-level, and senior reps. In doing so, you’ll communicate to the reps that there are advancement opportunities within the team, and they won’t feel like they should leave.

Pro Tip: With HubSpot Sales Hub’s Breeze Prospecting Agent, newer sales reps (and more seasoned ones) can sell smarter and focus their outreach efforts on the leads that matter most. Plus, they’ll be able to develop personalized prospecting strategies designed to complement their efforts, helping them close deals faster and more efficiently.

2. Sales compensation plans incentivize individual reps.

Knowing that they could earn more if they sell more will be enough to incentivize reps. Plus, if you include additional benefits — such as an educational stipend — your reps will be way more incentivized to seek additional training, making them more effective salespeople.

3. Sales compensation plans help you budget better.

By knowing how much you’ll pay each rep, depending on their experience and performance, you can create budgets that better align with your company’s financial standing. That way, you know how much of the company’s earnings will be allotted for your sales reps’ compensation. This will allow you to better prepare if the team underperforms one quarter.

The structure of a sales compensation plan varies by business and is typically based on team organization, resources, and goals. For example, one sales organization might offer a higher base salary, while another might prioritize commission based on their budget, business structure, employee needs, and team targets.

There should be a compensation plan for every member of the sales team based on their role, experience, length of the sales cycle, and the type of deals they engage in. Here are some other factors to consider while thinking about your sales compensation plan:

  • What’s your budget?
  • Does your company culture impact how you compensate employees?
  • What’s your competition paying?
  • What are living costs like in your area?
  • What are your team’s and organization’s goals?

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Before I share how to create your compensation plan, let’s take a look at some important sales compensation terms to know.

Sales Compensation Terms to Know

Depending on how you structure your sales compensation plan, the following terms and concepts may come up as you start the development process.

1. Sales Quota

A sales quota is a time-bound revenue target set by sales managers — either individually or as a group. The most common time constraints for quotas are monthly, quarterly, and annually. They can be measured as the sales managers and company leadership see fit, whether that’s by profit, deals closed, or overall activity.

2. Sales Accelerators

A sales accelerator kicks in when one of your reps hits a specific amount over their quota. Quota attainment, number of products sold, and contract length are the most common types of sales accelerators.

This type of payoff is exponential for your reps. With this compensation plan framework, they may end up with a huge commission check if they have a highly successful month or quarter (so be aware of your resources and budget).

For example, let’s say a rep has a base salary of $100,000 and earns a 10% commission on their sales. If their monthly quota is $50,000 in revenue and they hit 110% of their quota (bringing in $55,000 in revenue), you’d pay them 1.0x on their performance above 100%.

Essentially, this means they’d earn their regular 10% commission on the $50,000 ($5,000) plus an additional 10% commission on the extra $5,000 ($500). In total, your rep would take home $5,500 in commission for that month.

However, if commission accelerates further for over-quota performance (e.g., 1.5x above 100%), that extra $5,000 could yield $750 instead of $500, bringing their total monthly commission to $5,750.

3. Sales Decelerators

Sales decelerators have the opposite effect as accelerators — they penalize underperforming reps. A decelerator may kick in between 40% and 60% of their quota. In other words, if a rep only hits 60% of their quota, their performance would be multiplied by a decimal (like 0.5) to calculate their compensation.

4. Clawbacks

A clawback kicks in when a customer churns (i.e., stop using your product or service) prior to hitting a specific benchmark. They cause the rep to lose their commission and are common among subscription companies in an effort to keep customer retention rates high.

5. On-Target Earnings

On-target earnings (OTE) provide salespeople with a realistic view of their total compensation for a position when their expected and reasonable goals and quotas have been reached. Typically, OTE would include the base salary and the realistic commission resulting from closed deals.

6. Sales Performance Incentive Fund or Sales Contests

Sales performance incentive funds (SPIFFs) or sales contests are ways to incentivize high performance among your salespeople.

These tactics are often used to change behavior and include monetary (such as a $500 cash prize to the first rep who closes 10 deals of a certain product) or non-monetary (a nice dinner for every team that increases their retention rate by the benchmark percentage).

These sales incentives and contests should run for short periods of time — about one to four weeks in total. If you run them any longer, reps will lose the necessary sense of urgency for this tactic to work.

Also, keep your sales contests limited. The more behaviors you reward, the likelier your team will be pulled into conflicting directions — making it difficult to drive specific outcomes.

Now, let’s review a sales commission structure template and examples of different types of compensation plans.

Sales Compensation Structure Template

Structuring your sales compensation plan is simple with this free template. In it, you’ll find seven different types of comp plans that could work for your business. Each of them is made up of several factors that create the total compensation plan:

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  • Base Salary: The compensation provided to a sales rep before they meet quota.
  • Projected Sales: The number of deals that the sales rep is expected to close by the end of the selling period.
  • Commission Rate: A commission amount expressed as a percentage of the revenue brought in by the sales rep.
  • Bonus Amount: The compensation provided above the base salary that compensates a sales rep for the deals they’ve closed during the selling period.
  • Commission Per Sale: The compensation amount paid to a sales rep per unit sold.

These are some of the most common sales compensation factors you’ll take into account when developing your comp structure, but you may not use all of them in the same plan.

Below are some examples of compensation plans and how each of these elements fits into them.

Sales Compensation Plan Examples

There’s no one specific way to pay employees in sales. Many companies tailor their plans according to how they conduct business. Generally speaking, there are four main types of compensation: hourly wages, salary, commission, and bonuses. Compensation plans are more detailed and can contain different forms of commission or no commission at all. They are all tailored to the size and scope of the business it applies to.

The following examples include the most common types of sales compensation plans. Each example has a different structure, so you can tailor your plan to your specific sales team and business based on your needs, resources, and goals. Check them out below:

1. Base Salary Plus Commission Plan

a chart graphic detailing how a base salary plus commission sales compensation plan works

Create a custom version of this compensation plan with HubSpot’s free Sales Compensation Calculator Kit

The most common sales compensation pay structure is the base salary plus commission plan. This structure provides reps with a fixed yearly base salary as well as commission. They get the security of a steady income with the economic incentive to sell.

In this plan, the commission percentage is lower because of the base salary.

To determine your base-variable (or fixed) compensation split, think about the following factors:

  • How difficult the sale is
  • How much autonomy is needed (i.e., are you providing your reps with leads, or are you asking them to generate their own? Are you giving them technical support or none?)
  • How much experience is necessary

To determine the variable compensation, think about the following factors:

  • How complex your sales cycle is
  • How much influence the rep has over the purchasing decision
  • How many leads reps work with at a given time
  • Your team’s selling function

Essentially, the shorter and simpler a sale is and the less impact a rep has over the customer’s behavior, the smaller the percentage of variable compensation should be.

One standard ratio across industries is 60:40 — meaning 60% fixed to 40% variable. A less aggressive ratio (think 70:30 or 75:25) is common when reps are required to teach the prospect because they’re most likely selling a highly complex or technical product.

Account managers may have a similar ratio of fixed to variable pay, driving them to spend more time helping their existing customers than finding new ones.

Best for: Most businesses, as it provides greater clarity into expenses and allows for hiring highly-motivated, competitive salespeople while ensuring reps fulfill non-selling tasks. With this plan, you benefit from greater clarity into your expenses (since there’s less variability) and the opportunity to hire highly-motivated, competitive salespeople.

2. Base Salary Plus Bonus Compensation Plan

A base salary plus a bonus compensation plan is common when your reps tend to consistently hit their pre-set targets.

For example, you might pay $30,000 base and $15,000 for selling X amount per year. If you know about eight of your 10 employees will consistently hit quota, and total earnings are $55,000, you can set aside $440,000 in your annual budget for the bonuses. But again, this prevents reps from feeling any motivation to over-perform.

Best for: Companies with reps who consistently hit their pre-set targets. It offers a high level of predictability and motivation to close sales. This sales compensation plan approach offers a high level of predictability and still motivates your reps to close sales.

3. Commission Only Compensation Plan

a chart graphic detailing how a commission only sales compensation plan works

Create a custom version of this compensation plan with HubSpot’s free Sales Compensation Calculator Kit

A commission-only structure means you pay reps purely based on their performance. If they don’t sell anything during a month, their salary is zero. If they sell $50,000 worth of products in a month, their salary may be anywhere between $15,000 and $22,500, depending on the commission percentage you offer your employees.

This type of plan also motivates reps by giving them the freedom to earn as much money as they can while saving you time trying to identify any poor performers on your team. However, commission-only plans can make it challenging to forecast your expenses and stick to a tight budget.

In terms of the commission percentage to pay reps, you may decide it’s anywhere between 5% to 45%, which is standard.

Additionally, the more support you expect reps to give customers (such as implementation help or account management), the higher their commission should be. Remember to factor in their level of involvement in the sale as well, meaning if they’re only producing leads (rather than closing them, too), you should allocate a smaller commission.

Best for: Companies looking to minimize risk and motivate reps to earn as much as they can while saving time by identifying poor performers. Due to the simplicity of a commission-only compensation plan, you forgo a lot of risks. Plus, when your salespeople succeed, revenue increases; if they fail, you lose nothing.

4. Gross Margin Commission Plan

Maybe your company will pay reps based on profit rather than sales. In other words, a rep would be compensated more for selling a product with a $2,500 gross margin than one with a $1,000 gross margin.

Additionally, gross margin commission plans promote the sales of specific product lines. Not all products are created equal, but paying on gross margin motivates your salespeople to sell more of your most profitable products.

However, there are three main things to keep in mind when it comes to gross margin commission plans.

  • Revenue must be your priority if you use this plan. Perhaps you’re trying to build market share or attract the top 20 logos in your industry. You want salespeople to focus on those goals — compensating them for profit may distract them and cause them to pursue the wrong customers.
  • Reps must have control over pricing. Reps have to be either selling multiple products at different price points or have discounting power.
  • You must be able to track your gross margins. Shifting product and/or distribution costs, rebates, and territory changes can make calculating this extremely hard.

Best for: Companies prioritizing revenue and looking to discourage discounting, promote specific product lines, and motivate salespeople to sell more profitable products. This sales compensation plan works well because it discourages discounting. Reps can become reliant on discounts to close deals, which isn’t good for your business. Tying commission to the product’s final cost encourages reps to give fewer and smaller discounts.

5. Absolute Commission Plan

a chart graphic detailing how a set rate commission sales compensation plan works

Create a custom version of this compensation plan with HubSpot’s free Sales Compensation Calculator Kit

An absolute (or set rate) commission plan requires you to pay your reps when they reach specific targets or milestones. For example, you might pay your salespeople $1,000 for every new customer they obtain or 15% of upsell and cross-sell revenue.

However, this structure doesn‘t take into account market penetration or the number of opportunities. For example, one rep may be getting twice as many leads as their peer, but they’d both be treated equally.

Additionally, you’ll need to carefully consider what’s best for the overall company when determining the commission. If you’re trying to drive the sales of a certain product line, you’ll need to compensate reps accordingly (hint: reps will often do whatever is most lucrative for them, regardless of greater business objectives).

Best for: Companies aiming to drive good results with easy-to-grasp plans that directly tie output to salary without setting quotas and instead focusing on benchmarks or recommendations. Because the output is directly tied to salary and there are no quotas involved, reps are usually highly motivated to perform.

6. Straight-Line Commission Plan

A straight-line commission plan rewards reps based on how much or little they sell. For example, if a rep reaches 86% of their quota, they’ll receive 86% of their commission. If they reach 140% of their quota, they receive 140% of their commission.

Although this approach is relatively easy to calculate, it’s not perfect. So, what’s the issue? You want to encourage over-performance as much as possible. If you’re already paying base, getting a rep to hit 140% of their quota from 120% has a greater financial impact than getting an under-performer to hit 100% of their quota from 80%.

Plus, a rep may be just fine making 80% of their quota — you don’t want to disincentivize any of your reps to sell because they’re content with a lower salary (which is when you’d incorporate an accelerator).

Best for: Companies that want to encourage over-performance, as getting a rep to hit 140% of their quota from 120% has a greater financial impact than getting an under-performer to hit 100% of quota from 80%.

7. Relative Commission Plan

a chart graphic detailing how a relative commission sales compensation plan works

Create a custom version of this compensation plan with HubSpot’s free Sales Compensation Calculator Kit

Unlike an absolute commission plan, a relative commission plan uses a quota or predetermined target. This target can be based on revenue (X dollars) or volume (X units).

When a rep hits 100% of quota, they make their OTE, which consists of either base salary plus commission or pure commission. For example, if a rep’s yearly quota is $60,000, their at-plan commission is $50,000, and their base is $80,000, then their OTE would be $130,000.

Best for: Companies that want to use a quota or predetermined target based on revenue or volume, with reps making their on-target earnings (OTE) when hitting 100% of quota.

8. ‘Draw Against’ Commission Plan

DrawAgainst commission plans are regularly occurring payments made in advance to the sales rep or subtracted from the rep’s total commissions. While they seemingly emulate salary schedule payments, they are regular commission payouts given to the employee before they need to earn that money back. If there are remaining commissions after a specific time period, you will pay the remainder.

There are two main Draw Against commission plans:

Recoverable Draws

Recoverable draw payouts are basically loans to employees that you expect to gain back from their earned sales commission. For example, if an employee draws $2,500 per month, they’re expected to earn a minimum $2,500 in commission each month so your business doesn’t lose money. If this threshold is not met, their debts roll over into next month’s pay period.

Nonrecoverable Draws

Typically suitable for newly beginning sales reps, this draw is a payment you will not expect to gain back. It is unlikely for these employees to earn much in commission from the start, so use this draw until their training period is over.

Best for: Companies looking to provide regular commission payouts to employees before they need to earn that money back.

9. Territory Volume Commission Plan

a chart graphic detailing how a territory volume commission sales compensation plan works

Create a custom version of this compensation plan with HubSpot’s free Sales Compensation Calculator Kit

With a territory volume commission plan, sales teams work with prospects and clients in clearly defined regions. Your reps are paid on a territory-wide basis versus an individual-sale basis. Once the compensation period is complete, the total sales are split among the reps who worked in that territory.

Best for: Team-based sales organizations where each rep works towards a common goal and focuses on a specific territory or region, with commissions split among the reps working in that territory. To attract reps to this type of plan and grow your sales teams, you may offer them an attractive commission paired with a well-developed territory.

10. Salary Only Compensation Plan

With a salary-only structure, you decide ahead of time how much you’ll pay your salespeople. It doesn’t matter how much (or how little) they sell; their take-home earnings are set.

A salary-only structure is fairly uncommon for sales teams. That’s because, without commission, reps are usually less motivated to go above and beyond. After they’ve hit quota, they may relax instead of pushing for the next deal because there’s no incentive or reason to continue onward.

Plus, many salespeople love the thrill of scoring commission — the high stakes and competitive nature of earning a commission is often part of the reason reps go into sales in the first place. Not to mention, your top-performing reps may just leave your company so they can make commissions elsewhere.

You’re likely wondering: Well, are there any positives to a salary-only compensation plan?

Here’s your quick answer: Yes. This type of compensation plan makes it simple to calculate sales expenses and predict hiring needs. Additionally, your reps may be less stressed because they don’t have to worry about the financial consequences of missing their target or the weight of the competition.

Best for: Companies that want to simplify calculating sales expenses and predict hiring needs, with reps potentially experiencing less stress due to not worrying about the financial consequences of missing targets or the weight of competition.

11. Multiplier Commission Plan

A multiplier commission plan incentivizes sales representatives to exceed their targets and drive revenue growth. You reward reps by multiplying their commission rate when they achieve a certain percentage above their sales target.

For example, if a rep’s standard commission rate is 10% and they achieve 150% of their target, their commission rate might be multiplied by 1.5, resulting in a 15% commission on all sales over the target.

Say a rep has a monthly target of $50,000 and earns a base commission of 10%. If they sell $75,000 worth of products (150% of their target), their commission would be:

  • 10% commission on the first $50,000 = $5,000
  • 15% commission on the additional $25,000 = $3,750
  • Total commission earned = $8,750

Best for: Industries with intense competition or high-growth startups. It’s also effective for product launches, seasonal sales, and expansion into new markets where companies want to establish their footprint quickly. This plan encourages reps to push beyond their targets. The higher they go, the more they earn. Ultimately, it’s an excellent option for companies looking to drive aggressive growth and reward top performers.

12. Milestone-Based Commission Plan

A milestone-based commission plan rewards sales representatives for achieving specific milestones throughout the sales process.

Instead of focusing on the final sale, this plan incentivizes reps to complete key activities that lead to successful deals — like setting up demos, securing contracts, or reaching revenue thresholds. Each milestone carries a specific commission amount or percentage.

For example, a milestone-based plan might offer:

  • $500 commission for setting up a qualified demo
  • $1,000 for securing a signed contract
  • 5% commission on the first year’s revenue once the deal closes

This structure keeps reps focused on moving prospects through the pipeline and encourages them to prioritize high-value activities.

Let’s say a rep sets up 10 qualified demos ($5,000), closes 5 contracts ($5,000), and generates $100,000 in first-year revenue ($5,000) in a quarter. Their total commission would be $15,000.

Best for: Industries with complex sales cycles, like B2B or financial services, where multiple touchpoints and milestones are required to close a deal.

Now, let’s look at how to implement one of these types of sales compensation plans on your team.

How to Implement a Sales Compensation Plan

1. Use a sales compensation planner.

There are dozens of potential approaches to and combinations of sales compensation strategies. To ensure you land on the best plan for your sales team, use a sales compensation planning template to calculate how much revenue you can expect and how much reps will be paid.

Featured Resource: Sales Compensation Planner

a screenshot of hubspot’s sales compensation planner

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2. Determine your sales compensation plan goals.

The first part of developing a sales compensation plan strategy includes setting your goals — laying out your business objectives is a critical part of any strategy.

So, here are some common primary and secondary goals of sales compensation plans for your consideration. Clarifying your priorities will help you decide how to compensate your salespeople in a way that works for your business.

