The 6 Stages of the Customer Buying Process & How to Leverage Them

Understanding the customer buying process is essential for effective sales and marketing. Learn the six stages customers go through before making a purchase, from problem recognition to post-purchase evaluation, and how to optimize your strategy for each stage.

Summary

  • 70-90% of the buying journey happens before customers ever talk to you - Most of the decision process occurs through problem recognition, information search from friends and family, and evaluating alternatives, meaning your marketing must address these stages long before direct engagement
  • Six distinct stages require different strategies - Problem recognition needs content marketing to articulate customer pain, information search demands product quality and authority building, alternatives evaluation requires clear value differentiation, purchase decision needs security reassurance, actual purchase must be frictionless, and post-purchase evaluation determines if they return
  • Post-purchase treatment determines recurring revenue - Customers evaluate whether expectations were met and decide to come back or never return, making good customer service, follow-up surveys, and fair refund policies critical since recurring customers are far more valuable than one-time buyers. See how Tallyfy improves customer onboarding and retention

Disregarding the type of business you run, or the industry you are in, you should probably be aware of what the buying process is and how to take advantage of it.

What is the Customer Buying Process?

In terms of marketing, many companies will put all of their energy and resources into the purchase itself. This is often a mistake because the customer has an entire process they will go through before they ever buy anything from you.

In fact, 70-90 percent of the buying process will happen prior to ever engaging with your company.

Every time a customer makes a purchase they go through a certain thought process.

Even when they are making an impulse buy, the customer will still go through the stages of the buying process.

Understanding the buying process is important for your team and will help you design a better sales strategy.

The 6 Stages of the Customer Buying Process

When a customer is considering a purchase that is more expensive or requires some kind of monthly commitment, they will usually spend more time thinking about it.

They may want to research different options, talk to a friend or family member about it, and weigh the pros and cons of going through with the sale.

In business, this process is often portrayed as a sales funnel with more and more people dropping off as they move further into the funnel.

At each point during this process, the customer will go through a specific thought pattern.

To help your customer follow through with the sale, you must understand what their needs are at each point.

Let’s look at the six stages of the buying process below:

Stage #1: Problem Recognition

This is the most important step in the decision process because your customer has to realize they need your product before a purchase can ever take place.

This presents you with both the opportunity and the challenge of identifying with your customer.

The best strategy is to articulate their problem in your marketing efforts.

With traditional marketing or PR, this can be done through advertising: having an ad that explains what the customer’s problem is, and how the product or service can solve it.

With any online business, on the other hand, the best way to influence the problem recognition stage is through content marketing.

With the right content, you could identify with your audience, articulate their needs, and offer helpful resources and tools.

Now the customer will begin searching for information to help them find the best solution to their problem.

Most people will immediately turn to friends, family members, and colleagues for recommendations.

While you cannot really talk the above-mentioned friends or family members into endorsing your product, there are several things you could do:

  • Focusing on the Product - If your product is really good, people are going to start being your brand advocates, and you will not even have to pay them!

  • Build Authority - This one is pretty generic, and translates into regular marketing. It could mean working on your company web presence, for example, so that it is easy for your customers to find you and learn more about your product.

  • Reviews & Partnerships - Other than friends and family, there is something else that is extremely helpful in influencing decision-making: the influencers. Establishing connections with experts in your field (or bloggers, review websites, etc.) will help you stand out.

Stage #3: Evaluation of Alternatives

Although some people will come to a quick decision, most customers will not settle for the first solution they find.

They will evaluate several different options and the possible benefits or drawbacks to each.

And even if your company has the best product to meet their needs, they still may decide to go with someone else.

So, the one thing you could do at this stage is to offer a lot more value than your competition and communicate that with your customers.

This can be easier in some industries (software, for example, where you can add more powerful features), but hard in others (consumer goods. Who looks at the brand of their toilet paper, anyway?)

Stage #4: Purchase Decision

Once the customer has explored their options they will make a decision about whether or not to move forward with the purchase.

Yes, even though they have reached the middle of the buying process they could still choose to walk away.

At this point, customers need a sense of security.

They also need to be reminded of the problem that brought them here in the first place.

And if a customer does decide to walk away this is the best point in the process to bring them back.

Depending on your industry, this could be a simple email reminder, for example (hey, you were interested in our software!).

Stage #5: Purchase

At this stage, you want to make it as easy as possible for your customers to buy from you.

Does your website load too slowly?

Can they order from their phone just as easily as on a desktop?

These are questions you should consider.

The customer already decided that they want to do business with you - you do not want to make it hard for them.

Let’s say if your payment processing software is being laggy, they might just decide to ditch and go to your competitor!

Stage #6: Post-Purchase Evaluation

You may think you are in the clear now but your work does not end after the customer makes their purchase!

Customers will evaluate their purchase based on previous expectations and decide whether or not they are satisfied.

If they are not happy with your product, they will just never use it again - and everyone knows that recurring customers are much better than those buying just once.

Or it could end up going even worse, with the customer asking for their money back.

Depending on how you handle this situation, the customer will react differently.

If you put their concerns at ease and even make them feel better, they are much more likely to come back or even refer their friends.

Or, if you treat them wrong, you are never going to see them (or their friends) again.

There are a couple of ways to work with this stage:

  • Good Customer Service - Being able to talk to your customers and help them use their product can take you a long way.

  • Follow-Up Emails, Survey - Showing the customer that you care about their experience is a pleasant experience on its own.

  • Fair Treatment - Sometimes, the product might just end up not being what the customer is looking for. If you treat them with respect and offer a refund, they are more likely to come back for a different purchase. If you shut them down, they are lost forever.

Conclusion

Hopefully, these six steps have given you a better understanding of the thought process that goes into making a purchase.

They can be extremely helpful if used as a framework to analyze your customer’s thinking, and then use what you learn in combination with other marketing efforts.

Your business might be leaving money on the table - by using workflow software, you can analyze, improve and automate your processes. Schedule a free Tallyfy demonstration and learn how!

About the Author

Amit is the CEO of Tallyfy. He is a workflow expert and specializes in process automation and the next generation of business process management in the post-flowchart age. He has decades of consulting experience in task and workflow automation, continuous improvement (all the flavors) and AI-driven workflows for small and large companies. Amit did a Computer Science degree at the University of Bath and moved from the UK to St. Louis, MO in 2014. He loves watching American robins and their nesting behaviors!