Experience Map
Experience mapping looks at your customer’s end to end experience with your brand to identify areas ripe for improvement and innovation.
Use this Miro board to uncover what customers are doing, thinking and feeling throughout their journey.
Educate outside agent on the process
Set client expectations early
Educate client on what Mortgage Success is
Educate client on why refinancing is a good option
Show a success screen that informs client of their pre-qualification and introduces Mortgage Success agents, with ability to book an appointment
This template was created by Josh Zak.
Get started with this template right now.
Customer Journey Map Template
Works best for:
Ideation, Mapping, Product Management
A customer journey map (CJM) is a visual representation of your customer’s experience. It allows you to capture the path that a customer follows when they buy a product, sign up for a service, or otherwise interact with your site. Most maps include a specific persona, outlines their customer experience from beginning to end, and captures the potential emotional highs and lows of interacting with the product or service. Use this template to easily create customer journey maps for projects of all kinds.
User Journey Map
Works best for:
Customer Journey Map
A template to help you get started with building simple user journey maps.
Behavior Design Mapping (Journey)
Works best for:
Customer Journey Map
This map is a behavior micro-journey and should be feeding from a higher level map.
Fly UX Customer Journey Map
Works best for:
Customer Journey Map
I created this Customer Journey Map as part of a UX Design certifcation program, for UX Design Insitute.
Scenario Mapping Template
Works best for:
Desk Research, Mapping, Product Management
Scenario mapping is the process of outlining all the steps a user will take to complete a task. The scenario mapping template helps you create a visual guide to what different personas are doing, thinking, and feeling in different situations. Use scenario mapping to outline an intended or ideal scenario (what should happen) as well as what currently happens. If you’re trying to outline the ideal scenario, user mapping should take place very early on in a project and can help inform user stories and the product backlog. If you’re just trying to get a better sense of what currently happens, you can do user mapping when conducting user interviews or observation.
Practical Customer Journey Mapping by Alex Gilev
Works best for:
Customer Journey Map
Today, customers hold companies to high standards for product quality and user experience.