Remember, your goals may mix the examples below or look completely different — your targets should reflect what you hope to get out of the sales compensation plan and your unique needs. Check out the chart below for some insight on how to segment these goals:

Primary goals of sales compensation plans

Secondary goals of sales compensation plans

Grow revenue

Lower expenses

Increase cash flow

Drive sales for a specific product

Increase average contract length

Attract target customers

Increase average deal size

Reduce discounting frequency

Increase the percentage of repeat customers

Reduce average discount size

Increase retention rate

Acquire seed accounts

Increase upsell or cross-sell rate

Manage deal flow

3. Choose a type of sales compensation plan.

Now that you have your goals, it’s time to choose which compensation plan you’ll implement at your company. Refer back to the sales compensation plan examples to review the most common options.

While determining which plan is best for your business, ask yourself the following questions:

  • What is my overall budget?
  • How many reps do I have?
  • What types of compensation plans do my competition use?
  • What will my salespeople expect out of the plan implemented?

You’ll also need to determine when to pay employees. Typically, there are four standard options for paying commissions:

When a Customer Signs a Contract

Paying when the customer signs the contract is good motivation for the salesperson at hand because they immediately see the monetary impact of closing the deal.

However, this payment plan can also lead to cash flow problems if there’s a significant delay between the signed agreement and the first payment (especially if you’re an early-stage business or it‘s a large deal that’s being closed).

When You Receive the Customer’s First Payment

Compensating reps when you’re paid is the most common payment method. There’s less lag between the time of the commission and revenue payments. You can also use clawbacks to incentivize salespeople to focus on good customer fit (rather than just anyone who will buy), which often boosts retention rates.

Note: If you’re a subscription-based business, this timeline can disrupt your cash flow. After all, if you give a rep commission on the entire contract when you get the first check, you’re paying in advance of the customer’s subsequent payments.

Every Time a Customer Pays

Paying each time you get an invoice is ideal if you want to protect your cash flow. Nonetheless, it can be complex to plan if you’re on a tight budget, especially if you have a large sales team of reps closing and managing deals.

When Deal Goals are Reached

Also referred to as a tiered commission structure, this compensation plan motivates reps and rewards top performers who close a certain number of deals monthly. After reps exceed a predetermined benchmark, their commission rate increases. This model can also implement commission reductions for those who underperform.

4. Base your decisions on research and data.

Collect data on sales rep performance, customer visits, and segmentation using a tool like HubSpot Sales Hub to identify areas where your team’s efforts may not align with your priorities.

Josh Miller, Head of Sales Compensation at CVS Health, explained why this is important, especially when it comes to salespeople gaining trust from their prospects, in The Sales Compensation Show:

“To be successful in sales comp, you have to legitimately understand the business to a certain level of depth,” Miller explained. “We have to be able to speak the language; we have to understand the various factors that they [prospects] have to look out for … I think it requires a lot of listening, it requires a lot of asking questions that may sound dumb … I think when we ask those questions, it sets sales comp professionals apart from other functions.”

Just like Josh affirmed, having this information builds credibility and support for your compensation plan revamp. For example, analyzing the volume of activity and customer visits relative to different customer segments reveals misalignments between your sales team’s efforts and the areas you’ve identified as most important.

Also, create a framework that collects feedback on individual sales rep performance. Sales compensation professionals have visibility across all organizations and teams, allowing them to identify top performers based on the deals they close and the feedback they receive. Compare this information to current compensation rankings to uncover discrepancies you need to address in your plan design.

5. Prioritize simplicity in sales compensation plans.

Keeping sales compensation plans simple is crucial — but it’s especially important for large organizations. At HubSpot, even with 8,000 employees, we keep commission plans straightforward for sales representatives. This is in line with industry best practices since 86% of companies standardize their compensation plans.

Kat Walenty, a Senior Manager at HubSpot, underscores the importance of this simplicity in a podcast:

“There’s a lot of nuances around the other things, the benefits that go with it, how we’re paying against the market, finance, like, what are we looking to stiff on? There’s just a lot more to it,” Walenty said. “Whereas, maybe we go to the reps with a very simple plan, but all of the other things around it and getting there are the things that make it very complex and complicated.”

The larger the organization grows, the more variables involved, making sales compensation an increasingly complex optimization problem.

Trying to incentivize every behavior can lead to incentivizing none, so it’s essential to find the right balance within teams and segments.

For example, your sales compensation plan could consist of a base salary and a commission rate of 10% on all sales. Set a clear quota for each representative based on their territory and experience level. If a representative achieves their quota, they earn their full commission. If they exceed their quota, they earn an additional 5% commission on the excess amount.

Prioritizing simplicity in the front-facing aspects of the plan helps keep sales representatives focused and motivated.

6. Choose a payroll software.

Once you’ve determined your plan goals, type, and payment plan, you can choose a payroll software to assist in compensating your salespeople.

Depending on how long your company has been established and whether or not you have an HR team that handles pay and benefits, you may or may not already have payroll software. If you do, it should be easy for you to incorporate your new sales compensation plan into the software.

If not, you might consider one of the following three popular payroll software options to help you carry out your plan.

  • Gusto: This software offers an all-in-one service, including payroll, HR, and benefits, so you can handle all payment-related work from a central location.
  • Intuit QuickBooks Payroll: This option offers automatic payroll tax calculations, paycheck accuracy, and native payroll integration for your accounting software, allowing you to focus your time and attention on other important tasks.
  • Patriot Software Payroll: Patriot is a great option for anyone with a low budget who needs the bare minimum payroll-related features and capabilities.
  • Xoxoday Compass: Xoxoday has a ton of different integrations that work well with your existing ERP, CRM, HRMS, HCM, Spreadsheets, or any sales tech stack to centralize and manage all your commission data in one place.
  • Incfile’s Employer Tax Calculator: While not strictly software, this employer payroll tax calculator tool can estimate tax deductions and withholdings. Incfile’s tool can also estimate hiring costs, pay employees accurately and on time, and better manage temporary and/or seasonal employee payroll.

7. Set quotas and expectations for compensation.

Now it’s time to set your quotas for your individual reps and/or your team as a whole. This will allow you to establish expectations for compensation with your salespeople so everyone knows what’s expected of them and how they’ll have the opportunity to make money.

Of course, this begs the question: How do I decide what the quota should be?

Well, there are two main approaches to setting quotas:

Bottoms-Up Approach

The bottoms-up approach requires you to consider your team‘s capabilities and the perceived market opportunity to determine each territory’s or salesperson’s quota. The more data you have, the easier this will be.

Your inputs will vary depending on your product and type of sale, but generally, you’ll want to consider the following when using the bottoms-up approach to establish quota:

  • Average contract value (ACV) or average deal size
  • Average revenue per salesperson
  • Number of salespeople
  • Number of qualified leads (per month or quarter)
  • Percentage of qualified leads that close

These considerations will tell you how many deals a rep should be working on and, thus, what a reasonable quota should be.

Alternatively, you can simply multiply the typical number of closed deals by the average deal size. This will give you a baseline number to use for your quota.

But beware: The more successful and experienced your salespeople become, the more deals they‘ll be able to work on and the bigger their contracts will be. This means their quota may quickly become inaccurate, so you’ll want to consistently evaluate it if you take this approach.

Top-Down Approach

With a top-down approach, you combine market data with your revenue targets to figure out what your team needs to bring in.

So, if most companies in your space pay their salespeople in the X to Y range, and your reps need to close Y amount in total for your business to hit the established goal, you can determine a reasonable OTE and your optimal team size.

8. Maintain your sales compensation plan.

As your business goals evolve, teams grow, product lines change, and competition adjusts over time, your compensation plan will need to be revisited. Like any business strategy, it’s not going to stay relevant forever — what works now might not suit your needs a year from now.

Review and analyze your compensation plan to keep your reps happy and motivated. At the same time, don’t revise your compensation too frequently. Research suggests that confidence drops when comp plans are changed frequently. It shows you aren’t confident in the plan.

Ensure you’re implementing a plan that helps you positively impact your business’s bottom line. Build it right the first time and stick with it unless there are significant changes that require revisions.

Sales Bonus Structure

Many companies offer bonuses to sales reps based on certain criteria to encourage business growth, customer retention, or employee satisfaction.

If you’re confused, here’s a quick disclaimer on how sales bonuses and sales commission differ: Sales reps earn commission based on the volume of units sold or the revenue obtained from a new customer. For instance, perhaps a sales rep earns a 5% commission on every $1 sold (it’s important to note that commission is one type of bonus that you can offer).

A sales bonus, on the other hand, can be tied to revenue (for instance, maybe your sales reps receive a $10,000 bonus for every $100,000 worth of revenue they bring into the company), but it doesn’t have to be.

Sales bonuses can be tied to other achievements as well, such as if a sales rep increases a customer’s lifetime value or if a sales rep has worked at your company for five years.

In 2022, the most popular formula calculation method was a bonus formula tied to quota performance.

There are different ways to structure your bonus structure. These include:

  1. Variable bonus: Your sales rep earns a certain bonus (or commission) for a certain amount of revenue obtained or when they reach a certain pre-identified achievement.
  2. Above-plan incentive (also known as SPIFFs): Your sales rep earns a bonus when they meet certain criteria for a specific product or service.

To explore these two bonus options more in-depth, I’ll share some bonus examples.

Sales Bonus Examples

1. Bonus Off Commission (Variable Bonus)

In this first example, a sales rep will earn a bonus based purely on the revenue they bring to the company. If a sales rep makes a $100,000 deal, they might earn $10,000.

Alternatively, perhaps you give a commission based on units sold. For example, if a sales rep makes 10 deals in one month, they might receive a $1,000 bonus.

2. Bonus Off Customer Lifetime Retention (Variable Bonus)

If your goal is to reduce customer churn, you might want to motivate your sales reps to increase customer lifetime value through up-selling or cross-selling to existing customers. One way to do this is by offering bonuses for customer lifetime retention.

For instance, perhaps you award your sales reps a bonus of $5,000 for every customer who signs a 3-year contract and $10,000 for every customer who signs a 5-year contract.

3. Bonus Off Annual Performance (Variable Bonus)

This type of bonus awards employees who’ve gone above and beyond for the business over the past year.

An example of this would be a bonus given to each sales rep who reached 120% of the quota over the past year.

4. Bonus Off Sales for Specific Products or Services (Above-Plan Incentive)

If you’ve just launched a new product, it could be a good opportunity to offer SPIFFs to your sales reps.

SPIFFs have pre-defined time frames and criteria. For example, perhaps your sales reps earn $500 each time they sell your new product to a customer. Alternatively, maybe every sales rep who sells 100 units of your new product receives a $1,000 gift card.

SPIFFs typically last only a short period of time. For instance, you might offer SPIFFs to your sales rep for six months to encourage a quick burst of sales on a new product.

a graphic detailing the types of sales compensation bonuses with examples

Begin Creating Your Compensation Plan

Remember, no sales compensation plan is perfect. Your priorities are constantly shifting, your reps are always looking for new loopholes, and your prospects are periodically changing their preferences.

Follow the tips above and develop a sales compensation strategy to fit your specific business needs and resources to help drive your bottom-line success.

This post was originally published in July 2020 and has been updated for comprehensiveness.

Unlocking the Experience Economy — Here’s What Every Brand Should Know

Does anyone else value experiences more than, well, stuff? The older I get, the more it’s clear that I would rather spend money making memories than spend my money on something I’ll have to store somewhere.

Plus, every now and then, the spirit of Marie Kondo descends. If an item isn’t nailed down to the floor, it’s in danger of the donation pile.

More and more consumers think like I do. In fact, a recent study conducted by Barclays found that nearly 60% of consumers would rather spend money on memories than material items. This shift in thinking (and spending!) has led to a boom in the experience economy.→ Download Now: The State of Customer Service [Free Report]

To understand this shift, I spoke with Kayla Smith, the director of public relations and travel advisor for Sojourney Travel. Today, I’m sharing what I learned and giving you tips on how to make the most of the experience economy.

Table of Contents

What is the experience economy?

The experience economy focuses on selling memorable experiences rather than goods and services.

I asked Smith to give me her definition of the experience economy. She told me, “I would define it as sort of this cultural shift of people seeking out experiences over material things. I hate to bring COVID up, but that was a time when there was this sort of broad-spectrum cultural shift.”

Smith mentioned that the COVID pandemic helped people realize that some experiences are here only for a moment. And once the moment has passed, it’s gone forever. Smith said, “It’s the concept of ‘you don’t really know what you have until it’s gone.’ And so you had this generational shift of people saying, ‘Okay. When we get past this, I want to build memories. I want to live life to the fullest.’”

She continued, “I think it just created this atmosphere of people seeking out experiences more and more to the point where there is this huge economic shift where people are taking more trips.”

A travel business is the most notable example of a company that operates well in this economy. However, other kinds of businesses do well in this economy, too. We’ll look at some great examples later on. But first, let’s dig deeper into why the experience economy matters.

Why the Experience Economy Matters

Given the term, it’s easy to understand that a customer’s experience is the top priority for brands that rely on the experience economy. However, even if your brand doesn’t provide an experience, like a once-in-a-lifetime trip or a class to learn craft skills, core principles of the experience economy matter, and you can apply those same concepts to the service you provide your customers.

So, what are the core concepts of the experience economy? Good question. Let’s look at them.

1. Experiences help build relationships.

Building a relationship with your clients helps improve the customer experience, even before they spend any money with your brand.

When your brand goes above and beyond to provide a memorable customer experience, you have a higher chance of gaining a loyal customer. It’s why 31% of customer success leaders look for ways to maximize customer retention strategies.

Smith said when people ask about her job, she doesn’t tell them she’s in the travel business. Instead, she says, “I’m in the relationship business. On the business side of things, it’s the opportunity to expand the relationship, to keep it going, and to have a personal connection with each of your clients.”

Smith told me that looking for ways to improve and maintain the customer relationship is the core of the experience economy. She said, “I think it’s a great opportunity to build relationships with your consumer. It is a continuous relationship.”

For Smith, that continuous relationship makes a difference for Sojourney Travel. She said, “Consumers have the comfort of knowing that there’s a continuous person that they can reach out to and that they built that relationship as well. So on the consumer side, they don’t have to search for someone new every time they want to plan a trip.”

2. It’s easy to personalize based on customers’ needs.

Creating those lasting relationships leads to another reason the experience economy matters: personalization.

And customers notice — 62% of consumers say that personalized recommendations are better than general ones. Personalized recommendations tell your customers that you are listening to and hearing their needs. If you can personalize your offerings based on your customers’ wants and needs, you’re working to elevate the customer experience and deepen your relationships.

Smith made a good point about personalization when it comes to strengthening connections. She told me that when you build personalized relationships, customers keep returning to you. She said, “They come back to you, and they’re like, ‘Hey, I worked with you last time. I know you have these notes about me.’”

In fact, 59% of customers think businesses should use the data they collect on consumers to personalize their experiences. Moreover, 68% of customers would rather work with a brand that keeps notes than spend time repeating themselves to customer service reps.

When customers explicitly tell you what they want, pay attention. Reviewing your notes and records is an easy way to modify your services to meet your customers’ needs better.

3. Focusing on the customer experience can increase your revenue.

Remember how Smith and I mentioned that personalized relationships mean repeat customers? Brands that emphasize improving the customer experience and getting to know their clients better will have more opportunities to increase their revenue.

Amazingly, 86% of consumers are willing to pay more for a great customer experience, which can lead to increased cross-sells and upsell opportunities. In fact, 42% of businesses focus solely on the customer experience to increase the chances of these sales opportunities.

From a customer perspective, I can say this rings true. When my husband and I went on our honeymoon earlier this year, we stayed in a great little Airbnb. The hosts were super responsive and made our stay memorable. A few months later, when booking another stay, I specifically looked for rentals through our previous hosts. I knew their clean cabins provided the extra amenities my husband and I wanted.

Going the extra mile for your customers can help create more revenue opportunities, even if they’re a few months away.

hubspot customer journey map template]

Use HubSpot’s free customer journey map template.

Examples of the Experience Economy

Let’s look at some examples of brands that make the experience economy work for them.

1. Sojourney Travel

what is the experience economy: example from sojourney travel

Sojourney Travel, the company Smith works for, is an excellent example of the experience economy. Sojourney Travel helps its clients book memorable travel experiences without the headache that booking and planning usually bring.

For Smith, the travel experience is more than just creating memories in new, exotic places. Instead, it’s often about the togetherness created between families during their travels. Smith said her clients are simply seeking out opportunities to be together. She said, “People are just seeking this human interaction more and more than before.”

I asked Smith why customers choose Sojourney Travel as their travel agency. She told me they focus on solving travel issues before the customer is even aware of the problem. This helps reduce the friction and frustration travelers experience, leading to a better vacation and more positive experiences.

And it leads to happy, repeat customers.

2. DIYBooks

what is the experience economy: diy books

Source

When I think of the experience economy, I automatically think of travel brands. However, DIYBooks is an excellent example of an experience economy that goes beyond traveling.

DIYBooks connects individuals with ghostwriters to help tell their personal stories. According to Barbara Basbanes Richter, founder of DIYBooks, they “help people write their life stories through a guided journey of memory, reflection, and storytelling.”

I asked Richter why DIYBooks works. She told me, “Writing is both thinking and feeling — it’s how we make sense of our experiences. At DIYBook, we guide writers through this process, helping them uncover memories and connect stories in ways they hadn’t expected. When writers share their completed books with families and friends, they often spark conversations that might never have happened otherwise.

“Stories that seemed ordinary become touchstones for deeper family connections. This transformation from ‘writing a book’ into ‘discovering and sharing your life story’ makes DIYBook part of the experience economy. We’re not selling a writing platform; we’re helping people preserve their stories in ways that matter.”

Like Smith and Sojourney Travel, DIYBooks is in the business of building relationships — both with its customers and between its customers’ families.

3. Declare to Dare

what is the experience economy: declare to dare example

Debbi Sluys, a vision board expert and founder of Declare to Dare, helps her clients create the life of their dreams. Her vision board classes allow participants to develop connections to their deepest wants and desires. Sluys’s approach to her classes intentionally creates a welcoming and inclusive space to dream. Plus, she provides participants with the tools to make their dreams a reality.

