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End-to-End Customer Experience: Where CX Begins

By In Horatio Insights

Customer experience begins long before purchase. Discover how expectations, emotions, and customer journey touchpoints shape end-to-end customer experience.

end to end customer experience

Brought to you by

Rita Saoud

Rita Saoud

SVP of Operations at Horatio

Rita Saoud serves as the Senior Vice President at Hire Horatio CX, where she oversees operations, client services, and crisis management to optimize the customer journey. A multilingual leader fluent in Arabic, French, and Spanish, Rita is dedicated to fostering strong global relationships and empowering the next generation of CX professionals through people-first mentorship and operational excellence.

What is end-to-end customer experience?

We all know about customer experience and how it can make or break a potential customer's buying decision, but have you heard of end-to-end customer experience? This term refers to every single interaction a customer experiences with your company, encompassing the entire journey and how they feel about it.

If you want to become a customer-first business, you need to start thinking holistically. Most companies fall short when it comes to understanding the entire process, as they have aa traditional thinking. Some businesses are great at acquiring customers, but they’re terrible at retaining them. 

The truth is, it has nothing to do with the reasons they believe: their products or services might be excellent, but if the experience fails, then everything else fails. If you’re looking to build a seamless journey from the beginning, this article is great for you. Let’s discuss how your business can improve financial outcomes by investing in optimized experiences.

The invisible start: When CX actually begins

Recent customer journey research increasingly recognizes that customer experience is shaped by a broad ecosystem of antecedents and influences long before direct interaction occurs.

Beyond the first touchpoint: Traditional customer journey mapping assumes that the experience only begins when a customer lands on any of their touchpoints, whether physical or digital. In reality, customers start their journey long before that. 

When someone realizes they have a need, they immediately start looking for solutions, and in this scouting stage, perception plays a vital role. People start forming ideas about companies based on external signals, digital exposure, emotional assumptions, or customer reviews. 

Expectation as experience architecture: But what are some of these signals? People will form perceptions based on the context and story they see about a company. You build that with your specific tone of voice, pricing, visuals, social proof, and media presence. All those aspects become the experience architecture that defines what a customer thinks of you before they interact with your company.

If you start promoting yourself as a premium brand, then they’ll expect a premium experience in every interaction. If you fail to meet those expectations, you’re doing something wrong, but the good news is that you can manage customer expectations by building a strong reputation with your brand’s communication. 

Invisible experience layers: Before customers ever interact with a company directly, their perception is already shaped by invisible experience layers such as:

  • Social proof and review culture
  • Online discourse and community sentiment
  • Peer recommendations and word-of-mouth
  • Brand reputation and cultural perception
  • Algorithmic exposure across social and search platforms
  • Inherited trust signals.

This is especially important in the digital era where customers constantly move between platforms while forming opinions about brands. This complexity is one reason why 41% of CX leaders say keeping pace with rising customer expectations is the biggest challenge facing their organization today.

Redefining the end-to-end journey map

The Pre-journey (The setup)

Remember that your target audience will build perceptions based on things you control (ads, tone of voice, or pricing) and things you don’t (customer reviews, negative comments, or bad product use).

Pre-awareness experience

Customer perceptions are often shaped long before active engagement begins through:

  • Social reputation
  • Online reviews
  • Community discourse
  • Employer reputation
  • Creator and influencer ecosystems
  • Algorithmic exposure

A customer may trust companies like Apple, Patagonia, or Airbnb before ever using their products or services, based on all previous signals. That is a great customer experience building based on previous stages. Invest in retaining your existing customers and create better experiences so their opinions become advocates for new customers.

Expectation formation

Once a customer analyzes the previously available information and builds their perception, they can either decide to buy or move on. If they decide to interact with your business, now everything is under your control. We know building a perfect experience is impossible, but try to compensate when the customer experiences friction.

The active journey (The interaction)

The visible customer journey includes:

  • Discovery
  • Evaluation
  • Purchase
  • Onboarding
  • Usage
  • Support

Those journey stages are continuously building different perceptions based on your touchpoints, but the emotional weight they bring to it matters. If they perceive your products as premium quality, but once they interact with you, they receive terrible support, that high perception will automatically destroy itself. 

Stay alert to customer signals so you improve them before they become a bigger issue along their journey.

