For understanding how great leaders and orgs inspire action by starting with a clear sense of purpose.
Focuses on the seven elements necessary for helping your customer.
A four-step process that encourages user engagement and promotes habit formation.
Help individuals and groups connect personal stories to collective action.
Turn complex ideas into clear cause-and-effect stories people remember.
focusing on how brands can guide prospects from awareness to advocacy.
A storytelling framework that makes your message relatable, memorable, and impactful in any context.
Narrate how an idea was born, built, and scaled to demonstrate its real-world impact.
Build a service culture that turns everyday interactions into lasting customer loyalty.
For building customer-focused marketing strategies.
Build a clear system to improve content, ensuring long-term marketing impact.
Map user journeys from first attraction to lasting memory by structuring experiences across five critical stages.
Design consistent customer service experiences through connection, support, resolution, and continuous improvement.
Helps communicators control emotional rhythm and attention over time.
Analyze where your product creates value and identify the layers where real differentiation happens.
Map user journeys from first attraction to lasting memory by structuring experiences across five critical stages.
No application mappings are available for this framework yet.
Even the great products or services could fail because users get lost somewhere along the way.
A product can attract attention, yet lose people at the first click. A service can work well at the core, yet create frustration at the end. Teams often see the outcome, but not the moment where the experience breaks.
The 5E Experience Model can help here. It helps us slow down, observe the entire customer journey, and understand how users move from first contact to long-term engagement.
The 5E model divides the user journey into five sequential stages:
These stages describe how a user discovers a brand, interacts with a product, completes a task, and decides whether to return.
It is a practical tool for design thinking and product development teams that want a clear view of the customer journey.
This stage captures the spark that draws users in. A message, a friend’s recommendation, a visual cue, or a moment of need can trigger attention.
Entice sets expectations, and expectations shape the user’s judgment of the entire journey.
Enter marks the user’s first real step. It might be opening the homepage, walking into a store, or downloading an app.
A clean and simple entry reduces anxiety and builds confidence. A cluttered or confusing start creates early friction.
Engage is the core of the user experience. This is where users complete tasks, explore functions, and form opinions, and interact with the product, complete key tasks, and judge whether the experience feels smooth or frustrating.
Teams should design a highlight: a surprisingly smooth flow, a meaningful insight, or an enjoyable interaction. According to the Peak-End Rule, a single high-value moment here can significantly influence overall satisfaction.
Exit defines how the experience concludes. Even when the core journey works well, a poor ending can leave a negative impression.
The Peak End Rule makes the Exit stage extremely important. A clear summary, a simple confirmation, or a supportive message can turn a neutral experience into a positive one. Endings shape memory.
Extend looks beyond the session. It asks how the brand follows up and how the relationship continues. This may include after service support, community engagement, or well timed reminders.
Extend reinforces the peak and the ending, making the entire user experience more memorable and more valuable.