Sluys’s business is a unique experience, and her local tourism board took notice. Sluys told me, “I’m in Ontario, Canada. Our municipality approached me as an experience for their tourism offers. So on the website, it has me, and then it has me connected with one of our local boutique hotels as well as a local brewery.”

She said, “And then it becomes a whole experience for a girls’ weekend because people are looking to do, to create an experience, to create that memory. And so what they receive with me is definitely the experience at the moment, but then it carries on afterward because they actually have something tangible they’re going to take home, and I’ve taught them how to use it.”

4. Flygreen

what is the experience economy: flygreen

In my opinion, Flygreen is another great example of the economy of experience, especially for travelers who want to travel conveniently and in style.

Flygreen offers flyers a personalized chartered jet experience. Travelers can be in the air in as little as four hours, enjoying their preferred amenities made possible by the help of Flygreen’s aviation directors.

When I asked Pascal Couture-Trembaly, vice president of operations at Flygreen, why the customer experience is central to the brand, he told me it’s more than customer satisfaction. It’s efficiency, too.

Couture-Trembaly said, “At Flygreen, customer experience means delivering more than just a flight — it’s about offering unmatched efficiency and thoughtful expertise. For us, this translates to ensuring that a customer can make an inquiry and be ready to take off within four hours. In private aviation, time is a luxury our customers value far more than a glass of champagne or a leather seat.”

He said, “Exceptional service involves understanding the purpose of every trip and seamlessly matching it with the ideal aircraft. A fishing expedition requires something entirely different from an in-flight business meeting, and our job is to make those decisions effortless for our clients.”

It’s important to remember that customer experience transcends far beyond brands that fit neatly into the experience economy. What I mean by that is even if your brand doesn’t sell a direct experience, like a hotel stay, a guided tour, or a private class, you can still benefit from the concepts that make the experience economy great.

Here’s how.

1. Listen to your customers.

Smith told me the biggest way to make the experience economy work for your brand is to “focus on the relationships. Listen to the people.”

She said, “All in all, you’re not selling a product. You’re selling yourself and your services. You’re selling an experience to the client. You’re selling memories and the opportunity of togetherness.”

When you approach customer experience from a blind perspective, providing the experience your customers want and need can be challenging. This is why open conversation and dialogue is critical.

2. Dig deep into your customer’s “why.”

As you create opportunities to listen to your customers, take some time to understand why they are spending money with your brand.

Smith told me that it’s vital to understand why a customer is seeking out your services. Digging into their “why” is how you can provide the best, most personalized experience.

If you’re unsure of their reasonings, ask the deep questions. Smith said it’s as easy as asking them why they’re seeking out your services. Send a customer survey or contact your clients just to catch up and ask if you can do anything to support them. You might be surprised at how easy it is to tailor the experience when you clearly understand their needs.

3. Promote the human connection.

If I learned anything through my master’s of education program, it’s that connections are a basic human desire. I appreciate brands that focus on human-to-human interaction, and I think it’s one of the top takeaways of why the experience economy works so well.

According to Smith, it’s what people want to experience with a brand. She told me, “You know, I think people seek experiences because of the overall human connection that they desire.”

She said, “I think that they are going to want more of that because it is a basic human desire to connect with others and other like-minded people. When you feed into that when you talk to people, get an idea of what they’re looking for, and really form these relationships, you’re going to have a successful business model.”

Focus on the Experience

As I learned by chatting with Smith, consumers seek opportunities for experiences and memories.

No matter your brand, whether you sell an experience like DIYBooks or goods and services, listening to your clients will help you create a better customer experience. A positive customer experience will keep your clients coming back for more, helping to increase your revenue and bottom line.

25 Testimonial Examples to Build Hype

When I research companies online, I don’t just want to hear the company’s pitch; I want to hear from its customers. That’s where customer testimonials come into play. But what makes some testimonials so much better than others?

In this post, I’m sharing 25 testimonial examples showing how customers can build hype for your business. I’ll also share insights from marketers and business owners to teach you how to source, write, and distribute testimonials effectively.Download Now: 25 Testimonial Page Examples [Free Guide]

Table of Contents

Effective testimonials go beyond a simple quote that proclaims your greatness. They need to resonate with your target audience and the people who could also potentially benefit from the work you do in the future.

The best testimonials tell a story with friction and resolution. At the end of the day, your customer is the hero, but your brand helps them reach their goals.

Why are testimonials so effective?

Testimonials are a powerful tool used across multiple customer touchpoints, from marketing materials to sales conversations. Here’s why they are so effective:

Social Proof

When people are uncertain, they often seek validation from those who have already taken the leap. Testimonials as social proof allow potential customers to rely on others’ experiences to guide their decisions.

As Marissa Taffer, founder and president of M. Taffer Consulting, explained, “Testimonials are critical to my business. As a consultant, the field can be crowded, and having past (or current) clients paint a picture of what it‘s like to work with me can help me win a new piece of business better than if I try to explain what it’s like myself.”

Storytelling

Testimonials add a storytelling element to your marketing. They transform customer experiences into relatable narratives that potential clients can connect with.

When I spoke to Nadine Heir, an organic marketer at Tukki, she shared that in her work with B2B companies and tech SaaS companies, they “rely heavily on testimonials to add a story element to their marketing.”

By connecting with prospects through relatable stories, businesses humanize their brand and establish a deeper connection.

Demonstrating Impact

Testimonials do more than tell a story; they demonstrate real impact.

Heir highlighted this when she told me, “Without testimonials, it’s hard to demonstrate how technology or services move the needle for customers.”

Rather than simply telling potential customers about your offerings, testimonials highlight the tangible results your service or product has delivered.

Building Trust

Testimonials are essential for trust-building as they show potential clients that others have had positive experiences using your product or services. For service providers, in particular, this is often invaluable.

Nathan Ojaokomo, a freelance content writer, emphasizes this point: “Using testimonials makes it easier for potential clients to trust me.”

How to Ask for a Testimonial

I’ve learned that there’s no one-size-fits-all system for collecting testimonials. Businesses approach this differently depending on their type of business, product, customer/client base, and available resources. The key is tailoring your approach to your specific needs and goals.

Here are some of the most common strategies businesses use to gather valuable testimonials.

1. Make a direct ask.

Sometimes, the simplest and most effective way to collect testimonials is by directly asking your customers for them.

This is especially true for service providers or businesses that can’t allocate resources for more complex systems or lengthy interview processes.

But how do you ask for these testimonials?

Asking for a testimonial might seem awkward, but with practice and systemization, it becomes easier.

A great place to start is by sending a personalized email. As Ojaokomo explains, “I just ask them in an email. Something like, ‘We’ve been working together for a while now. Do you mind saying a few things about our work together? You can mention any from my communication, the quality of my work, and the results I’ve generated for your business.’”

The key is to make the request feel natural while clearly outlining what you need from them.

2. Conduct customer interviews to uncover insights.

Interviews often reveal in-depth stories about how your product or service has addressed specific challenges and delivered value.

Eric Doty, content lead at Dock, shared with me that, “Most of our testimonials come from full customer case studies based on 30-minute customer interviews.”

Similarly, Stella Inabo, a content marketer at Float, also shared with me how their customer interview process led to in-depth customer testimonials: “In our case, we conducted 30-minute interviews with everyone we spoke to. I started with the usual questions: ‘What’s your job? What are the hard parts of your job? How does our tool solve your pain points? What do you like or dislike about it?’ If someone mentioned something interesting, I let them elaborate or asked a follow-up question. As a result, I ended up with very comprehensive insights.”

3. Document and analyze customer interactions.

Some of the best testimonials happen organically during customer interactions. However, many businesses miss the opportunity to collect these valuable testimonials because these interactions aren’t properly documented.

“Many companies miss out on excellent, organically shared feedback because their product, sales, or CX teams don’t know what to look for, or they aren’t documenting every customer call,’ Heir explained to me.

At Tukki, she takes this a step further: “We record everything, which allows us to follow up with customers later via email, saying, ‘In our call, you mentioned XYZ. Do you mind if we share that with our audience in marketing materials?’”

4. Systemize testimonial collection.

While the methods mentioned above are effective, setting up an automated system to collect feedback regularly can make the process even more efficient. This can take various forms like:

collect testimonials through hubspot customer satisfaction survey

Customer Satisfaction Survey: Proven Tips for HONEST Answers

Tips for Collecting High-Quality Testimonials

How you collect testimonials can make or break the process, determining whether you can gather feedback at all and the quality of the testimonials you receive.

Here are some real-world tips and best practices to help ensure you get meaningful, high-quality feedback.

1. Know your target audience.

Before collecting any testimonials, clearly defining your target audience is essential. This information will be crucial in determining which segment of your customer base to include in your customer outreach.

As Ojaokomo shared, it’s crucial to “ensure the profile of the people leaving testimonials matches the profile of clients or customers you want to attract.”

If the people providing testimonials don‘t match the profile of the audience you’re trying to reach, even the most glowing testimonials are unlikely to resonate.

Once you’ve identified your target audience, the next step is to pinpoint the specific concerns or objections your testimonials should address.

Doty explained, “We have relevant testimonials based on the use case the customer is looking at. For example, we have testimonials that focus on onboarding to use with clients who are specifically looking at using Dock for onboarding.”

2. Ask at the right moment.

The timing of your request can significantly impact the willingness of a customer to leave a testimonial.

When a customer shares positive feedback, seize the opportunity to ask for a testimonial while their enthusiasm is fresh. As Doty pointed out, “Whenever we get glowingly positive feedback in an email or an Intercom support chat, we‘ll ask if that customer is willing to leave a review for us. They almost always say yes if we ask them right after they’ve given that positive feedback.”

3. Provide a framework and/or examples.

Giving your customers some direction can improve the quality of their testimonials by helping them provide more focused responses.

Doty explained to me how this approach works at Dock. “To get better answers out of them, I send them a customer story guide,” he explained. “I also send them sample questions, but not the exact questions I’m going to ask to make sure their answers are off-the-cuff, authentic, and unscripted.”

4. Use software to support the process.

Using software tools can streamline your process and make it easier to capture valuable insights.

Doty mentions Riverside and Descript as his go-to tools, while Inabo is a big fan of Maven. She shares, “Maven is great because it helps take specific notes, transcribes accurately, and uses AI to surface highly targeted insights.”

5. Share your final draft with the customer before publishing.

While it may seem like permission is implied once a testimonial is given, securing explicit consent before making it public on your business assets is essential.

Heir emphasized this, saying, “We send a contract to get explicit permission to share their words or videos. We also ensure they approve the specific wording before posting anything publicly.”

Inabo also noted, “We typically don’t have things like this happen at Float, but there was an instance where one software company said their legal team had to look through what we had written.”

Taking this proactive step helps prevent any potential issues down the road. It ensures the customer can review the testimonial, get approval from relevant stakeholders, and request any necessary amendments before it’s shared publicly.

Now that I’ve covered how to collect testimonials and customer feedback effectively, let’s discuss how to get the most out of this feedback.

In this section, I’ll share expert tips on how to turn that feedback into compelling testimonials.

1. Highlight Customer Pain Points

The most compelling testimonials are built around a story — and every story begins with a problem. “When presenting testimonials, businesses should highlight customer pain points and how their service provided a solution,” explains Safia Marmon, project lead at Sunbowl.

Highlighting the pain point in a testimonial is crucial because it allows your target audience to put themselves in the customer’s shoes and envision themselves overcoming the same challenge with the help of your product or service.

2. Keep the Customer’s Success Front and Center

One powerful lesson I learned while speaking to Inabo was Float’s approach to crafting compelling testimonials.

“We‘ve found that people want to feel like they’re good at their job, can spot a great tool, and implement a solution,” she explained. “It’s important that the customer’s success comes first, with our tool serving as the aid.”

A strong testimonial doesn’t just praise your product — it highlights the customer’s achievements. By spotlighting their success, you make the testimonial more relatable and inspiring.

3. Balance Emotion With Data

A compelling testimonial blends emotion and statistics to create a story that resonates and proves tangible value. “Emotions and statistics are the bread and butter of a standout testimonial,” Heir shared.

Doty also emphasized the importance of emotional appeal, noting that this can make testimonials feel more genuine and credible. “Having a bit of raw emotion, unfiltered honesty, or a specific anecdote in the testimonial versus having a perfectly polished quote makes them resonate more,” he explained.

But how do you strike the right balance between emotional appeal and data?

This balance emerged out of necessity for Inabo, but became a powerful strategy. She shared, “When I started conducting customer interviews at Float, I sent out questions beforehand, specifically asking them to come prepared with metrics.

However, many of them came with ‘feelings’ instead. Rather than sharing concrete data, I would hear things like, ‘It feels less chaotic. It feels like we’re more efficient. It feels like projects are faster.‘ So, what we ended up doing was blending those emotions with public data, which led to headlines like ’This company became more efficient in handling 200 staff.’”

4. Be Specific

Vague statements like “It was great!” don’t add much value to a testimonial. Instead, aim for specific feedback that highlights the benefits customers experience. Instead of using blanket or ambiguous statements like “made more money,” provide specific data and quantitative results, such as “grew our sales by X%,” to add credibility and detail to the testimonial.

Ojaokomo echoed this point, sharing, “The testimonial should be specific, so potential customers can see that the client didn’t just use a template or make a blanket statement. If possible, include real numbers.”

5. Keep It Short

People have short attention spans, which is evident from a recent Wistia study. The study found that the longer a video testimonial is, the lower its engagement: 45% of viewers stayed engaged with a video testimonial under one minute, but that number dropped to just 23% when the video exceeded five minutes.

If your testimonial is unnecessarily long, your readers will disengage and move on to reading something else. I recommend keeping written testimonials to two or three paragraphs or a video/audio testimonial under three minutes.

6. Attribute the Testimonial

Get permission to attribute a quote with the customer or company name whenever possible. An attributed testimonial is much more powerful than an anonymous one. If you can’t attribute a quote, use as much detail as you can, such as the person’s first name, location, and age or type of company.

To personalize a testimonial, add before and after images, a speaker photo or company logo, and other images that help readers connect emotionally.

10 Different Types of Testimonials

Testimonials can be collected and shared in different formats and platforms/mediums. In this section, I’ll cover ten testimonials and briefly discuss how they can be leveraged in your sales and marketing strategies.

types of testimonials infographic

1. Quote Testimonials

Quote testimonials display positive statements about your company in a customer or brand evangelist’s own words. This review style can be significantly more effective than traditional advertising methods, as most consumers will trust a peer over a paid actor. Include an image of the person to make it even more effective.

If your company wants to attract customers of a different demographic, finding testimonials with the same profile as your new audience can help make the connection.

2. Video Testimonials

Video is one of the fastest-growing content mediums, with 46% of companies using video to create video testimonials, according to Wyzowl’s 2023 study.

This shift towards video is evident in the approach of companies like Sunbowl, where, as Marmon shared, “We’re now focusing on authentic video testimonials, shifting away from our previous approach of using written reviews.”

Seeing another person share their story is more compelling than words on a page. 87% of marketers report that video has helped them to increase leads and sales, meaning they carry a powerful punch.

Consider this two-minute video testimonial that HubSpot created with a happy customer, ClassPass.

52% Increase in Lead Conversion Rate | ClassPass x HubSpot’s Customer Success Story

3. Audio Testimonials

Audio is similar to video in how it can influence and motivate your audience. For example, you can use an audio testimonial in a podcast, radio ad, or LinkedIn content.

One great benefit of audio is that it‘s cost-effective. You don’t need an entire production crew and tons of expensive equipment. You only need a microphone, recording software, and a quiet room to record in. With those tools, you can tell an inspiring customer story by threading different customer quotes together in one track.

4. Case Study Testimonials

A case study is an in-depth analysis of a customer’s experience with your company. These pieces — compelling for B2B companies — use a more scientific approach to prove how your business played a role in the customer’s success.

For example, case studies often use facts and observations to demonstrate how certain products or services benefit actual customers of your business. You can also use data visualization and storytelling to illustrate your benefits.

5. Social Media Testimonials

When people have an emotional brand experience (good or bad), they want to tell someone about it. That’s where social media testimonials come into play.

When you see customers talking about your brand on social media, engage with them. Like and comment on their post for added exposure. Be sure to ask permission before sharing those experiences on your website or other content.

6. Customer Interviews Testimonials

Customer interviews are an excellent way for your business to ask customers about specific aspects of your business and how they played a role in their success.

This format lets you show off your different products and features and lets potential leads see their real-world application. You can repurpose a customer interview over multiple mediums: written, video, photos, and audio.

7. Authority Testimonials

Also known as “influencer testimonials,” authority testimonials are pieces of content that include a celebrity or spokesperson supporting your company.

Often, this person is a significant influencer of your target audience and helps build your business’s credibility.

The most effective spokespersons are the ones who share the core values of the business and deeply connect with the target audience. Influencer testimonials can be expensive, and finding the right influencer can be challenging. Still, when they succeed, these campaigns can pay dividends for your company over time.

8. Peer Review Testimonials

Peer review testimonials are feedback that customers post on review sites like Yelp, Angi (formerly Angie’s List), or Trustpilot. These reviews can influence customers as many consumers look at these review sites during decision-making, particularly when using a company for the first time.

Studies show that 54% of consumers will only consider buying from a business if they have four or more stars on a review site.

These reviews can be quickly captured, reformatted, and shared on your company’s website, bringing social proof to your site.

9. Blog Post Testimonials

A blog post can be an informative way of displaying customer testimonials. You can write about a customer’s story in-depth and break down subtle details within the customer’s journey.

Once completed, the post can be shared either on your blog or on another blog that’s popular in your industry.

10. Press Review Testimonials

For growing companies, getting your business featured in the news (for the right reasons) is a big accomplishment.

Just like the restaurant Five Guys decorates its walls with press accolades, consider how to highlight positive media reviews. Capture quotes, buy reprint rights, and share your brand’s media coverage on social media.

Are you feeling inspired yet? Good, but before you start crafting your customer testimonials, it’s important to understand some of the best design practices.

In the next section, I’ll cover key design fundamentals you’ll want to focus on when creating customer testimonials.

Testimonial Design Best Practices

While customer testimonials can appear in many formats, there are still some standard guidelines to follow, regardless of your chosen approach.