The post-journey (The residual)

Emotional memory & narrative

Most companies focus too much on tangible touchpoints that they end up overlooking the next steps. The customer experience will not stop after they bought something from you, so invest in post-journey optimization as well. Customers will remember these aspects of the entire journey, including the post-purchase stage:

  • Emotional peaks
  • Endings
  • Surprises
  • Recoveries
  • Frustrations

This concept aligns closely with the “Peak-End Rule,” a psychological principle explaining how people judge experiences largely based on emotionally intense moments and final impressions. That’s why in many cases, a well-handled recovery moment can strengthen trust more effectively than a flawless but emotionally forgettable transaction.

As Maya Angelou famously said:

“People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”

Airbnb’s storyboard approach

Airbnb offers a strong example of how end-to-end customer experience extends beyond individual touchpoints. Inspired by Disney’s storyboard approach, Airbnb mapped the emotional journey customers experience while traveling or hosting, not just the booking process itself.

This helped the company realize that its true product was the overall experience and memory created around the trip, reinforcing the importance of designing customer journeys around emotions, expectations, and lasting impressions rather than isolated transactions.

Mapping the end-to-end customer experience journey

Near-perfect business processes are not enough if you overlook the customer journey’s emotional weight. Since customers will remember their feelings throughout their experience, it makes sense that you focus on understanding all the stages.

This will help you obtain a better idea of what’s at stake at each stage of the customer journey, knowing exactly what to do to improve it. These are the most important cycles of the end-to-end customer experience journey:

  1. Discovery: On this stage customers experience their first exposure with your brand. The stakes are low as their perceptions play a more critical role than everything else you might say about your company.
  2. Expectation formation: Customers begin their initial research about your business. This next filter helps them build a holistic understanding of what your company really is compared to their initial perception.
  3. Evaluation: Here comes the thorough research process where they compare your company with their other options. The stakes here are at their peak compared to the other stages of the pre-journey process.
  4. Purchase: After they decide you are a great option, the buying process starts. The stakes are medium as they have already made up their mind, but the interactions they have during the buying process are critical for the final decision.
  5. Onboarding: Customers return to their initial expectations and compare them to the experience you offer. Onboarding stages are very important for customers to decide whether they’ll be loyal customers or if it was just a one-time purchase.
  6. Usage: Building smooth experiences for the day-to-day uses should be a priority. If you create a customer-first experience where people have access to different resources that help them take advantage of their purchase, they’ll definitely consider buying again.
  7. Support: Customer support is one of the most vital aspects of the end-to-end customer experience. The stakes are higher as the customer is experiencing friction or wants help, leading with empathy is key to maintain a great relationship.
  8. Recovery moments: Friction will always be a part of the experience, but they way you handle it, matters more that the issue itself. If you keep great communication and have proactive assistance, customers will consider you a great option despite the problem they had.
  9. Post-experience reflection: Customers emotionally process and reinterpret the experience afterward. You can’t control their final decision, but you surely can build a great relationship that can make the choice easier.
  10. Advocacy: Positive experiences transform customers into promoters and advocates. If you were able to reach to this point, then you are most likely going to replicate it with new prospects, so keep up with the great job. Just remember to act based on customer feedback to improve the experience.
  11. Re-engagement: Returning customers expect continuity and recognition across channels. Make sure the next time they engage, they find a better experience, use their previous interactions as a basis of what they experienced to exceed their expectations.
  12. Public reputation exposure: Customer opinions influence future customers through reviews, social media, and online communities. Here the cycle repeats itself for future potential customers. 

Customer effort remains one of the most important factors of experience quality across every stage of the journey. Making sure it stays at low levels will improve your chances to build a great reputation based on your customer experience. 

Common journey mapping mistakes that create broken experiences

Starting the journey too late

The customer journey begins before a customer even lands on your website or physical store, so make sure you take into consideration improving your reputation to build great perceptions. Ignoring the influence that previous signals have on a potential customer is a mistake you can’t commit.

Mapping processes while excluding emotions

Effective customer journey mapping involves understanding the emotions a customer is feeling while they interact with your company. Emotions usually bring more insight than actions, as you can improve your CX by analyzing customer feedback. Smart businesses take advantage of that information to refine the high-stakes stages. 

Assuming the journey is linear

Even though you have a clear understanding of who your ideal customer is, you can have different target audiences for your different products and touchpoints. So, assuming everyone is the same is a big mistake; optimize the experience based on the target audience of each specific journey stage.

