Investing in "product delight" isn't a soft initiative; it has hard ROI. Studies show that emotionally connected users are twice as likely to stay with a product and twice as likely to buy more services. They are also 60% more likely to provide referrals, creating a powerful business case.
Delight isn't just for consumers. Technical B2B companies embed emotional goals into their product values. For instance, Snowflake aims to make users feel like a "superhero," highlighting the B2H (Business-to-Human) principle: end users, even in enterprise settings, have emotional needs.
The need for emotional connection isn't limited to consumer products. All software is used by humans whose expectations are set by the best B2C experiences. Even enterprise products must honor user emotions to succeed, a concept termed 'Business to Human'.
Investing in emotional connection has a quantifiable business impact. Research from firms like Deloitte and McKinsey shows emotionally connected users are twice as likely to have higher retention, referral rates, and lifetime value compared to users who are simply "highly satisfied."
Instead of pitching the abstract value of 'delight,' connect it to concrete business objectives. By asking a founder, 'Are users proud enough to recommend our product?' the focus shifted from a vague concept to a clear driver of word-of-mouth growth, making it easier to get buy-in.
True differentiation comes from "deep delight," where emotional needs are addressed within the core functional solution. This is distinct from "surface delight" like animations or confetti, which are nice but fail to build the strong emotional connections that drive loyalty.
While customer experience (CX) focuses on smooth transactions, customer intimacy builds deep, lasting loyalty by fostering closeness. This is achieved through empathetic actions in "moments that matter," creating powerful brand stories that resonate more than any marketing campaign.
Reframe your market from B2B or B2C to B2H (Business to Human). This change in perspective emphasizes that whether in consumer or enterprise settings, the end-user is a person with emotional needs. This mindset makes "product delight" relevant and essential for all products, not just consumer apps.
Delight goes beyond surface-level features. It's about creating products that solve practical problems while also addressing users' emotional states, like reducing stress or creating joy. This is achieved by removing friction, anticipating needs, and exceeding expectations.
To get buy-in from financial stakeholders, translate the 'soft' concept of brand love into hard metrics. Loved brands can command higher prices, maximize customer lifetime value, and reduce customer acquisition costs through organic advocacy, proving brand is a tangible asset.
To cut through the 'white noise' of feature-focused B2B marketing, Monday.com centers its strategy on an emotional differentiator: creating a product that people genuinely love to use. This insight, derived from customer testimonials, allows for a more resonant and memorable brand narrative that challenges industry norms.