Including the following elements in your customer reviews will make your customer testimonial feel more genuine for your target audience.

testimonial design best practices infographic

1. Get inspired.

Testimonial pages should feel unique yet familiar. Often, the best way to learn is to be inspired by successful examples. Testimonial pages are no different.

That’s why I’ve compiled a guide filled with the 25 best testimonial pages from companies we’ve seen online. Download the guide to get inspiration for your testimonial page.

[ADD FWCTA HERE INSTEAD OF OLD CTA]

2. Make it visually engaging.

The best testimonials paint a picture with words so readers can understand your purchasing value. Be sure to feature testimonials with descriptive language that’s enthusiastic and detailed to help convince your prospects to make a purchase.

Take your testimonial page one step further by incorporating more visual elements like images, videos, and social media feeds.

These are relatively easy ways to make testimonial content more engaging and prove to readers that the testimonial comes from a real person.

3. Keep it aligned.

Highlight testimonials that align with specific features of your product or service. Then, connect the dots for readers by linking to different product or tool pages. This allows readers to learn more about what they’ve just read.

All the better if there are relevant images or demo videos you can share alongside these specifically aligned testimonials.

4. Use a website page builder.

A testimonial page should be well-designed and visually appealing to maximize its intended impact. You can use a free website builder with themes and templates to quickly make a testimonial page that stands out.

hubspot's free website builder

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What do these look like in action? Check out the testimonial examples below to find inspiration for your testimonial page.

1. Stio’s Brand Ambassadors

stio’s brand ambassadors testimonial example

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Testimonial Type: Authority

Outdoor enthusiasts need to know that a product is durable and safe (sometimes in extreme conditions!) before they will purchase it. Stio’s approach adopts brand ambassadors who wear its products and advocate on the company’s behalf.

In its testimonial pages, Stio’s brand ambassadors answer interview questions about their interests and excursions for inspiration. The ambassadors mention Stio products and include a product carousel for their favorite gear at the bottom of each testimonial page.

A quote I love: “That the Outside is for Everyone! My passion is to support my community in getting outside.”

The testimonial introduces the reader to someone they can empathize with. This testimonial has a link to a blog post that further promotes the business.

2. Blue Apron’s Instagram How-To

testimonial example blue apron's instagram how-to

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Testimonial Type: Social Media, Authority

Testimonials can be simple. In fact, this testimonial by Instagram influencer Cody Tries Stuff is excellent because it’s easily shared via social media or the company’s website. That way, the brand can engage with leads on their most comfortable channels.

It’s also incredibly effective and has a foodie audience. Plus, it shows you how to use the meal kit with a discount code. Consider this comment from one of Cody Tries Stuff’s followers: “This is without a doubt the greatest blue apron ad that’s ever been created. The only time I’ve considered giving it a try.”

Pro tip: For social media reviews, consider inviting an expert to showcase your products, and don’t hesitate to include more informal elements like cute animals. (Ultimately, of course, it depends on your industry.)

3. Villa’s Tacos LA Times Review

villa’s tacos la times review testimonial example

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Testimonial Type: Press Review

Sometimes, testimonials don’t have to come from customers. In this example, a Los Angeles-based restaurant was given an excellent review by a critic from the LA Times.

While these testimonials don‘t come every day, it’s important to seize these opportunities and put this content on blast for potential leads to see. It’s also incredibly effective for a party unrelated to your business to review your product publicly.

For example, if you own a restaurant, you can potentially send pitches to editors, and if you sell a tech product, consider pitching your solution to tech publications. These reviews generate buzz and offer a uniquely unbiased yet editorialized view of your offering.

A quote I love: “Among choices of meat, I savor the nubbly beef and chorizo but take particular pleasure in the rich, hashed chicken leg that absorbs the mesquite smoke most profoundly.”

Getting this specific testimonial from a reputable third party inspires readers to desire your offering.

4. Fabletics’ #MyFabletics Hashtag

testimonial examples from fabletics' #myfabletics hashtag

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Testimonial Type: Social Media

Fabletics leverages social media to collect testimonials from its customers. For example, it encourages customers to post themselves on their Instagram pages wearing Fabletics products and tagging “#MyFabletics.”

This provides a surge of engagement for the brand’s social account and creates free advertisement through customer advocacy.

This is one of the most cost-effective methods for collecting unbiased customer testimonials. You can create a hashtag and easily start promoting it on Instagram or TikTok without paying a single dime.

What I love: Even if users don‘t write a lengthy caption singing praises to your product, a picture will more than say enough. The quality of the product and the user’s emotion in the photo will show that your product works.

5. Harry’s Trustpilot

harry's trustpilot testimonial examples

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Testimonial Type: Peer Review

As you can see in the image above, Harry’s has done a great job of building up its credibility on consumer review sites like Trustpilot.

Trustpilot is a highly regarded review site. High ratings give personal care company Harry‘s a major vote of confidence. You’ll rarely find a negative review, though it’s worth noting that a few negative reviews can lend credibility by making the reviews seem authentic. A TrustPilot account also enables you to analyze the reviews, pinpoint trends, and identify areas of improvement.

A quote I love: “How to solve my issue with my razor’s lubrication strip disintegrating was explained promptly and politely. And a free pack of cartridges was sent to compensate. Excellent service.”

6. Ahrefs Customer Quotes

testimonial examples from ahrefs customer quotes

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Testimonial Type: Quote

While Ahrefs doesn’t have a lot of quote testimonials on its homepage, the quotes used are catchy, specific, direct, and inspiring. In addition, the customer quotes come personalized with photos.

I love the simple carousel format and how you can click through different industries for quotes. The testimonial featured above is from Maile Waite, head of content for Ahrefs client CloudApp.

A quote I love: “Using Ahrefs’ data to plan our content strategy helped us increase visits to our blog by over 200% compared to the previous year.”

7. FASTSIGNS Customer Testimonial Video

fastsigns customer testimonial video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dgMyk8jJIpA

Testimonial Type: Video

FASTSIGNS’ testimonial video focuses on several customers who love to use their product. It’s simple storytelling at its best and emphasizes the impact and end result of the products. This three-minute video has more than two million views.

8. BambooHR’s Case Study Testimonial

bamboohr's case study testimonial

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Testimonial Type: Case Study

The big smiling picture of Angie stands out and invites readers to consider how BambooHR helped her organization. This is a real person that I’d love to trust.

The case study above focuses on the challenge, the solution, and the result. In addition, quotes from Angie are included in the content to personalize the testimonial and make it more relatable to readers.

A quote I love: “I can have training with the supervisors on how to utilize goals or assessments [in BambooHR], or how to do one-on-ones. And across the board, it’s the same, no matter the location. That brings that consistency you must have with multiple branches in multiple locations.”

9. OptinMonster’s Case Study Testimonials

optinmonster's case study testimonials

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Testimonial Type: Case Study, Testimonial Quote

OptinMonster leverages social proof at scale by showcasing a large testimonial page with a pull quote and photo for each. When you click on one, it opens a complete case study with quantitative results illustrated at the top, followed by a narrative about the customer journey.

A quote I love: “We are all in on OptinMonster. It works seamlessly for us. It has allowed us to dramatically increase our email subscribers.”

10. Zendesk’s Customer Stories

testimonials from zendesk's customer stories

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Testimonial Type: Case Study

Zendesk has a dedicated customer page that contains success stories of companies that use the product. The testimonials work for several reasons. Let’s take a look at the example above.

First, there are quote testimonials from the main players at Tile, offering social proof to readers. Second, the case study is also specific by highlighting the company’s challenges and how Zendesk helped.

A quote I love: “With the Zendesk and Ada integration, we were able to not only save costs on seasonal headcount, but we were also able to see revenue growth from customers who were being served at faster rates.”

Now that you’ve seen some excellent testimonial examples, let’s look at how to create your own testimonials.

Where and How to Share Testimonials

After you’ve collected several valuable testimonials and designed them the way you like, it’s time to consider how you’ll distribute them. I advise repurposing and adding them everywhere your potential customers might be! Look beyond the testimonial page with these placement ideas.

1. Share them on your website.

This is a simple use case for most businesses. For example, at Dock, Doty shared that they have testimonials on the home page and throughout the website.

Similarly, consider sprinkling social proof into your landing and services pages by adding a relevant quote or link to a case study on each one.

Creating a dedicated testimonial page to house all your testimonials and case studies is also important, providing potential customers with a central hub to visit when evaluating your product or service.

2. Use them in ad creatives.

Customer testimonials are powerful assets that can be repurposed into engaging ad creatives. Doty shared with me how the team at Dock uses customer interviews to create video clips for paid ads.

He explained, “As marketing collateral, we turn customer interviews into video clips and run paid ads to them on LinkedIn.”

3. Leverage them for organic content.

Testimonials can also be integrated across various types of content. For example, Inabo emphasized the importance of case studies in her content creation process at Float.

“For blog posts specifically, once we have testimonials, we use them in several ways: generating content ideas, writing ‘how-to’ sections in articles, and finding opportunities to incorporate them into upcoming content we want to optimize.”

4. Turn them into sales collateral.

Doty shared how Dock embeds customer testimonials and video clips into their sales strategy, saying, “For sales, we embed customer testimonials and video clips in our digital sales rooms.”

Similarly, Marmon explained how Sunbowl uses testimonials as social proof in its sales process when she told me, “They are primarily used in our sales strategy to show clients the work we’ve accomplished and how they can achieve similar results on their Shopify site.”

For service providers, testimonials can also be a great sales tool to support pitches and outreach. For example, as a freelance writer, Ojaokomo uses testimonials as social proof when pitching potential clients. He shared, “I use them on my website and also include them in my pitches to potential clients as a form of social proof.”

5. Use them to train internal AI tools.

This is an exciting and often underutilized use case, which I discovered through an interesting example shared by Inabo. She explained, “After we wrote the customer stories, my manager took them and plugged them into ChatGPT to train a model. This gave us a custom GPT that draws from the case studies to answer questions.”

6. Distribute on external review sites.

Publishing testimonials on third-party review sites can be a great way to expand their reach.

Doty shared, “We also ask if the customer is willing to leave a review on G2. Having that review publicly available on G2 gives more legitimacy to the testimonial when we feature it on our website.”

Testimonial Page Examples: What elements make a good testimonial page?

While many companies spread testimonials throughout their site, creating a dedicated testimonial page is also a good idea.

Testimonial pages are often one of the most visited pages by potential customers. Here are some critical components to include in your company’s testimonial page.

Choose headlines carefully.

Even though testimonials provide a wealth of value, many customers won’t take the time to read every one you put on your testimonial page.

One way to ensure potential customers easily find the testimonials most relevant to them is to use descriptive headlines. Instead of summarizing the entire testimonial into a headline, try only including the most essential part. It may be a comment on a specific product or a result the customer received by working with your company.

Ultimately, you’ll see better engagement rates if you keep headlines to around five to seven words.

Paint a complete customer profile picture.

As stated earlier, people are more likely to buy a product if a peer has had a good experience with the company or service. One way to connect a potential customer with a current client is through a customer profile.

In your testimonials, include all the information you can about the customer — age, gender, occupation, company, etc.

The more data you can share about the person, the more likely someone visiting the page will personally connect with the testimonial.

Consider featuring a single testimonial.

There are many ways to organize your testimonial page, but one of the most impactful is to consider featuring a single testimonial above all the others.

For example, if one of your company‘s key differentiators is your team’s customer service, you‘ll want to pick the best testimonial you have around a customer’s experience.

Having the glowing review be the first thing potential clients see can help drive home that your company prides itself on delivering exceptional service.

Now, let’s see how other companies utilize their pages to drive leads.

1. HubSpot

hubspot case studies page

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On our own testimonials page, HubSpot features enthusiastic customer reviews detailing the benefits, quantitative results, and implementation journey to HubSpot. The teaser for each case study shows the company’s industry, size, and hubs used, letting readers pick a case study that’s closest to their experience.

What I love: The testimonials make it clear that the change was worth it for the customer.

2. Bluebeam

bluebeam case study

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Many companies struggle to grab people’s attention using their testimonial pages, but Bluebeam does a great job of catching your eye as soon as you arrive on the page.

While it’s technically called a case studies page, the first thing you see is a set of project examples in the form of large, bold images that rotate on a carousel.

What I love: Scroll down, and you can also click on video case studies and view customer panels.

3. mHelpDesk

mhelpdesk’s testimonial page

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Visit mHelpDesk‘s testimonial page, and you’ll see videos and text testimonials equipped with pictures.

Some of the testimonial videos don’t have high production quality.

However, they get the message across and cover useful and relevant information — which shows you don’t need to invest thousands in production to get some testimonial videos up.

What I love: In line with the theme of earning trust, the testimonial page displays awards and badges of recognition.

4. ClearSlide

clearslide testimonials

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One of the first things I noticed about ClearSlide‘s testimonial page is how creatively it’s named — “What They’re Saying.”

It includes a smattering of customer quotes, topped with client logos from big names like The Economist and Starwood.

Pro tip: If you have celebrities or influencers within their community, include and even highlight their testimonials on your page.

5. FocusLab

focuslab’s testimonial page

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FocusLab took a unique and very cool-looking design approach to its testimonial page — which is fitting, seeing as it‘s a design agency. Again, it’s technically a visual catalog of both previous projects and works-in-progress.

Instead of just listing client quotes, the page opts for a card-like design with interactive, rectangular elements you can click on to see the complete case study — with quotes occasionally appearing in between.

What I love: FocusLab not only covers the challenges faced by clients and how FocusLab helped solve them, but the case studies also include some of the steps in the design process.

6. 99designs

99designs’ testimonial page

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99designs takes an unconventional approach to its testimonial page. Using a star-rating system not usually seen in the B2B sector, the page is headlined with an eye-catching video with customer reviews below it.

What I love: The page allows users to sort through customer reviews by category so they can read the ones most relevant to them.

7. Slack

slack’s testimonial page

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Slack’s customer testimonials are under a section they’ve called “Customer Stories,” highlighting an individual company per post.

Slack uses individual testimonials to highlight key product features and how the customer used them — a genius way to give a product tour while letting happy customers sing your praises.

What I love: Each review features a quote that summarizes how Slack helped the customer’s business. From each blurb, visitors can click to learn more about the specifics of that customer case study to get even more insights.

8. Dribbble

dribbble’s testimonial page

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Dribbble’s “wall of love” is clean and simple, with highlighted quotes, names, and photos. What I love about this page is how honest and straightforward the user reviews are.

It’s quickly clear to a reader that these testimonials haven’t been altered or edited — which lends the site a degree of authenticity and trustworthiness that might convince someone to start using the product.

Pro tip: Avoid over-editing your customer’s testimonials. Otherwise, it’ll sound like you wrote them even though you didn’t.

9. BioClarity

bioclarity’s testimonial page

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BioClarity’s cruelty-free, plant-derived skincare line is about one thing: being green. Green is all over the website, and its Instagram is covered in images of people applying green serums to their faces.

In this case, pictures serve as better testimonials than words — but BioClarity still uses both.

On its reviews page, visitors can see pictures of items, star ratings, and words of recommendation — all in a soothing green theme.

What I love: Visitors can click on the reviews page to read in-depth product reviews from real customers from the results page.

10. Kissmetrics’ Customer Quotes

kissmetric’s testimonials

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Kissmetric’s testimonial page features quotes from three customers who describe how the software helped them achieve their goals.

Notice how they highlight different features that Kissmetrics offers and how using the software directly impacted their business.

What I love: This is a great example of a testimonial page that showcases the brand’s value.

11. Xero

xero’s testimonial page

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Xero’s customer stories page is beautifully designed and highly user-friendly. It features detailed biographies of its customers and really makes you feel connected to their stories.

In one example, we meet Amy, who’s using Xero’s software and services to run her business.

Her testimonial page includes quotes, videos, and plenty of pictures showing not only how Amy uses Xero but also showing off her interests and personality as well.

This makes Amy’s testimonial more relatable because it feels genuine to Xero’s target audience. And, since I feel like I know Amy through her page, I’m more likely to trust her testimonial.

Pro tip: Use storytelling elements to bring your customers’ experiences to life.

12. REI

rei’s gear reviews

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Here’s an excellent example of a blog testimonial page for an outdoor retailer. REI uses this section of its blog to promote different product benefits and uses.

What I love: Customers can contribute stories, and readers can vote and comment on the posts. This structure starts valuable conversations about the business and creates a community of like-minded customers.

13. Esch Landscaping LLC

esch landscaping’s testimonial page

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At the end of the day, if you’re an SMB, your testimonial page shouldn’t break the bank. You don’t have to build out an entirely new sector of your site to showcase your testimonials effectively.

Instead, build your testimonial page directly into your site’s interface, like the example above.

Esch Landscaping has a clean, straightforward testimonial page integrated seamlessly into its main site. It has videos highlighting the company’s work and individual quotes from clients who were satisfied with their experience.

What I love: This is an excellent example of how SMBs can execute a cost-effective testimonial page.

Writing Testimonials That Connect with Your Audience

As I’ve worked on this piece, I’ve come to appreciate how creating impactful testimonials requires a thoughtful, strategic approach. From establishing the right processes to asking the right questions and transforming feedback into compelling narratives, every detail plays a vital role.

By sharing practical tips and real-world testimonial examples throughout this post, I hope you‘ve gained valuable insights into how some of the best in the business create testimonials that not only capture customers’ experiences but also deeply resonate with their audience.

We removed the featured resource snapshot here in favor of the FWCTA

Editor’s note: This post was originally published in April 2018 and has been updated for comprehensiveness.

11 Customer Service & Support Metrics You Must Track [New Data]

Think about the last time you had a great — or even terrible — customer experience. I experienced the former recently when I had a refund issue with a major airline. It started with an AI chatbot that collected all my information to get my background details in one place. I was then matched with a representative via text who quickly processed the refund and sent me on my way. The CS team used all of the green flags of service to help resolve my issue:

  • Used AI to chatbot to respond efficiently.
  • Personalized my experience with my user profile.
  • Connected me with a representative to quickly solve my issue.

