Journey-level VoC — the contact-level CSAT that hides churn

Voice of Customer · ~7 minute read

Contact-level CSAT high while journey-level CES low. Agents handling individual contacts well while journeys fail across them. Journey-level VoC surfaces what contact-level surveys miss.

What a journey is

A journey, in VoC terms, is the sequence of customer interactions and experiences related to a single underlying need — a claim, an onboarding, a complaint, a churn-risk. A journey may span hours, days, weeks; may cross channels and functions.

Contact-level measurement catches one slice; journey-level catches the whole.

The signals to track

Number of interactions to resolve a journey (more = worse). Channel-switching (customer started in chat, ended on voice = friction). Repeat-contact rate. Escalation rate. Time-to-resolution at journey level. Customer effort across the journey, asked at journey end. Drop-out / abandonment. Outcome — did the underlying need get met.

These are operational, not statement-only. They surface friction the contact-level survey misses.

Moments of truth

The interactions or steps where the customer’s overall impression is disproportionately shaped — the first contact, the first sign of trouble, the escalation, the closure. The disciplined operation identifies them, measures specifically at them, designs deliberately around them.

A caution: "moment of truth" is sometimes slogan rather than analysis. The disciplined use is identification + measurement + design.

Worked example

Claims journey: contact-level CSAT 4.1/5 (high). Journey-level analysis: 38% of journeys involved three or more contacts; 22% involved channel-switching; average time-to-settlement 18 days against a "fast-track" promise of 5; journey-end CES 3.1/5 (low); repeat-complaint rate 19%; churn within 12 months of claim 24% (against 9% baseline).

Contact-level CSAT was misleading. The operation that measures only contact-level sees scores rise while customers churn.

Contact-level vs journey-level Contact-level ▸ Agent behaviour ▸ Scripting / process adherence ▸ Immediate satisfaction ▸ Useful for QM and coaching Journey-level ▸ Friction across contacts ▸ Channel-switching ▸ Repeat-contact ▸ Drop-out / abandonment ▸ Total time-to-resolution ▸ Useful for service design Measure the journey, not just the contact

The closing principle

Contact-level CSAT can be high while journeys fail. Measure the journey; identify moments of truth; design around them. The aggregate hides what segment-by-journey reveals.

See also