Written by students who passed Immediately available after payment Read online or as PDF Wrong document? Swap it for free 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Class notes

Lecture Notes Digital Marketing and Metrics | VU Amsterdam | 2025/26

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
214
Uploaded on
01-06-2026
Written in
2025/2026

Lecture 1 notes from Digital Marketing and Metrics at VU Amsterdam covering customer journeys, touchpoints, and omnichannel strategies. Topics include ZMOT (Zero Moment of Truth), customer journey analysis, owned/paid/earned channels, and how mobile and digital platforms are reshaping consumer behavior across retail sectors. Essential for understanding how companies like Matalan and HEMA adapted to customers moving fluidly between online and offline channels.

Show more Read less
Institution
Course

Content preview

Digital Marketing and Metrics (30 maart)
Lecture 1

LEARNING OBJECTIVES
• Explain the concepts of customer journeys, touchpoints, channels, and ZMOT, with
relevant examples
• Perform a customer journey analysis: identify key stages that customers go through
and key touchpoints
• Describe customer segments based on patterns in their customer journeys
• Explain the impact of mobile devices, omnichannel shopping, and physical stores for
customer journeys
• Understand how relationships between product satisfaction, journey satisfaction, customer
inspiration, and customer loyalty may vary across the different customer journey segments

Digital Marketing and Customer Journey

DIGITAL MARKETING
Digital marketing is an adaptive and technology-enabled PROCESS by which firms
collaborate with customers and partners to create, communicate, deliver, and sustain value
for all stakeholders. (Kannan & Li, 2017)

DIGITAL MARKETING
The impact of digital technologies is reflected in:
• More information channels and ways to interact
• More personalization of advertising
• Changing buying patterns and consumer needs
• The rise of digital platforms
• Increasing competition
• Increasing marketing expenditures and need for accountability
Good metrics inform good management.

There are new platforms that are changing how digital marketing works.

TODAY’S CUSTOMERS MOVE FLUIDLY ACROSS CHANNELS
And everything starts with a search.

Video: Google Search Matalan journey
-> marketing wasn´t aligned with customer behavior. The marketing was very traditional.
-> similar to HEMA. Traditional offline stores and they had to change

They say that customer behavior is not only focused on off-line stores. Mobile ads are based
on location and are an add-on. People search on their phones for things, and they see
somewhere nearby me. The mobile channel was the single biggest influence for people
to come into the store.

,In the Google Search Matalan example, the company discovered that its marketing
strategy was not aligned with how customers actually behaved.

Originally, Matalan operated mainly as a traditional offline retailer. Their marketing
approach focused on:

●​ Physical stores
●​ Traditional advertising (e.g., TV, print)
●​ Promotions centered around store visits

However, customers were already behaving differently. Many people:

●​ Started their journey with an online search
●​ Looked for store locations, opening hours, or product availability
●​ Compared prices and products online before visiting a store

This meant that customers were moving between online and offline channels, but the
company’s marketing strategy was still designed for a single-channel retail model.

To adapt, Matalan needed to shift toward a more omnichannel strategy, where online and
offline channels work together. This included:

●​ Improving visibility in search results
●​ Making product and store information easily accessible online
●​ Ensuring a consistent experience across digital platforms and physical stores

A similar situation occurred with companies like HEMA, which traditionally relied heavily on
physical stores. As consumer behavior changed, these retailers had to invest more in:

●​ E-commerce
●​ Mobile experiences
●​ Digital marketing
●​ Integration between online and offline shopping

The main lesson is that customer behavior changed faster than many companies’
marketing strategies. Businesses that succeed today align their marketing with how
consumers actually move across channels—starting with search and digital information
gathering, even when the final purchase happens in a physical store.

CUSTOMER JOURNEY
• A customer journey is the process a customer goes through, across all stages and touch
points, that makes up the customer experience.
• Touch points are interactions between customers and firms that involve any transactional or
informational exchange, online and offline, including customer-to-customer interactions,
occurring at distinct points in the customer journey.
• Owned, Paid, Earned classification
Exercise: Think about a recent experience (e.g., buying coffee, booking a trip, online
shopping, etc.). Describe the customer journey and identify the most important touchpoints
you encountered.