→ Download Now: Customer Service Metrics Calculator [Free Tool]

If that’s the gold standard, how can you make sure your customer experience lives up to it? In this article, I’ll share the top ways to measure — and improve — your customer experience. I’ll also share some of the latest data from our 2024 State of Service report to support these insights. Together, we’ll explore customer satisfaction, retention, resolution time, and more.

Table of Contents

Top Customer Service Metrics Reps Track in 2024 [New Data]

According to our State of Service report, the top KPIs service leaders track in 2024 are:

  • Customer satisfaction score (CSAT).
  • Revenue.
  • Customer retention.
  • Average response time.
  • Average resolution time.

When choosing a list of five most important metrics, customer satisfaction and customer retention were selected by 31% of respondents. Followed closely behind are average response time (29%), average resolution time (26%) and customer lifetime value (26%).

Like my example with the airline, customers today are expecting swift action from your customer service teams. Tracking metrics can measure how satisfied your customers are and how quickly you serve their needs — because you can’t improve what you don’t measure.

top customer service kpis

Keep reading to see what top metrics you should track in 2024 to deliver exceptional customer experience.

11 Customer Service Performance Metrics You Must Track

1. Customer Satisfaction (CSAT)

Customer satisfaction measures how your customers feel about the customer service or support they received — and it’s the leading metric for CS teams to track, according to our State of Service report.

CSAT is typically measured by asking your customers to complete a quick survey post-service, whether by clicking a thumbs up or thumbs down or answering a few questions about their experience. How you collect this data is up to you.

What Customer Satisfaction Tells You

This crucial metric tells you how effective, helpful, and friendly your customer service team was and if your customer’s issue was fully resolved. It could also tell you whether or not they’d return with a question or concern based on your questions.

What to Look For When Measuring Customer Satisfaction

Look for positive responses, which means great customer experiences and a well-functioning customer service team. Negative responses can also help, as they tell you how to improve.

How to Improve Customer Satisfaction

Listen to what your customers are telling you. If your post-service survey doesn’t ask open-ended questions, consider following up with those who reported a negative (or thumbs down) experience and ask them for specific feedback.

Emily Stebbins, a contract manager at HubSpot, says, “I was always the most focused on customer satisfaction rate. If we were not solving the core issue(s) at hand, we were not satisfying our customers.”

Stebbins also stresses the importance of “asking the right questions, matching tone, and using comforting and helpful language … to assure movement and care.”

Pro tip: I recommend incorporating AI tools to improve customer satisfaction. Of the marketers surveyed in our report, 91% found that AI improved their customer service response time.

2. Average Ticket Count

Your average ticket count measures the average number of customer service or support tickets your team receives. You can measure these on a daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, or yearly basis — or all of the above.

Navigating this can be extremely tricky when the number of tickets is higher than ever, and 82% of customers expect issues to be resolved immediately.

findings from the hubspot 2024 state of customer service report on customer service metrics

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What Your Average Ticket Count Tells You

While more tickets can be a confirmation that your customer service system is accessible and working, it can also indicate customers are having frequent issues — and that your product or service may be falling short.

What to Look For When Measuring Your Average Ticket Count

Look for fewer tickets, which means fewer problems for your customers.

How to Improve Your Average Ticket Count

Communicate your customer feedback to your product and marketing teams so they can understand what your customers may be dealing with or asking questions about. Depending on the number of tickets you receive, ensure you have enough representatives on your customer service team to handle the ticket volume.

Pro tip: I recommend using HubSpot Service Hub to speed up ticket resolution time and reduce the amount of time customer service reps spend resolving tickets/issues — a win-win.

3. Average Response Time

Your average response time tracks how long your customer service team takes to respond to a conversation after opening a ticket.

This metric measures how quickly your customers are being helped, as well as how quickly each ticket can be resolved. As customers feel long holds and wait times are the most frustrating part of customer service, it’s important to factor this metric into your service practices.

With the vast majority of customers expecting their issues to be resolved immediately, reducing your average response time will ensure that you are responding promptly to their needs.

What Your Average Response Time Tells You

This metric tells you how quickly your customer service team solves issues and gets back to customers.

What to Look For When Measuring Your Average Response Time

Look for quick response times, which demonstrate to your customers that their issues are your priority… which can lead to positive customer satisfaction measures.

How to Improve Your Average Response Time

Make sure your team is equipped to solve issues and answer questions. If they’re dependent on a manager, trainer, or product specialist, it’ll likely take longer to get back to customers with answers and solutions. Also, ensure your team handles and resolves the proper number of tickets at once — whether that’s one, five, or ten. If they’re too overwhelmed, it could slow down your customer service process.

4. Average Ticket Resolution Time

Your average ticket resolution time measures how long your team takes to resolve each customer service or support ticket.

What Your Average Ticket Resolution Time Tells You

This metric tells you about the efficiency of your customer service team and, potentially, the complexity of issues from your customers.

What to Look For When Measuring Your Average Ticket Resolution Time

Look for short resolution times, which means that your customers’ issues are being solved quickly — and more customers are walking away satisfied.

How to Improve Your Average Ticket Resolution Time

Take a look at the initial message your team sends to each customer. Make sure reps ask thoughtful questions and encourage the customer to explain their problem in detail. Also, ensure your team is well-versed in your products or services so they can respond and resolve issues quickly without having to reach out to other teams for help — thus lengthening the process. An internal knowledge base can also go a long way in giving reps the info they need to solve customer problems.

In addition, take note of tickets filed for the same issue. Jon Dorosh, a senior customer success manager at HubSpot, says, “If tickets related to a certain product or service tend to have an above-average resolution time, it may be a great opportunity to build further knowledge base enablement or schedule training for your internal teams.”

Pro tip: AI-powered reps will also be extremely useful in helping you efficiently meet the needs of modern customers.

quote from jon dorosh about customer service metric of ticket resolution time

5. Ticket Resolution Rate

Your ticket resolution rate measures how many issues are fully resolved in comparison to those that haven’t yet been resolved. This metric is also measured based on a period of time, like daily, weekly, or monthly.

You can also compare your ticket resolution rate to your ticket backlog to see how many tickets remain unresolved each day, week, or month. What constitutes a fast or slow ticket resolution rate will depend on other benchmarks you set for your team: ticket backlog amount, average response time, etc.

Calculate the ticket resolution rate using this formula:

Resolved Tickets / Total Tickets x 100 = Ticket Resolution Rate (%)

What Your Ticket Resolution Rate Tells You

This metric tells you how quickly and efficiently your customer service team is solving — and closing — tickets.

What to Look For When Measuring Your Ticket Resolution Rate

Look for a high rate, meaning fewer tickets are left unresolved.

How to Improve Your Ticket Resolution Rate

Be sure you have enough representatives to handle all of the tickets you receive. Are there other issues or distractions keeping your representatives from handling their assigned tickets and taking on new ones?

6. Preferred Communication Channel

The preferred communication channel isn’t as much a metric as it is an observation of how your customers prefer to contact you. Whether through email, live chat, social media, web form, or phone calls, keep track of how your customers reach out to you.

Customers also now expect omnichannel support across platforms.

According to the State of Service report, marketing leaders say the most effective customer service channels are:

  • AI chatbots.
  • Online chat with a human rep.
  • In-person.
  • Social media.
  • Over the phone.
  • Messaging apps.

What Your Preferred Communication Channel Tells You

This information tells you how your customers prefer to communicate with your business and what channels you should focus on and improve.

What to Look For When Measuring Your Preferred Communication Channel

You’re not necessarily looking for one channel in particular, but take note of customer patterns. These can help guide your customer service and support analysis.

How to Improve Your Preferred Communication Channel

Considering that ticket volume has increased significantly across all channels, offering omnichannel support is crucial.

In fact, according to research by the HubSpot Blog, 70% of service leaders say customer service needs to be available across every channel customers use.

Luckily, offering omnichannel support is one of the highest ROI strategies you can use. And using AI chatbots to increase your omnichannel support is one of the leading trends among marketers today.

7. Service Level Agreement (SLA)

A service level agreement (SLA) helps teams prioritize incoming tickets based on their importance and any pressing time constraints. They’re typically made between a business and its customer to ensure agents deliver on expectations.

What Your SLA Rate Tells You

Your SLA rate tells you how well you meet customer expectations, whether you can meet expectations on time, deliver solutions, and follow through on what you say you’ll do.

What to Look For When Monitoring SLA

When monitoring your SLA, refer back to the initial agreements you set with the customer. If they wanted a solution in a specific time frame, did you meet it? Your SLAs should contain the information that helps you understand whether you’ve performed or not, and it should be your main point of reference.

How to Improve Your SLA

Rachel Ang, a senior customer support specialist at HubSpot, says that consistently achieving the SLA for first response time set with customers helps build trust.

“Workflow automation software can help you and your teams improve your SLA rate,” says Ang, “as you can set up tickets, prioritize tasks, and set up notifications for SLA expiry dates, which can help reduce the likelihood of late resolutions or missed follow-up.”

8. Ticket Backlog

Your ticket backlog is a measure of how many unresolved tickets are waiting to be handled by your customer service team. This metric can also be measured against daily, weekly, or monthly increments.

What constitutes a “backlog” is subjective. Once you decide on your response and resolution time goals, any unresolved tickets beyond these benchmarks could be considered backlogged.

While speed isn’t the most important metric in customer service, it’s still critical to providing a positive customer service experience.

What Your Ticket Backlog Tells You

This metric communicates how fast your team is reaching, responding to, and resolving your tickets and how quickly tickets are coming in from customers.

What to Look For When Measuring Your Ticket Backlog

Look for fewer tickets in your backlog, as it would mean your team has an efficient and effective response time.

How to Improve Your Ticket Backlog

Understand your customer service process from start to finish. Are there any kinks slowing your representatives and inhibiting them from working on a new ticket? Do you have enough representatives to cover the number of tickets you’re receiving?

9. First Response Time

Your first response time measures how long it takes for a member of your customer service team to first respond to a new ticket or inquiry — essentially, how long a customer has to wait before they are helped.

As I said above, speed isn’t everything in customer service, but it sure provides a positive, enjoyable experience. Nowadays, customers expect to engage with someone immediately.

What Your First Response Time Tells You

This metric tells you how efficient your customer service team is and how long it takes them to open new tickets and respond to customers.

What to Look For When Measuring Your First Response Time

Look for less wait time for customers, which means a positive customer experience.

How to Improve Your First Response Time

Ensure nothing is holding your team back from opening new tickets and sending an initial response. Encourage your team to juggle a few tickets at once so newer customers feel that their inquiries have been heard or seen. As always, make sure your team is well-staffed to handle all your tickets.

10. First Contact Resolution Rate

Your first contact resolution (FCR) rate measures the rate of tickets resolved by your team’s first response to a customer inquiry. This is an important metric as it indicates how clearly and efficiently your team communicates and how much information you ask your customers to share when they first reach out.

In case you’re wondering, the average FCR is around 70%, a “good” FCR is between 70% and 79%, and a “world-class” one is over 80%.

However, not every issue is eligible for an FCR, especially if the customer makes a mistake or your representative has to consult with the product or IT teams.

When calculating FCR rate, consider this formula (instead of including all tickets in your calculation):

FCR Tickets/Total FCR-Eligible Tickets X 100 = FCR Rate (%)

] customer service metrics: an example of the first contact resolution rate formula

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What Your FCR Rate Tells You

This metric tells you how efficient your customer service team is and how clearly they communicate and attempt to understand your customers’ problems. It also shows you how precise your customer support “instructions” are (i.e., how clearly you communicate the information you need from a customer to help them).

What to Look For When Measuring Your FCR Rate

Look for a high FCR rate, which means that your customer service team is communicating clearly and your customers understand what you need from them in order to help.

How to Improve Your FCR Rate

What do you tell customers you need from them to receive support? What form fields do you have in your customer support web form? The more information you request — and customers provide — upon initial contact, the quicker your customer service team can provide support.

11. Number of Interactions Per Ticket

The number of interactions per ticket measures how many times your customer service team interacts with the customer while their ticket is open and unresolved.

This metric can measure the number of interactions one service rep has with the ticket or the number of interactions that happen if the customer is passed around to different representatives before coming to a solution.

Considering that 92% of survey respondents say they’d spend more money with companies that ensure they won’t need to repeat information, the number of interactions per ticket is a critical metric.

What Your Number of Interactions Per Ticket Tells You

This metric shows you how effective each message or interaction from your customer service team is.

What to Look For When Measuring Your Number of Interactions Per Ticket

Look for fewer interactions per ticket, which means your team communicates clearly, asks the right questions, and works hard to solve each problem swiftly.

How to Improve Your Number of Interactions Per Ticket

Challenge your customer service and support teams to communicate clearly and reply with thoughtful questions. Ask them to encourage customers to explain their issues exhaustively, so your team can help them without so much back-and-forth. After all, 31% of consumers say that having to repeat themselves is their biggest frustration.

Exploring Additional Customer Service Metrics

In addition to the top 11 customer service metrics I’ve detailed here, many businesses include specific customer success and customer satisfaction metrics in their scoring. These metrics may include their Net Promoter Score (NPS) or customer retention and churn rates.

It’s up to you how you organize these metrics; we’ve detailed them in separate blog posts on customer success metrics and customer satisfaction metrics.

Track your customer service to create the best customer experience possible.

Customer service and support are multifaceted and multidisciplinary functions. These teams deal with countless customer issues, questions, and concerns regarding your products or services and their experience working with your business.

For this reason, customer experience doesn’t have the same cut-and-dried metrics as other business functions, but that doesn’t mean it’s not important to measure. In fact, it’s arguably the most crucial factor to measure because it’s one of the most direct customer touchpoints in your business.

Well-performing customer service departments lead to happy customers, and happy customers are your best marketers. So, use these metrics to improve your customer service and support processes — and boost your business’s bottom line.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published in June 2018 and has since been updated for comprehensiveness.

10 Crisis Communication Plan Examples (and How to Write Your Own)

In June 2023, Reddit faced what seemed like a manageable challenge: implementing API pricing changes.

Instead, it spiraled into a massive platform-wide protest with over 8,000 subreddits going dark.

As a Reddit user, I saw this unfold in real-time as several subreddits I belong to joined the blackout. What started as a technical policy change quickly became a lesson in poor crisis communication.

Why? Poor crisis communication.

Rather than engaging transparently with moderators, Reddit‘s CEO Steve Huffman dismissed concerns, made contradictory statements, and failed to address the community’s core issues.

The result? A PR nightmare that could have been mitigated with proper crisis planning.

The lesson, I think, is that crises come when they’re least expected — which is why every company must have a crisis communication plan.

Free Download: Crisis Management Plan & Communication Templates

In this guide, I’ll show you how to create a communication framework that protects your reputation, maintains stakeholder trust, and confidently navigates any crisis that comes your way.

Table of Contents

“Crisis management is always first and foremost about people,” says John Bailey, senior VP at GoCrisis.

“Focus on the harm done and calibrate your response to that — whether it’s a customer who bought a product that went wrong, or somebody who lost a loved one.”

Whether you actively manage it or not, your company’s reputation is already established in the minds of those familiar with your brand.

While researching corporate responses to crises, I realized that taking control of crisis communication allows you to shape the narrative rather than letting others define it for you.

By communicating openly during challenging times, you safeguard your reputation and foster deeper customer trust through transparency.

Now, you might be wondering, “What constitutes a crisis?” Let’s dive into some examples below.

Crisis Scenario Examples

Just about any scenario could manifest as a business crisis that warrants communication from your organization.

“You can almost guarantee that the day the bell rings and something really significant happens, it will be the one thing you never considered,” says Bailey, citing how a volcanic eruption in Iceland disrupted operations at Singapore’s Changi Airport — a scenario that scored so low on their risk register that it had never been considered.

Some of the most common types of crises include:

  • Financial. Financial loss such as announcing a bankruptcy or store closures.
  • Personnel. Staff changes that may affect operations or reputation such as employee furloughs, layoffs, or controversial behavior.
  • Organizational. Misconduct or wrongdoing as a result of organizational practices.
  • Technological. Technological failure that results in outages causing reduced functionality or functionality loss.
  • Natural. Natural crisis that necessitates an announcement or change of procedure. For example, defining safety precautions amid a health crisis.
  • Confrontation. Discontent individuals confront an organization as a result of unmet needs or demands.
  • Workplace violence. Violence is committed by a current or former employee against other employees.
  • Crisis of malevolence. A business uses criminal or illegal means to destabilize, harm, extort, or destroy a competitor.

In addition, anything else you can think of that could stall or halt business continuity is a good example of a crisis that warrants communication with customers and/or the public.

While crisis communication can be fairly reactive, it helps to have a crisis communication plan in place before you need to use it to make the process easier for your team members.

While reviewing different crisis management plans, I’ve discovered that the best ones do more than just list procedures – they serve as a structured framework to minimize the impact of crises, safeguard stakeholders, and ensure operational continuity.

Most importantly, a crisis management plan helps guarantee a quick release of information and a consistent message on all company platforms during a crisis. That message depends largely on what the crisis involves and how all parties are affected by it.

Why is a crisis management plan important?

At this point, you might be thinking: “A crisis management plan? That sounds like a lot of work for something we might never use. What’s the point?”

In reality, how you prepare for and respond to a crisis plays a major part in whether your organization survives it. According to Capterra’s 2023 Crisis Communications Survey, fewer than half (49%) of U.S. businesses have a formal documented plan.

Specifically, having a solid crisis management plan helps you:

Act swiftly when minutes matter.

During a crisis, your team might have to make dozens of critical decisions simultaneously. It could be facing cyberattacks, technology failures, or workplace violence — and that’s just the beginning.

Having to figure out your response in the moment is like attempting to build a lifeboat during the storm.

That’s why Carmel O’Toole, a seasoned journalist and award-winning PR practitioner, advises that “a holding statement should be issued within the first few moments. It doesn‘t need to say a lot, but it’s about establishing your organization as a central point of authoritative communication.”

Protect your reputation.

The first 24 hours often determine how your organization’s response will be remembered.

A crisis management plan ensures quick, consistent, and transparent communication, which explains why 84% of leaders who’ve experienced a crisis say they would increase practice sessions afterward.

“Resources are finite,” O’Toole advises, “so focus on the most likely scenarios. Do a risk assessment — look at both likelihood and potential impact to prioritize your crisis planning.”