Isolating the customer journey from strategic planning

Every business department has its own set of priorities, and all those need to be aligned with the brand’s outcomes. The customer experience and customer journey departments need to be included on strategic discussions and performance meetings to improve the financial results they provide.

This challenge continues growing as consumers increasingly expect seamless omnichannel experiences. In fact, 97% of consumers say it is important to switch channels without losing context, yet only 16% of CX leaders say their organizations have fully integrated systems enabling this continuity.

Ignoring the post-purchase stage

As we mentioned before, customers won’t remember a great buying experience if the post-purchase support is terrible; they remember how you made them feel. The way you treat your customers after they buy or interact with you matters more than everything else.

Treating journey maps as static

Your journey maps should not remain the same over time; customer expectations and emotions evolve. This means you need to revisit this process every once in a while and optimize based on your discoveries. 

How to improve end-to-end customer experience

Design around expectations

A strong end-to-end customer experience begins with aligning expectations and business outcomes. Organizations should intentionally design memorable moments that emotionally anchor the customer journey. Identify key emotional moments throughout the journey where positive emotions create long-term memory and stronger customer loyalty.

Identify friction across the entire journey

Having different touchpoints brings several benefits to your company and customers, but at the same time each one brings several challenges. Identify the areas where the experience is negatively affected and work on improving it based on feedback. Remember, every touchpoint has different audiences, so use different CX data to create tailored strategies. 

For example, people who prefer to use the self-service channel won’t have the same issues as those who prefer to interact via phone calls.

Build consistency across digital and human touchpoints

And if we’re talking about different touchpoints, we must bring another challenge to the table: maintaining consistency. While it is hard, it is not impossible, so invest in understanding the expectations people have and build experiences that tackle their specific needs. 

Offer the same quality of service in each touchpoint, even if they’re digital or physical. This is important because 85% of customers now expect consistent interactions across departments regardless of the channel they use.

Use behavioral and emotional insights

Analyze behavioral patterns, emotional signals, and customer sentiment to understand where friction emerges throughout the customer journey and experience.

By leveraging behavioral insights and AI-driven analytics, businesses can personalize interactions, anticipate customer needs, and proactively identify moments where customers may require additional support. In fact, 56% of consumers now expect all offers to be personalized.

Create feedback loops across departments

Customer journey mapping requires cross-functional collaboration and shared visibility across the entire customer lifecycle.

All your business departments must have access to customer insights and behavioral data to better understand how their decisions affect the overall experience. Aligning internal goals with customer outcomes creates stronger continuity across touchpoints. 

As McKinsey notes, real customer experience transformations happen when organizations take a comprehensive approach to customer journeys and how the business itself operates. Improving isolated touchpoints alone rarely creates sustainable long-term CX improvements.

Continuously adapt to changing customer expectations

Revisiting old mappings to update them is a best practice you must follow. Technology, products, expectations, and behaviors change, so you need to adapt your business to supply those needs to stay competitive.

The end-to-end customer experience strategy to thrive

Every strategy leaves different lessons, so no matter what you implement, focus on collecting data based on the results. When mapping the customer journey, you also need to collect information about the current context and future outcomes after deploying it. 

Your customers are the center stage of the strategy, so listen very carefully to what they’re saying and act. Their feedback is your most valuable asset. Every interaction counts, so make sure everyone experiences your desired level of quality.
At Horatio, we understand how important customers can be, so we focus on creating tangible value to customer experiences. Contact us and let’s start working on building your next successful end-to-end customer experience!

FAQs

What is customer journey mapping?

Customer journey mapping is the process of visualizing every stage, interaction, and emotion customers experience while engaging with a brand across the full lifecycle.

What is end-to-end customer experience?

End-to-end customer experience refers to the complete perception customers build throughout every interaction with a brand, from first awareness to post-purchase memory and long-term loyalty.

When does customer experience actually begin?

Customer experience often begins before direct interaction occurs. Reviews, social proof, brand reputation, advertising, and online conversations all shape customer expectations early in the journey.

What are customer journey touchpoints?

Customer journey touchpoints are all the moments customers interact with a company, including advertisements, websites, onboarding, support conversations, reviews, social media, and post-purchase interactions.

What is the difference between customer journey and customer experience?

The customer journey refers to the stages customers move through when interacting with a company, while customer experience describes the emotional and overall perception formed throughout those interactions.

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