Key Takeaways
A touchpoint (point of contact) is any moment in which a (potential) customer comes into contact with your company, your brand, or your product—online or offline. From a Google search to your website, the initial call, and the invoice: every touchpoint influences the customer experience and brand image. Identifying and optimizing all touchpoints along the customer journey is the foundation for customer success and sustainable customer retention.
1. Definition: What is a touchpoint?
A touchpoint is any moment of contact between a (potential) customer and a company. Touchpoints can be direct (website, sales conversation, email) or indirect (third-party reviews, recommendations, social media mentions).
Each individual touchpoint shapes the perception of your brand and influences the purchase decision. In B2B, a customer typically goes through 8–15 touchpoints before making a decision. The sum of all touchpoint experiences makes up the customer experience.
In the omnichannel era, designing all touchpoints consistently is a challenge: website, social media, email, personal consulting, trade fairs—everywhere, the same brand positioning and quality must be tangible.
2. Types of touchpoints
Digital touchpoints
- Website and SEO: Often the first point of contact—UX and content quality are crucial.
- AI answers: Through LLMO and GEO, your brand becomes visible in ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews—an increasingly important touchpoint.
- Social media: LinkedIn posts, personal branding, interactions, and comments.
- Email: Newsletters, automated sequences, personal correspondence.
- Content: Blog posts, glossary entries, whitepapers, videos, podcasts.
- Online reviews: Google Reviews, industry portals, customer references.
Personal touchpoints
- Initial call, consulting appointment, workshop
- Trade fairs, conferences, networking events
- Phone and video calls, support requests
Administrative touchpoints
- Preparing proposals, drafting contracts
- Invoicing, payment process
- Onboarding materials, documentation
3. Touchpoints in the customer journey
Touchpoints are distributed across the entire customer journey:
Pre-purchase (before the purchase)
Google search → glossary entry → whitepaper download → LinkedIn profile → webinar → initial call. This phase is about attention, building trust, and lead generation. The sales funnel structures these touchpoints.
Purchase (during the purchase)
Proposal presentation → negotiation → contract draft → signature. What matters here is professionalism, speed, and a clear value proposition.
Post-purchase (after the purchase)
Onboarding → project delivery → business reviews → NPS survey → upselling conversation → recommendation. Customer success manages the post-purchase touchpoints and directly influences retention.
4. Optimizing touchpoints
- Consistency: Every touchpoint must deliver the same brand quality. A perfect website is of no use if the proposal arrives as a Word document.
- Relevance: Every touchpoint must provide value—not only for the company, but for the customer. Avoid empty follow-up emails and generic newsletters.
- Seamlessness: The transition between touchpoints must be smooth. If a customer moves from the website to the initial call, the consultant should know the background.
- Emotion: Positive emotional moments—an unexpected onboarding gift, a personal thank-you note—stay in people’s minds and set you apart.
- Measurement: Measure the quality of each touchpoint using KPIs (NPS after specific interactions, conversion rate per touchpoint).
5. Practical perspective: Touchpoints in SMEs
In SMEs, there is often a discrepancy: personal touchpoints (consulting, workshop) are excellent, but digital touchpoints (website, email, social media) lag behind.
Typical touchpoint map for an innovation consulting firm:
- Decision-makers Google “Business Model Innovation” and find a glossary entry (SEO touchpoint)
- Reads additional glossary entries → builds trust (content touchpoint)
- Sees the founder’s LinkedIn post → follows the profile (social touchpoint)
- Downloads whitepaper → becomes a lead (conversion touchpoint)
- Receives an email sequence with practical examples (automation touchpoint)
- Books an initial call → personal consulting (sales touchpoint)
- Receives a tailored proposal (proposal touchpoint)
- Workshop delivery → wow experience (delivery touchpoint)
- Follow-up with results documentation (success touchpoint)
- Recommendation to business partners (advocacy touchpoint)
6. Step-by-step: Touchpoint mapping
- List all touchpoints: Brainstorm with your team: Where does a customer come into contact with us? Digital, personal, administrative.
- Assign to the customer journey: Assign each touchpoint to the phase: pre-purchase, purchase, post-purchase.
- Adopt the customer perspective: Evaluate each touchpoint from the customer’s point of view: What does the customer expect? Is it met or exceeded?
- Identify weak points: Where are there breaks, inconsistencies, or disappointing experiences?
- Prioritize and optimize: Start with the touchpoints that have the greatest impact on conversion and retention.
- Review regularly: Touchpoints change—new channels are added (LLMO), others lose relevance.
Bring all touchpoints up to excellence?
We help you map your customer journey, identify critical touchpoints, and create a consistent customer experience across all channels.