Keep your team aligned.

A crisis management plan ensures everyone knows their exact role and responsibilities. As O’Toole emphasizes, “Who handles media communications? Who manages operational continuity? Who coordinates with emergency services?”

These aren’t questions you want to be asking in the middle of a crisis.

Your team members are also your most important ambassadors. “Staff should not be last in line to hear about what’s going on,” she notes.

While it‘s important to have media policies in place, this shouldn’t be treated as a gag order — it’s about ensuring inquiries are directed to the proper channels and that everyone can respond confidently and consistently.

When these roles and responsibilities are clearly defined, your organization can respond as a unified front rather than scattered individuals.

This coordinated approach makes all the difference when time is of the essence and every decision counts.

Crisis Management Strategies

1. Spokesperson Response

In my analysis of corporate apologies during crises, I’ve found that humanizing the response — whether through a CEO statement or designated spokesperson — consistently leads to better outcomes than technical or legal-focused responses.

“Ignore the noise and focus on what you own as a responsibility,” advises Bailey, drawing from his experience leading Malaysia Airlines’ communications during the MH370 incident. “The first currency that you have in a crisis is information,” he adds.

Choosing a good communicator is important, as their actions will influence how your key stakeholders react to the situation. If they can make your company look human and your mistakes appear manageable, that will play a major role in maintaining stakeholder support.

2. Proactive Damage Control

When examining cases where companies have successfully avoided potential crises, I’ve noticed that systematic preparation is the key factor differentiating containment from catastrophe.

In my research on cybersecurity incidents, companies that invested in preventive measures consistently achieved better crisis outcomes than those that were forced into reactive responses.

Proactive damage control is what you do to reduce or prevent the effects of a crisis before it occurs. For example, adding security software that records and backs up company data will help you avoid a malware crisis. Additionally, you can train your employees to watch out for suspicious or harmful emails that might reach their inboxes.

At HubSpot, our security team sends out routine training videos to educate employees about different security protocols. The videos are short and the multiple-choice quizzes are so light-hearted that they act as additional learning tools in case you didn’t pay close attention to the video.

This makes training easy to consume and, more importantly, effective in teaching employees how to protect company data.

3. Case Escalation

Sometimes, crises can be resolved on the individual level before they reach a viral tipping point. For these cases, it helps to create an escalation system within your customer service team that can diffuse the issue before it gets out of hand.

At HubSpot, we have specialists who work on complex or time-sensitive cases. When customers have needs that require additional attention, our experts intervene to assist. This helps the service rep manage a tricky situation and ensures a more delightful experience for our customers.

4. Social Media Response

In analyzing how companies respond to crises on social media‌, I’ve observed an interesting pattern: the speed of information sharing on social platforms can transform a minor incident into a major crisis before a company can react.

What makes social media particularly challenging for crisis management is its dual nature: while it’s a powerful marketing tool that allows companies to reach audiences across the globe, this reach works both ways.

Customers can share stories, post pictures, and upload videos for the world to see. One viral video painting your company in the wrong light can lead to millions of people developing a negative perception of your brand.

Crises are battled both in-person and online. So, your company needs a social media plan that can manage the digital buzz around your business.

This may include assigning more reps to monitor your social channels or updating followers with new information. But, regardless of how you use it, social media can’t be ignored when your company is working through a crisis.

5. Customer Feedback Collection and Analysis

Sometimes, a crisis occurs, but it isn‘t on the front page of the news or going viral on social media. Instead, it’s silently affecting your customers and causing churn, but you‘re unaware of it because you’re not gathering enough feedback from your customers.

Gathering feedback is an excellent way to prevent a crisis. It provides insight into how customers are feeling about your business, allowing you to spot major roadblocks before they escalate into a crisis. Customers can also share negative criticism that you can use to improve other customers’ experiences.

When faced with an unhappy or escalated customer, our success team recognizes this as a chance to collect customer feedback. They begin interactions by asking customers to review their experience and discuss any unsatisfactory elements. This helps our team create actionable steps that they can use to align themselves with the customer’s needs.

Rachel Grewe, a HubSpot Customer Success rep, explains this strategy in the quote below.

“I open with asking for the opportunity to hear their feedback on their experience, then I make sure to close with actionable next steps for myself and the customer. An escalated customer isn’t always a sign of failure but an opportunity to demonstrate our commitment to our customer’s success.”

How to Write a Crisis Communication Plan

“If something happens that brings consequences for you as a business, that thing has already happened. You can’t turn the clock back,” says Bailey.

With this consequences-first mindset, here’s how to create your crisis communication plan.

how to write a crisis communication plan

1. Identify the goals of the plan.

I recommend focusing your crisis communication plan on specific, measurable outcomes rather than just broad goals.

The goal of a crisis communication plan is to ensure rapid, transparent, and unified messaging that protects the organization’s reputation, restores trust, and maintains operational continuity.

For example, in a product recall scenario, the objective might include achieving a 90% resolution rate within 48 hours while minimizing negative sentiment by 30% on social platforms.

To measure success, establish clear metrics such as response time, stakeholder engagement levels, and recovery benchmarks that align with the organization’s strategic priorities.

2. Identify stakeholders.

Effective crisis communication begins with stakeholder identification and prioritization.

Stakeholders should be segmented into primary and secondary groups based on their level of impact and influence.

For example:

  • Primary stakeholders. Customers affected by service disruptions, employees managing crisis operations, and investors requiring reassurance about the company’s stability.
  • Secondary stakeholders. Media outlets monitoring the story, regulators overseeing compliance, and industry partners dependent on the company’s operations.

Use a prioritization framework to guide communication flow.

For instance, during a major outage, customers and employees need immediate updates, while media statements can follow after internal alignment. Tailor messaging to each group’s needs: investors may require data on financial impact and recovery timelines, while customers need actionable next steps to resolve their concerns.

Additionally, maintain a centralized database of stakeholder contact information and communication preferences. This ensures rapid outreach and minimizes delays during high-pressure situations.

3. Create a hierarchy for sharing information on the crisis.

Establishing a clear hierarchy for sharing information ensures timely and accurate communication during a crisis.

I think the most critical aspect here is ensuring no information gets lost between teams.

This hierarchy should adapt to the nature of the crisis and account for backup roles to avoid delays.

A typical structure might include:

  1. Initial reporting. The first person to identify the crisis (e.g., a customer service agent noticing a social media backlash) escalates it to their direct manager.
  2. Leadership notification. Department heads evaluate the situation and notify the Crisis Response Lead (e.g., COO or Head of Communications) with all available details.
  3. Cross-functional coordination. The Crisis Response Lead convenes a task force, which may include the CEO, General Counsel, and department heads, depending on the crisis type.
  4. External experts. For high-stakes situations, legal advisors, PR consultants, or cybersecurity firms are brought in to provide expertise.

For example, in a cybersecurity breach, the IT team identifies the issue and escalates it to the CTO. The CTO notifies the Crisis Response Lead, who activates the plan, including contacting legal counsel for regulatory reporting requirements and the PR team for stakeholder communication.

Ensure all roles in the hierarchy are well-documented, with designated backups to handle absences. Clearly outline decision points, such as “Media statements require CEO sign-off within one hour of draft completion,” to maintain alignment.

4. Assign people to create fact sheets.

Assigning the right team to create fact sheets is critical for maintaining accurate and consistent messaging. Fact sheets should outline key details, such as the nature of the crisis, its impact, and immediate next steps, tailored to the intended audience.

In my view, fact sheets work best when they anticipate stakeholder questions rather than just stating company positions.

To streamline this process, focus on:

  • Roles and responsibilities. Assign a content lead to draft the document, a subject matter expert to ensure accuracy, and an approval lead to finalize it. For example, in a data breach scenario, the IT team provides technical details while the PR team adapts them into an accessible language for customers.
  • Templates and tools. Use pre-designed templates or crisis management software to ensure clarity and speed. Fact sheets for media might include a concise incident summary and approved quotes, while enterprise clients may require a detailed timeline and resolution roadmap.
  • Timeline management. Set deadlines based on crisis urgency. For instance, during a service outage, prepare a fact sheet within 30 minutes for internal use, with a customer-facing version ready within 2 hours.
  • Real-time updates. Fact sheets should be living documents that evolve as new information becomes available. Proactively update stakeholders to prevent misinformation and build trust.

For example, during a service disruption, the initial fact sheet might confirm the outage and estimated resolution time. As the investigation progresses, updates can include the root cause, recovery actions, and steps to prevent recurrence.

5. Identify and assess example crisis scenarios.

Identifying and assessing potential crisis scenarios allows your organization to prepare for high-impact events proactively.

Start by creating a list of likely scenarios relevant to your business and assessing them using a likelihood-impact matrix. This approach prioritizes your response plans based on the probability of occurrence and the potential damage to your organization. Below are some potential scenarios.

  • Cybersecurity breach: A hacker gains access to customer data, triggering regulatory reporting requirements and public concerns about data privacy.
  • PR scandal: An executive’s controversial comment goes viral, leading to calls for accountability on social media and demands for a public apology.
  • Operational failure: A major service outage disrupts customer operations during peak business hours, resulting in financial losses and reputational damage.

For each scenario, outline potential impacts (e.g., regulatory penalties, customer churn) and craft tailored mitigation strategies.

For instance, in a cybersecurity breach, your response plan should include immediate containment steps, regulatory disclosures, and customer communication templates.

Collaborate across teams to build robust scenario assessments. Legal teams can provide insights into regulatory risks, IT teams on operational vulnerabilities, and PR teams on reputational threats. Regularly revisit and update these scenarios based on changes in your business or industry trends.

6. Identify and answer common questions.

During any crisis — no matter how big or small — people are going to ask questions. Whether they are customer advocates or reporters, the public will want to uncover the truth. After all, in most cases, companies are seen as guilty until proven innocent.

Crisis communication plans can help you identify and answer questions that you can expect to be asked during your crisis scenarios.

Pro tip: I suggest building your Q&A document based on actual stakeholder concerns rather than assumptions. Use the potential scenarios you identified to structure this doc.

You can also collaborate across teams to build robust scenario assessments. Legal teams can provide insights into regulatory risks, IT teams on operational vulnerabilities, and PR teams on reputational threats.

Regularly revisit and update these scenario responses based on changes in your business or industry trends.

7. Identify potential risks.

Identifying potential risks is essential to prepare for the challenges your crisis communication plan may face. Based on my analysis, effective risk identification requires thinking beyond immediate operational concerns.

Start by categorizing risks into key areas such as:

  • Operational risks. Delayed responses or misinformation spreading internally.
  • Reputational risks. Loss of customer trust due to inadequate communication or slow action.
  • Legal and regulatory risks. Non-compliance with disclosure requirements or breaches of contractual obligations.
  • Financial risks. Increased costs due to service recovery or customer churn.

Use a risk probability-impact grid to assess and prioritize risks. For example, a cybersecurity breach might have a low likelihood but high impact, requiring proactive contingency plans.

Develop pre-approved mitigation frameworks for high-risk scenarios. For instance, in a PR crisis, your framework might include immediate coordination with legal counsel to vet public statements or pre-drafted customer communication templates.

Understand cascading risks, where one issue triggers others. A data breach, for instance, may lead to legal fines, customer dissatisfaction, and a drop in stock value. Addressing the root cause swiftly can prevent secondary risks from escalating.

Finally, perform a post-crisis analysis to identify gaps in your risk management strategy and incorporate lessons learned into your plan. This continuous improvement process ensures your organization is better prepared for future crises.

8. Create guidelines specific to social media.

Social media is often the front line in crisis communication, requiring swift, transparent, and platform-specific responses. I’ve found that social media requires its own distinct crisis response framework due to its real-time nature.

Here’s what I recommend to manage a crisis effectively.

  • Tailor your messaging for each platform. For example:
  • Use concise, real-time updates for X, focusing on key facts and reassurances.
  • Maintain a professional tone on LinkedIn for updates aimed at investors and partners.
  • Adopt a customer-centric and empathetic approach for Instagram or Facebook audiences.
  • Deploy tools like Hootsuite or Sprout Social for continuous monitoring of mentions, hashtags, and keywords related to the crisis. Use AI-driven sentiment analysis to detect trends and adjust your messaging accordingly.
  • Leverage relationships with trusted influencers or brand advocates to share accurate information and counter misinformation.
  • Establish a rapid response team dedicated to identifying and addressing false narratives before they gain traction. For example, correcting viral misinformation with pinned posts or official replies.
  • Ensure messaging across platforms is empathetic and transparent while reflecting the brand’s voice. Avoid overly formal responses on customer-focused platforms and overly casual tones on professional networks.
  • Provide consistent updates at predictable intervals (e.g., every hour for fast-evolving crises). Avoid overwhelming your audience with excessive posts while ensuring you remain visible and accessible.

Pro tip: During a service outage, post real-time updates on X every 30 minutes, while using LinkedIn for a professional incident summary and estimated resolution timeline. Proactively address customer inquiries on Instagram and Facebook with pre-approved FAQs tailored to the crisis.

What to Include in a Crisis Management Plan

If the idea of crafting a crisis management plan feels overwhelming, take a deep breath — it’s more manageable than it sounds. And the payoff? A roadmap that helps you navigate stormy seas with confidence.

A strong plan ensures your team can act decisively, communicate effectively, and stay aligned when it matters most. Here’s what to include.

1. Crisis Response Team

Think of this as your organization’s emergency task force. Who’s taking the lead? Who’s the backup? And who’s handling media inquiries? These roles should be crystal clear.

“Your spokesperson should embody the Five C’s: Clarity, control, concern, confidence, and competence,” O’Toole advises.

Make sure contact details are up-to-date so there’s no scrambling when minutes count.

2. Communication Protocols

When a crisis hits, everyone — from employees to customers — needs clear, consistent information. Outline who communicates what and how, from pre-approved templates to specific messaging channels.

“Transparency is key,” O’Toole explains. “Pre-planning helps maintain trust while avoiding missteps in the heat of the moment.”

3. Emergency Response Procedures

No one wants to figure out evacuation plans or safety protocols on the fly. Document these steps ahead of time, and keep holding statements ready to issue within minutes. Preparation now saves precious time later.

4. Business Continuity Measures

Crises can disrupt operations — but they don’t have to derail them. Detail how your organization will keep critical functions running, from backup systems to recovery procedures.

“Think beyond the basics,” O’Toole suggests. “What happens if your primary systems fail? Do you have backup tools to keep critical systems up and running?”

5. Stakeholder Management

Your employees, customers, vendors, and investors are counting on you. A crisis management plan should address their needs with care and precision.

“Employees are often overlooked,” O’Toole notes, “but keeping them informed is critical. They’re your most important ambassadors.”

6. Training and Testing

A plan is only as good as your ability to execute it. Regular simulations and scenario planning help uncover weaknesses before a real crisis occurs.

Simulations are invaluable because they highlight vulnerabilities so you can address them proactively.

7. Resource Inventory

List everything your team might need, from backup communication tools to emergency supplies. Being prepared means you won’t have to scramble for essentials in a moment of chaos.

8. Legal and Compliance Considerations

Addressing legal and regulatory obligations is non-negotiable.

While some legal teams might advise silence, O’Toole cautions against shutting down communication entirely: “Maintaining public trust often requires open, honest dialogue.”

9. Plan Maintenance

A crisis management plan is not a “set it and forget it” document. To ensure its effectiveness, schedule quarterly reviews and revisit lessons learned after each crisis.

Challenging situations offer invaluable insights. Use these insights to refine your plan and strengthen your organization’s resilience.

The Crisis Management and Communication Plan Template

hubspot’s free crisis management plan template

It can be difficult to get your crisis communication plan started from scratch. Use HubSpot‘s Crisis Communication Plan Template to build out your company’s plan. Included are charts, sections, and prompts to help you document your company’s strategy when a crisis hits.

1. Create an incident response team.

First up? Create a core incident response team and broadly define their responsibilities when a communications crisis occurs. Create a list of everyone on this team along with their email and phone number in addition to a group email or chat that can be used to activate the entire team at once. Then, build a greater response team to help support the core group. This may include departments such as customer support, legal, social media, C-suite executives, and security.

Regularly reevaluate these lists to keep them current and ready to go at a moment’s notice.

2. Identify roles and responsibilities.

Next, identify the roles and responsibilities of each team member in the core group and those in greater departmental response teams. For example, you might assign one member of your core team the job of managing social media communications, while another may be tasked with drafting a public statement.

Departments such as social media, meanwhile, should each have their own crisis contact with their own set of responsibilities — such as creating a larger-scale campaign to minimize public fallout.

3. Implement an escalation framework.

Crisis response comes with substantive stress: Companies must act quickly to resolve issues without making things worse. As a result, it’s worth implementing an escalation framework to help guide your response:

Step 1: Alert

Ensure that all relevant team members are notified ASAP. Define specific communication channels for this process.

Step 2: Assess

Assess the severity of the incident and your potential response. Key questions to ask include: What happened? Where and when? Who was affected and involved? How much do we know?

Step 3: Activate

With the initial assessment complete, activate the relevant team members and their department contacts to help begin the crisis management process. The first steps might include calling an all-hands meeting, responding to immediate media inquiries, and drafting communications to customers and other affected stakeholders.

Step 4: Administer

Crisis communication persists over a few weeks or months. As a result, it‘s critical to continually monitor what’s happening and what’s changing to ensure communication is administered effectively.

Step 5: Adjourn

When the worst of the crisis has passed, regroup your team to debrief how the crisis was handled, what outcomes occurred, and what changes could be made to improve overall response. It’s also worth having at least one staff member regularly monitor the situation in case another response is required.

1. University of Washington

In a university crisis communication plan, it’s essential to focus on crises that may affect normal school and administrative functions.

For instance, my college always emails students if a dangerous incident occurs on or near campus and gives us a list of tips to remain safe. Universities also plan for crises such as marches or protests, injuries or deaths of community members, and bad press relating to the school.

university of washington's crisis communications plan

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The University of Washington has an extensive crisis communication plan geared toward preserving the safety and security of community members.

As a university, the main audiences for communication include students, faculty, staff, parents, and alumni, as well as visitors, temporary residents, the general public, and the media.