,Customer journey example: buying coffee

Pre-purchase stage​
On my way to class in the morning, I felt like having coffee. I opened Google Maps and
searched for “coffee near me.” I compared a few nearby cafés, looked at their ratings and
photos, and chose the one with the best reviews, and that was closest to my route. The most
important touchpoints here were the search results, online reviews, and the location
information.

Purchase stage​
I walked into the café, looked at the menu board, and ordered a cappuccino from the barista.
The key touchpoints during this stage were the store environment, the menu, the interaction
with the staff, and the payment process when I paid with my card.

Post-purchase stage​
After receiving the coffee, I drank it on the way to class and evaluated the experience.
Because the coffee tasted good and the service was quick, I remembered the café as a
good option for the future. The main touchpoints here were the product quality, the overall
experience in the café, and the possibility of leaving or reading reviews online.

Mobile devices, omnichannel shopping, and physical stores each play distinct but
interconnected roles in shaping today’s customer journeys:

Mobile Devices:
- Mobile usage in customer journeys has grown sharply from 2013 to 2016, especially
among multiple touchpoint shoppers and extensive online shoppers.
- Mobile devices act as complementary search tools rather than standalone channels,
enabling broader exploration and richer journeys across touchpoints.
- Mobile usage expands the number and variety of touchpoints a customer uses, increasing
search depth and journey complexity.
- There is no distinct "mobile-only" segment; mobile is embedded within existing segments’
shopping behaviors.
- Retailers should integrate mobile as part of a seamless omnichannel experience,
optimizing it for quick access and smooth transitions.

Omnichannel Shopping:
- Five distinct omnichannel journey segments exist: store-focused, pragmatic online,
extensive online, multiple touchpoint, and online-to-offline shoppers.
- Multiple touchpoint shoppers show the highest usage of various touchpoints and mobile
devices, often mixing online, offline, competitor, and additional channels.
- Successful omnichannel management involves orchestrating all touchpoints to deliver
seamless, satisfying, and inspiring experiences, particularly for multiple touchpoint shoppers
who form a high-spending segment.
- Touchpoints used, channel preferences, and loyalty drivers differ widely by segment,
emphasizing the need for segment-specific strategies.

, Physical Stores:
- Physical stores remain critical, especially for store-focused and online-to-offline
(webrooming) shoppers.
- Store-focused shoppers rely almost exclusively on physical stores for search and
purchase, rarely using mobile or digital touchpoints; their loyalty is driven strongly by product
satisfaction and in-store inspiration.
- Online-to-offline shoppers search extensively online but complete purchases in the physical
store, valuing both product quality and a satisfying online-to-offline journey.
- The feared "showrooming" segment (search offline, buy online elsewhere) was not found,
suggesting that physical stores continue to be powerful conversion touchpoints.
- Physical stores serve as important sources of customer inspiration via sensory
engagement, product trials, and staff interaction.

In short, mobile devices enrich customer journeys, especially in complex omnichannel
segments; omnichannel shopping requires tailored journey management depending on
segment usage patterns; and physical stores continue to play a pivotal role both as search
and purchase touchpoints, especially for offline and webrooming shoppers.

The main idea from the figure is that there are three stages, and that their are are set of
experiences before each stage.

Current customer experiences cause future decisions.

CUSTOMER JOURNEY FRAMEWORK: LEMON & VERHOEF (2016)

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
June 1, 2026
Number of pages
214
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Olga
Contains
All classes

Subjects

$9.78
Get access to the full document:

Wrong document? Swap it for free Within 14 days of purchase and before downloading, you can choose a different document. You can simply spend the amount again.
Written by students who passed
Immediately available after payment
Read online or as PDF

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
zbheshof

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
zbheshof Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
6
Member since
2 year
Number of followers
0
Documents
14
Last sold
3 weeks ago

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Working on your references?

Create accurate citations in APA, MLA and Harvard with our free citation generator.

Working on your references?

Frequently asked questions