What I like: The attention to detail in all the varied organizations included in the team of representatives shows an added layer of consideration during a crisis. Having a list of reps at hand guarantees a proper and timely response.

2. Southwest Airlines

Southwest has consistently been one of the safest airlines in the world. However, that doesn‘t mean the company doesn’t experience accidents.

On Flight 1380, an engine malfunction resulted in the death of a passenger and was recorded as the company‘s first in-flight fatality. The company’s CEO, Gary Kelly, immediately responded to the situation by offering a sincere, heartfelt apology to the victim’s family. He then pulled all advertising from their social media channels and made personal phone calls to passengers offering support and counseling resources.

Why this was effective: Although crises like these are hard to imagine, they do occur and have a significant impact on businesses. Despite Southwest‘s lack of prior experience with such an accident, the CEO exhibited readiness for the situation and displayed genuine regret through his statements and the company’s actions.

3. Boeing

Boeing experienced a major crisis when two of its 737 Max airplanes fatally crashed in Indonesia and Ethiopia just five months apart in 2018 and 2019. The crashes killed a combined 346 people and the manufacturer is still suffering the fallout from the events.

At first, Boeing blamed pilot error for the crashes until information surfaced later that it was a flight control software issue. In response, the FAA and other global regulators grounded all Boeing 737 Max planes for 20 months until they could figure out what software glitch was causing the fatal crashes.

As a result, Boeing’s stock price plummeted, and it was forced to halt production of the Boeing 737 Max, costing the company billions in losses. Once the pandemic hit in 2020 and air travel slowed, Boeing faced another crisis as orders for the model were canceled, leading to more financial losses.

To make matters worse, when the 737 Max planes were finally cleared to fly in November 2020, they were grounded again in early 2021 after electrical issues were discovered. In 2021, Boeing was ordered to pay $2.5 billion to settle charges that the company hid issues with the plane from safety officials.

At first, Boeing deflected blame for the crashes to “inexperienced pilots,” but an investigation later showed that Boeing’s flight control software was the main contributor to the crash. Moreover, the US Justice Department found that Boeing knew about the software issue and tried to conceal the faulty software from investigators.

“Boeing’s employees chose the path of profit over candor by concealing material information from the FAA concerning the operation of its 737 Max airplane and engaging in an effort to cover up their deception,” stated a DOJ press release regarding Boeing’s fraud charges.

While nothing would have made up for the loss of life, Boeing would have been better off coming clean about the existing software glitch. Its efforts to conceal the issue meant that pilot training manuals lacked information about the faulty system, which forced planes to nosedive after it overrode pilot commands.

What could’ve been better: Had Boeing been transparent about its automated flight control system, including it in its manual and informing customers of the aircraft software, tragedy could have been prevented.

4. Virginia Department of Education

Similar to universities, schools need to deal with crises efficiently, especially if they impact the normal class schedule. Since schools deal with children, parents and guardians must be made aware of any situations that could affect their children’s education, safety, or health.

school crisis communications plan from the virginia department of education

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The Virginia Department of Education has created a lengthy management plan, including crisis communications. The plan highlights various crises that would require communication with parents — such as a school bus accident —and gives letter templates that can be quickly sent out.

What I like: This crisis communication plan lists several different types of symptoms that parents or guardians are instructed to watch out for. This is vital because it isn’t always clear how students are affected, and it is important for their care to know what to look out for.

5. KFC

In 2018, restaurant chain KFC got into an awkward situation when it ran out of chicken to serve its customers. Having built its brand on its 11-spice fried chicken recipe, this was a crisis that the company probably didn’t plan for.

But, KFC‘s marketing team quickly got to work and was able to put a positive spin on the situation. They released videos and tweets like the one below that light-heartedly apologized for the shortage and showed off the brand’s humility.

kfc crisis communication plan

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This is why a crisis communication plan is essential for restaurants. Some scenarios you’ll want to plan for are the spread of foodborne illness, unsanitary working conditions, and, of course, delivery issues affecting food supply.

What I like: While the brand typically doesn’t take itself too seriously (like its humorous social media marketing campaigns), it presented customers with the facts and explained what it was going to do to better serve them.

6. Amazon

Amazon faced criticism in December 2021 after a tornado ravaged one of its warehouses in Edwardsville, Illinois. Six people died in the warehouse collapse in Illinois as a series of tornadoes ripped through parts of Tennessee, Kentucky, and Arkansas.

Once reports surfaced of Amazon warehouse workers allegedly being forced to continue working through tornado warnings, the company’s health and safety guidelines quickly came under scrutiny.

Amazon’s first misstep was a delayed public response. CEO Jeff Bezos took nearly 24 hours to respond to the warehouse collapse.

“The news from Edwardsville is tragic. We’re heartbroken over the loss of our teammates there, and our thoughts and prayers are with their families and loved ones”, Bezos tweeted. “All of Edwardsville should know that the Amazon team is committed to supporting them and will be by their side through this crisis. We extend our fullest gratitude to all the incredible first responders who have worked so tirelessly at the site.”

Bezos was quickly lambasted across social media, with many suggesting that his statement was insincere.

What could’ve been better: When such a tragic loss of life happens, it‘s best to come out with a statement that expresses empathy sooner rather than later. Bezos’ reply came across as insincere in part because it was delayed. The CEO had been steadily tweeting and posting about the landing of Blue Origin throughout the day, so by the time he commented on the tornado tragedy, it seemed like an afterthought.

7. Burger King

In the fall of 2019, a man who follows a vegan lifestyle filed a lawsuit against popular fast food chain Burger King on the basis that the company misled other vegan customers regarding the newly introduced Impossible Burger. Upon realizing the meatless patties were prepared on the same grill as the 100% beef burgers, the plaintiff alleged that the ads weren’t clear that the burger was not completely meat-free.

Other popular fast-food chains like Subway and Wendy’s have experienced similar crises in the past regarding issues with food preparation. Although both were unfounded claims, they caused a significant crisis for both brands. It’s not a surprise that Burger King experienced similar, unfounded claims.

Although Burger King had a strong rebuttal against the lawsuit, the company awaited the decision of the judge who dismissed the case a year later due to a lack of evidence from the plaintiffs.

Why this was effective: Burger King was successful in this crisis communication because it allowed the crisis to run its course without intervening more than necessary. At the announcement of the case dismissal, Burger King responded, “This claim has no basis.”

8. United Airlines

No list of crisis communication examples would be complete without mentioning United Airlines. Already under pressure for less-than-stellar customer service, the 2017 video of Dr. David Dao being dragged out of his seat when the airline overbooked put United into a tailspin.

Their first response? Not great. United’s CEO tried to blame Dao, calling him “belligerent” and “disruptive.”

Not surprisingly, this didn’t sit well with the public, and #boycottUnited hashtags began trending. The company then did an about-face, took full responsibility, and pointed to changes being made.

What could’ve been better: Businesses should lead with empathy in situations where emotions run high. While United’s image did stabilize over time, the changed tactics strategy is a good example of what not to do when a crisis comes up.

9. Hollywood Foreign Press Association

In 2021, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association was under fire for its lack of diversity and inclusion. Over 100 PR firms — and their celebrity clients — threatened to boycott the Golden Globes unless the HFPA committed to “transformational change” within the organization.

“We call on the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. to swiftly manifest profound and lasting change to eradicate the longstanding exclusionary ethos and pervasive practice of discriminatory behavior, unprofessionalism, ethical impropriety, and alleged financial corruption endemic to the HFPA, funded by Dick Clark Productions, MRC, NBCUniversal and Comcast,” the publicists said in a statement.

“To reflect how urgent and necessary we feel this work is, we cannot advocate for our clients to participate in HFPA events or interviews as we await your explicit plans and timeline for transformational change.”

In response to the outcry, the HFPA pledged to increase its membership to a minimum of 100 people and to require at least 13% of its members to be Black journalists.

While the HFPA has since implemented several changes, including increasing membership to 105 members, the organization still has a lot of work to do in order to regain the trust of the entertainment industry. Not only was the Golden Globes ceremony telecast canceled in 2022, but many publicists maintained their position on having their clients boycott the organization.

What could’ve been better: Had the HFPA listened to concerns and implemented change sooner, it might have been met with less scrutiny.

10. Cracker Barrel

In 2017, a man named Bradley Reid asked a question on Cracker Barrel’s corporate website: He wanted to know why his wife had been let go from her 11-year manager position at one of the company’s Indiana locations.

The social media firestorm came quickly, with #JusticeForBradsWife trending and other brands posting signs that they would be happy to hire Brad’s wife.

chick-fil-a taking advantage of cracker barrels lack of crisis communication plan

Source

Cracker Barrel‘s response? Silence. The public never learned the circumstances of Brad’s wife’s job loss, and after a few months the crisis blew over.

In this case, weathering the storm worked for Cracker Barrel, in part because the issue revolved around a single person and their specific circumstances.

Speaking up — even if the job loss was benign — could have resulted in questions about personal privacy and also put the company on the defensive. Instead, they chose to wait out the storm.

Putting It All Together: Making Theory Work in Practice

After months of researching and analyzing crisis communication strategies, one truth stands out: no company is immune to a crisis, but every company can be prepared.

After reading dozens of case studies and expert interviews, I’ve discovered that the difference between a crisis that strengthens a brand and one that damages it often comes down to preparation and humanity.

What struck me most was how the best crisis communicators emphasize that crisis management is fundamentally about people.

Whether analyzing KFC‘s chicken shortage or Boeing’s 737 Max crisis, I found that the companies that handled crises best weren‘t those with the biggest PR teams – they were the ones that had clear plans, spoke with authentic voices, and weren’t afraid to admit mistakes.

The most powerful insight I gained? A crisis, when handled well, can actually strengthen stakeholder trust.

Through this research, I‘m convinced that crisis communication isn’t just about damage control – it‘s about demonstrating your company’s values when they matter most. I hope this guide helps you build a crisis communication plan that reflects your organization’s best self, even in its most challenging moments.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published in May 2019 and has since been updated for comprehensiveness.

How Teams Make the Most of Customer Experience Automation — The Complete Guide

When I think about the businesses I stay loyal to — from my go-to software provider to my favorite airline to my local yoga studio — it’s not because they’re the cheapest or even the most innovative. It’s because they make my experience as a customer easy, personal, and genuinely enjoyable.

Most customers today are like me; they have more options than ever and gravitate to products that offer genuine value. This is where customer experience automation can be incredibly helpful. And it’s more than just using a basic AI chatbot — AI is helping teams automate tedious tasks, uncover customer insights and expectations, and provide a personalized experience, all while ensuring a human touch when it matters most.Download Now: Free Customer Journey Map Templates

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According to our State of Customer Service Report, the majority of service teams are already implementing some form of automation in their process.

  • 77% of service teams are using AI.
  • 79% of service pros using AI find it effective.

Paulius Milišauskas, vice president of customer operations at Omnisend, explains how CX automation plays a role in his team: “Our primary goal is not efficiency itself, but customer satisfaction through service efficiency. We automate all processes that can simplify our clients’ experience.”

Why Customer Experience Matters More Than Ever

It’s important not to miss the big picture when talking about automation. Delivering a great customer experience deserves your attention, time, and investment because it makes customers more likely to be loyal, increase their spending, and even advocate for your brand.

  • Loyalty reduces churn. And 20% of companies in our State of Service survey identified preventing churn and boosting retention as a challenge when creating a great customer experience.
  • Better CX boosts CLV (Customer Lifetime Value).
  • Good CX turns customers into advocates.

top challenges when creating an exceptional customer experience

And looking at the top challenges service leaders face when trying to deliver a great customer experience, AI can help immensely.

How I Apply Customer Experience to My Business

Even though I’m not running a large customer service team, CX plays a huge role in how I run my freelance writing business. My ideal clients — usually marketing teams — have access to hundreds of talented writers with similar skills. So why would they choose me?

The answer often lies in the experience I provide.

A great client experience makes long-term relationships easier to build. I make sure to go beyond delivering solid writing: I’m responsive, proactive, and focused on making the process smooth and enjoyable. That effort pays off:

  1. Clients come back for future projects.
  2. They often increase the value of their work with me, asking for additional services or larger scopes of work.
  3. They recommend me to others, which brings in new opportunities.

And while I don’t use automation as extensively as an enterprise team might, there are plenty of ways I could bring it into my business to enhance my CX. For example:

  • I can use data to understand my clients better. AI could help me analyze past projects to spot trends in terms of contract value and length, as well as what types of projects clients are most satisfied with or where delays tend to happen.
  • I can automate feedback requests by sending automated follow-ups after projects to gather feedback that can help me improve and add more value. (This also means one less email I have to manually send!)
  • I can streamline testimonials and referrals. An automated system can ask clients to share more about their experience and refer me to others in their network.

Benefits of Customer Experience Automation

Hopefully I’ve already made it clear how valuable automation can be to deliver a great customer experience — but don’t just take it from me. I spoke to a few CX experts to learn more about the key benefits of CX automation and how they’re seeing it play out in their business.

Improved Response Times and Availability

Today’s customers aren’t patient. (I know. I’m working on it, too.)

According to our survey, 82% of consumers expect issues to be resolved immediately. Automation helps you meet these expectations by streamlining tasks like ticket routing, providing instant answers through chatbots, and offering 24/7 availability.

According to Omnisend’s data, while human specialists typically respond within five minutes, AI systems provide instant responses. This immediate availability ensures customers get help whenever they need it, regardless of time zones or business hours.

When customers feel heard and their issues are resolved quickly, they’re far more likely to stick around.

Lauren Parker, founder of LMR Digital Marketing, explains how she helped a client automate lead follow-up and saw impressive results: “When partnering with Blissful Minds, a telehealth weight loss service, we implemented an email workflow that drastically cut response times. This approach helped them generate over 1,500 new patient leads and efficiently scale their services.”

Enhanced Efficiency

Automation lightens the load for your customer service team by handling repetitive or time-intensive tasks, like data entry or answering FAQs. This means your team can focus their time and energy on more complex issues that require a human touch.

For example, Salesforge increased onboarding engagement by 23% within 30 days by automating client check-ins and delivering timely, personalized resources, founder V. Frank Sondors told me.

Better Data-Driven Decision-Making

By automating data collection and analysis, you can uncover insights about your customers’ needs, preferences, and pain points. This makes it easier to make informed decisions and proactively improve the customer experience.

According to Sidharth Ramsinghaney, director of strategy at Twilio, organizations implementing AI-driven personalization are seeing powerful results: “45% report improved customer satisfaction scores, while 41% are achieving better data-driven decision making and market segmentation.”

Increased Revenue Through Personalization

Customers want to feel valued, and automation helps you deliver personalized experiences at scale. Whether it’s recommending products, tailoring email content, or preemptively addressing potential issues, AI-driven personalization increases customer satisfaction and drives repeat purchases.

Twilio’s research shows that “55% of consumers are willing to spend more for personalized experiences, with customers spending an average of 36% more with brands that personalize engagement.”

How to Automate Customer Experience

Automation can feel cold if done poorly, but the key is to make it feel personal and relevant. This lets teams deliver human-centric experiences while freeing up time for high-value interactions.

Here’s how I’d recommend tackling the process.

1. Start with a thorough understanding of your customer touchpoints.

The first step: Map out your customer’s journey — and include every point where they interact with your brand. (P.S. I’ve previously written how you can use AI when customer journey mapping if you want to learn more.)

Here’s an example of a customer journey template you can use:

how to automate the customer experience: customer journey template

When I’ve done this in my own business, I’ve been surprised at how many small touchpoints there are, from the first email inquiry to the follow-up after a project wraps up.

Using a customer journey map, identify where customers are thriving and where they’re running into roadblocks. For example:

  • Are there delays in responding to inquiries?
  • Are there common questions or complaints that come up repeatedly?
  • Are there points where customers seem to drop off entirely?

In an ecommerce company, for example, maybe your customer pain points are around product delivery and communications. Patricia Pavia, a customer experience manager for biom, says that the most helpful thing they’ve automated is an order confirmation and tracking system.

“Once a customer places an order, they receive an instant confirmation email with their order details and estimated delivery time. This not only provides them with immediate clarity but also reduces the need for follow-up emails and questions about shipping status,” she said.

2. Understand your customers’ current experience.

Once you know the touchpoints, the next step is to learn how your customers feel at each stage. Personally, I like to gather feedback whenever I can — whether it’s through surveys, one-on-one conversations, or even just paying attention to what clients mention during our projects.

For a larger team, you might use AI tools to automate this feedback collection, like sending out NPS surveys after key milestones or analyzing the trends in your support tickets.

Here’s what our latest data shows about the effectiveness of certain customer service channels:

chart showing effectiveness of customer service channels

Lasandra Barksdale, founder of Kompass Customer Solutions, approaches this through what she calls “experience blueprints” — a sophisticated blend of journey mapping and service blueprinting that reveals how back-office processes affect front-line interactions.

“This approach starts with discovery: uncovering pain points, mapping out friction, and pinpointing where automation can enhance experiences,” she said.

“By working from the outside in, we identify unmet needs from a customer’s perspective, and then go inside out, analyzing internal processes to address those gaps.”

When Barksdale worked with a financial services client, for example, they discovered that while the company wanted to reduce call volume by redirecting customers to their website, the site didn’t actually address the top 10 reasons customers were calling in the first place.

“By helping them identify self-service functionalities and adding a status-tracker feature for more complex requests, we reduced the need for calls and gave customers transparency on their requests’ status. This shift led to happier customers and empowered staff, ultimately showing that call reduction is a customer-centered strategy, not just a cost-cutting measure,” she added.

3. Identify tasks that can be automated.

Not every task needs to be automated, but many repetitive processes are perfect candidates. Here are some examples I’ve seen work well:

  • Support ticket routing.
  • Answering FAQs.
  • Follow-ups and reminders.

In my own business, I’ve thought about automating parts of my onboarding process. For example, sending out a welcome email that includes FAQs, project timelines, or next steps that could save me time while giving clients a consistent experience.

Philippe Mesritz’s team at Community Brands built customer journeys that adapted based on customer actions and CRM data. They created digital engagement points that would trigger specific responses, from sending relevant blog posts to scheduling training videos, all timed to provide maximum value to the customer.

“Through a combination of automated journey orchestration and manual intervention, we were able to engage with thousands of customers that would then gain benefit from the microlearnings,” he said.

4. Leverage AI for personalization at scale.

AI can be really helpful here — and this is especially valuable given that personalization is a top customer expectation in 2025.

AI tools can analyze customer behavior and preferences to deliver hyper-personalized recommendations and experiences. This includes things like:

  • Suggesting products or services based on past interactions.
  • Sending tailored email content based on what customers have browsed.
  • Anticipating needs, like reminding customers of a subscription renewal or suggesting resources to help them get the most out of your product.

5 Tips for Automating the Customer Experience

As you begin to automate your customer experience, you should do it in a way that feels personal, helpful, and true to your brand. The key is to keep the human element at the heart of everything you do.

Here are some practical tips to help you get started and make the most of automation:

1. Keep automation connected to human support.

While AI can handle routine inquiries, there should always be a clear path for customers to escalate issues to a real person when needed. As a customer, this is my biggest frustration with some of the software tools I use.

A chatbot can answer basic questions, but if a customer needs more in-depth support, the chatbot should seamlessly transfer them to a live agent who has all the context from previous interactions.

customer experience automation: hubspot chatbot example

Pro tip: Try using a tool like HubSpot’s Customer Service Software to see this in action. With Service Hub, you deliver support at scale with AI-powered service, an omni-channel help desk, and 24/7 availability.

2. Make automation feel personal, not robotic.

Nobody likes feeling like they’re talking to a machine. Personalize automated communications by tailoring them to customer data and behavior. Use names, recommend relevant products, and make messages sound natural.

I really loved this email I received from a pizza restaurant in London called Sweet Thursday. It started off with a tailored introduction and a personalized mention about me revisiting the restaurant. It also includes a few select discounts that might interest me. Overall, it feels friendly and helpful — and not like I’m just another email in their CRM system (even if I am!).

customer experience automation: automated follow-up email from sweet thursday restaurant

3. Let data guide your automation strategy.

Automation thrives on data. By analyzing customer interactions, you can spot patterns, preferences, and pain points to refine your processes.

For example, you could use data to identify which questions come up most frequently in support tickets and build a comprehensive, automated FAQ or chatbot response for those. Or you might track which customers are engaging with your emails and which aren’t, so you can tweak your messaging accordingly.

Pro tip: HubSpot’s CRM software can track customer behavior and segment audiences. This way, you can create more targeted, effective automation strategies that speak to different groups based on their unique needs.

4. Build proactive systems that prevent problems.

The best customer service should aim to prevent issues before they arise. Automation can help you be proactive by sending reminders, tips, and solutions before problems crop up.

For example, if a customer hasn’t logged into your product in a while, you could set up an automated email to check in and offer helpful resources or guides to get them back on track.

I recently signed up to trial Zoho Projects as a project management software for my business. I loved their approach to automating the onboarding process, and it gave me a really positive impression as a customer.

Take a look at the email below — it’s clear they are balancing some level of automation by reaching out and providing resources, but they are also connecting me to a human account manager. I feel like I have a direct line to the product.

customer experience automation: automated onboarding example from zoho projects

Pro tip: Think about where you can automate follow-ups that prevent frustration. If a customer is having a technical issue, an automated troubleshooting guide can provide instant help, reducing their need to reach out.

5. Continue to monitor efficiency and customer satisfaction.

Automation can’t improve customer experience on its own — it needs regular monitoring and refinement.

You should consistently track metrics like response times, ticket resolution rates, and customer satisfaction scores (CSAT) to ensure that your automation efforts are working. At the same time, look at the quality of the customer experience — is your automation actually improving satisfaction, or is it creating frustration?

Pro tip: HubSpot’s Service Hub can be incredibly helpful here, too. For example, you can track your customer health scores, which show areas where you can improve customer retention.

A Better Customer Experience = Happier Customers

CX automation isn’t just for big businesses. Even as a freelancer, I’ve used it to improve efficiency and enhance client relationships. Whether it’s gathering feedback, automating follow-ups, or offering personalized recommendations, automation helps me focus on delivering great work.

With tools like HubSpot, it’s easier than ever to connect everything — from customer data to communications — so I can offer a more personalized experience without getting bogged down in manual tasks.

No matter the size of your business, automating key touchpoints can free up your time, boost your efficiency, and ultimately lead to happier, more loyal customers.

And that’s the kind of growth that really moves your business forward.

Customer Data Integration: A Complete Guide [Expert Tips & Examples]

You know that feeling when you’re shopping online, and a brand treats you like a stranger, even though you’ve been buying from them for years? As a content marketer diving into the world of customer data integration, I’ve learned this frustrating experience often comes down to one thing: disconnected customer data.

After speaking with industry experts and diving into the research, I’ve discovered just how crucial customer data integration is becoming. Just look at the numbers: The global customer data platform (CDP) market is projected to grow from $7.4 billion in 2024 to $28.2 billion by 2028. Businesses are waking up to the fact that they need better ways to understand their customers.

And it makes sense why. Twilio’s 2023 State of Personalization Report found that when companies get their customer data right and create personalized experiences, consumers spend an average of 38% more. That’s a game-changer for any business.Download Now: Introduction to Data Analytics [Free Guide]

In this guide, I’ll share what I’ve learned from industry experts about how organizations are successfully implementing CDI, along with data-driven evidence of what works.

Table of Contents

What is customer data integration?

Customer data integration (CDI) involves consolidating information from different parts of a company into one complete view. As Taylor Brown, COO and Co-founder of Fivetran, a leading data integration platform company, explains:

“When done well, it gives an organization access to reliable, well-organized data that can be used easily for analysis. This helps break down data silos, where information is stuck in separate systems, and ensures the company can get a full picture of its operations and customer interactions.”

When I first started learning about CDI, the idea of breaking down silos resonated with me. I’ve worked on projects where scattered data led to incomplete insights and frustrated teams. CDI essentially takes all the ways customers interact with your business — browsing your website, calling customer service, or making a purchase — and connects the dots to create a clear, actionable picture.

I can’t overstate the importance of having real-time customer data, evidenced by the fact that 78% of data leaders now consider real-time data access a “must-have” for their operations. That stat hit home for me as I realized how vital CDI is — not just for better analytics but for creating the kind of seamless, personalized experiences that customers expect today.

→ Download Now: The Ultimate Guide to Customer Data Platforms [Free Guide]

Types of Customer Data Integration

When I started asking experts about different approaches to customer data integration, I assumed organizations would need to choose just one strategy. But Josh Wolf, Senior Director of Solutions Consulting at Tealium, a leading customer data platform company, helped me realize I was missing the bigger picture.

“When organizations think about managing their customer data, they often wonder if they need to pick just one approach,” Wolf explained. “But here’s the thing: It’s actually much more powerful to use all three major strategies together since they each solve different pieces of the puzzle.”

That insight clicked for me. Instead of viewing these strategies as competing options, I saw how they could work in harmony to create a comprehensive data solution. Let me break them down.

1. Data Consolidation: The “All-In-One-Place” Approach

This approach focuses on centralizing customer data in a single location, enabling organizations to unify their information and act on it more efficiently. Wolf likened it to creating a well-organized library. “Think of it as creating one central ‘home’ for all your customer information,” he says. “This makes it so much easier to run analytics and generate reports since all your data is in one spot. Plus, everyone in the organization can work from the same set of facts, which breaks down data silos.”

The importance of consolidation is evident – especially as businesses prioritize first-party data. According to Tealium, 78% of organizations view first-party data as their most valuable customer information. Companies can provide better customer experiences and streamline operations with a single source of truth.

2. Data Propagation: The “Right-Time, Right-Place” Method

While consolidation focuses on centralization, propagation ensures data gets where it needs to be, exactly when it’s needed. This approach supports real-time data movement, making it invaluable for scenarios requiring high performance, like global operations or customer service.

Wolf highlighted its operational importance: “Propagation involves copying and distributing data to create redundancy, which can be particularly useful in scenarios that require high performance and availability.”

I found this especially compelling when applied to customer service. Imagine a scenario where customer agents have instant access to the latest updates — dramatically improving the quality of support. It’s no wonder nearly 70% of businesses are investing in real-time data capabilities, according to Salesforce’s 2024 State of Marketing report.

3. Data Federation: The “Connect-the-Dots” Solution

Finally, federation allows organizations to query and analyze data stored across multiple systems without moving it. Wolf described it as “being able to search across multiple libraries at once.” This approach is particularly valuable for large organizations managing data in many different systems.

I hadn’t realized how common this need was until I saw Gartner’s 2024 Magic Quadrant for Customer Data Platforms, which found organizations now manage data from an average of 15 systems. Federation shines when you need broad queries without the complexity of full data migration, making it an essential tool for modern enterprises.

Which approach is right for your organization?

So, how do you choose between these approaches? Taylor Brown from Fivetran told me, “The choice between these integration types depends on the specific needs and scale of an organization’s data strategy, whether it’s analytical use, operational efficiency, or exploratory analysis.”

But to maximize impact, you don’t need to pick just one. “To reap the most benefits, it is critical to use all three approaches together,” Wolf told me. “Think of it like this: you might use federation through your data lakehouse tools for broad queries while bringing in specific chunks of legacy data into tools like Tealium when you need them. It’s about being strategic and using each approach where it makes the most sense.”

That advice reframed my understanding of CDI entirely. Instead of viewing these strategies as isolated tools, I now see them as parts of a unified framework that can adapt to the unique needs of any organization.

The Customer Data Integration Process

the customer data integration process

When I started exploring CDI, it felt like untangling a giant knot. Each thread — whether it was mapping data sources or enabling real-time access — seemed overwhelming on its own, let alone as part of a larger system. But after speaking with experts, I learned that a successful CDI doesn’t have to be daunting. It’s all about approaching the process systematically, balancing technical precision with strategic vision.

Let’s break it down into eight essential steps to help you move from chaos to clarity when managing customer data.

1. Define your strategic goals.

The first question to ask is why you’re building a CDI framework. Josh Wolf from Tealium emphasizes this: “Your main focus should be on improving customer experience, engagement, and conversion rates.” In my experience, when teams align around these goals early, the implementation process runs more smoothly. Wolf recommends:

  • Building out strategic audiences.
  • Defining clear use cases.
  • Creating an implementation roadmap that balances quick wins with long-term value.

Pro tip: ​​Collaborate across teams to prioritize use cases. Wolf suggests ranking them based on value or importance and the time required for implementation — short-term, medium-term, and long-term. This balance ensures progress while keeping the end goal in focus.

2. Map your data sources.

Next comes identifying where your customer data lives. Wolf advises, “Work closely with your implementation teams to nail down exactly what data you need to build customer profiles.”

This involves:

  • Pinpointing data sources (e.g., website analytics, CRM, customer support platforms, or social media).
  • Determining how the data can be collected.
  • Identifying the attributes needed for customer profiles.

Pro tip: I spoke with Arunkumar Thirunagalingam, Senior Manager of Data and Technical Operations at McKesson — a company that manages pharmaceutical distribution and healthcare technology for thousands of hospitals and pharmacies nationwide. Thirunagalingam emphasized the importance of staging and transforming data within a centralized framework to ensure consistency across sources, especially when dealing with external systems that may have varied standards.

3. Design your data architecture.

One lesson I’ve learned from talking to experts is how critical it is to get your architecture right. As Thirunagalingam explains, this step includes:

  • Creating a centralized framework for data transformation.
  • Establishing Master Data Management processes.
  • Building flexibility into your data model.
  • Setting up robust data quality checks.

Pro tip: Start implementing advanced deduplication techniques and governance frameworks early to unify disparate records effectively. Thirunagalingam emphasized that small steps here save massive headaches later.

4. Extract and transform data.

Taylor Brown from Fivetran made me realize how much automation can simplify this stage. He advises, “Look for automated data pipeline solutions that provide extract, load, transform (ELT) capabilities, a wide range of connectors, high reliability, and strong performance.”

This ensures:

  • Consistent data extraction from various sources.
  • Standardized data transformation processes.
  • Efficient handling of different data formats.

Pro tip: Brown suggests familiarizing yourself with the logs or APIs of each data source before developing your extraction software. This preparation prevents costly errors during the automation process.

5. Load and integrate.

This step involves ensuring that your data flows seamlessly across all systems. Wolf recommends focusing on:

  • Defining and building out your event data layer.
  • Setting up connections to marketing and analytics vendors.
  • Ensuring proper data flow to all systems for both reporting and action-taking.

Pro tip: Don’t overlook the needs of your vendors. Wolf stresses the importance of ensuring they have everything required to support both reporting and actionable insights.

6. Validate data quality.

No matter how robust your CDI system is, data integrity is critical. Thirunagalingam advises maintaining quality through:

  • Comprehensive data quality checks.
  • Early detection of inaccuracies.
  • Correction of duplicates and inconsistencies.

Pro tip: Thirunagalingam recommends establishing a Master Data Management process to identify a single “master” record for each customer, which helps maintain data integrity across the organization.

7. Enable real-time access.

Real-time data access was a game-changer for me in understanding CDI’s potential. Wolf explained, “Real-time event collection is key — it lets you act on data as it happens.”

This involves:

  • Setting up real-time data access for stakeholders.
  • Enabling immediate data utilization.
  • Creating value through smart audience definitions, even with unknown visitors.

Pro tip: According to Wolf, real-time data capabilities are essential for understanding and responding to customer needs, whether during service interactions or through marketing communications.

8. Maintain and optimize.

Finally, success isn’t just about implementation — it’s about maintenance and iteration.

This ongoing process involves:

  • Regular system monitoring.
  • Performance optimization.
  • Continuous updates to meet evolving business needs.

As Wolf puts it, the key is to “think of it as building the engine while also planning the journey.” Success comes from balancing immediate technical needs with long-term strategic goals.

Pro tip: Brown emphasizes being prepared for potential changes at the source or shifts in downstream requirements that could impact your data models. Planning for flexibility ensures your CDI strategy stays resilient.

Customer Data Integration Examples

It wasn’t until I started diving into real-world examples that I truly understood how transformative customer data integration can be. These stories highlight operational improvements and the game-changing results that CDI can drive — results that impact customer experiences and business growth.

REA Group: Revolutionizing Real Estate With Real-Time Data

One of the most impressive cases I’ve come across is from REA Group, Australia’s leading property platform. Their story highlights how CDI can solve the challenges of managing a dual-sided marketplace, seamlessly serving property seekers and real estate agents.

“As a team, we always strive to make the property experience more seamless for both consumers and real estate agents,” explained Sarah Myers, GM Audience & Marketing at REA Group. “Partnering with Tealium has allowed us to turn consumer data into real-time personalized experiences at scale.”

What really stood out to me were the results:

  • 23x higher click-through rates and 10x higher conversion rates from real-time triggered campaigns compared to scheduled campaigns.
  • 65 million events processed daily, updating over 40 million data points.
  • 7.5 million personalized recommendations delivered every day.
  • An eightfold increase in visits from owned channels, generating over $10 million in earned media annually.

Their ability to break down data silos and expand personalization beyond email to omnichannel marketing resonated with me — it’s a challenge so many organizations face.

Saks: From Months to Minutes

Taylor Brown shared a fascinating example of how Saks, a luxury ecommerce retailer, revolutionized its data integration process. “Saks reduced the time to integrate new data sources from months to hours, enabling near real-time updates every five minutes,” Brown explained.

This transformation didn’t just speed things up — it fundamentally improved their operations:

  • 5x increase in team productivity.
  • Significant cost savings across the company’s systems.
  • Real-time KPI reporting across the enterprise, allowing for faster, more informed decision-making.

What I found inspiring about Saks’s journey is how automation allowed their team to shift from firefighting data issues to focusing on strategy and insights.

National Australia Bank: Real-Time Revolution

In industries like banking, where precision and trust are paramount, CDI isn’t optional — it’s critical. National Australia Bank (NAB) faced the challenge of integrating data from traditional banking systems and modern cloud platforms to serve millions of customers better.

According to Brown, their approach focused on three key areas:

  • Consolidating customer data from multiple sources.
  • Implementing real-time analysis capabilities.
  • Delivering more personalized banking services based on unified insights.

For NAB, this wasn’t just about data management but about transforming their customer relationships. The results included improved customer satisfaction scores and a reputation for delivering banking services tailored to individual needs.

La-Z-Boy: From Operational Efficiency to Customer Satisfaction

La-Z-Boy’s story is one I found especially compelling because it illustrates how CDI can impact both operational efficiency and the customer experience. La-Z-Boy modernized its entire data infrastructure and saw remarkable results. According to Fivetran:

  • Nearly $6 million saved by aligning supply with demand.
  • A 20% improvement in shipping accuracy, which enhanced customer satisfaction and reduced support inquiries.
  • A reduction in data availability time from 3 hours to just 10-15 minutes.

What struck me was how La-Z-Boy used CDI to link their supply chain to customer demands. This dual focus on efficiency and experience shows the full potential of well-integrated data.

What This Means for Your Organization: Looking Ahead

Exploring customer data integration has made one thing clear: It’s not just a technical endeavor — it’s a strategic tool for transforming how businesses operate and engage with customers. The examples from REA Group, Saks, La-Z-Boy, and NAB highlight the incredible potential of CDI to deliver measurable results, from operational efficiencies to enhanced customer experiences.

As your organization considers CDI, I recommend keeping these guiding principles in mind:

  • Start small, then scale. Focused initiatives can build momentum and set the stage for broader success. For example, La-Z-Boy’s early projects delivered millions in savings and improved customer satisfaction.
  • Prioritize data quality. Clean, consistent data is the foundation for everything. Without it, even the most advanced tools will fall short.
  • Leverage real-time capabilities. Companies like Saks and REA Group have shown how real-time data access can unlock faster decision-making and more personalized interactions.
  • Stay flexible and future-focused. Design systems that can scale and adapt as your organization’s needs evolve.

Looking ahead, the future of CDI lies in balancing innovation with trust. Organizations that prioritize privacy while leveraging data to deliver personalized, scalable experiences will be best positioned to thrive in an increasingly data-driven world.