Install
openclaw skills install cb-customer-journey-mapperMap complete customer journeys for any overseas market — with localized touchpoints, cultural buying triggers, and conversion barriers. Output a visual-ready journey map, not just theory — complete with pain points, opportunities, and channel recommendations.
openclaw skills install cb-customer-journey-mapperThis skill provides a structured method for mapping the end-to-end customer journey for overseas customers, from initial awareness through purchase, onboarding, retention, and advocacy. It recognizes that trust dynamics, channel preferences, and the role of social proof shift significantly across cultures and markets. The framework guides you through mapping each stage of the journey in the target market, auditing local channel touchpoints, diagnosing trust barriers and friction points, aligning messages and proof points to local expectations, designing a retention and advocacy loop, and building a stage-by-stage measurement plan.
The framework is designed for product, marketing, customer experience, and growth teams building international customer funnels.
Try these real-world scenarios to see what this skill can produce:
Prompt 1: Ecommerce Journey Map
"Map the customer journey for a Japanese consumer buying premium tea from our UK-based online store. From first awareness (Instagram/Pinterest discovery) through purchase, delivery, and repurchase. Include cultural-specific touchpoints: omotenashi expectations, gift-packaging norms, and the Japanese review culture." → Output: 7-stage journey map (Awareness → Consideration → Purchase → Payment → Delivery → Unboxing → Post-Purchase), touchpoint inventory per stage with channel (Instagram, Rakuten comparison, LINE messaging), cultural annotations (gift-wrapping expectation, review thoroughness norm, trust-badge hierarchy for JP), pain points (shipping time anxiety, English-only checkout friction, payment method gaps), opportunity map (LINE integration, Rakuten Ichiba presence, Japanese-language review nudges), KPI recommendations per stage
Prompt 2: B2B SaaS Onboarding Journey
"Our project management SaaS has great conversion in North America but terrible onboarding completion in Germany. German users seem to want more documentation before trying features, and they drop off at the 'invite team members' step. Map the German-user onboarding journey and redesign it." → Output: Current-state journey map (signup → first project → invite team → first collaboration → paid conversion), German-user behavior overlay (documentation-first pattern, privacy concerns at invite step, group-decision pattern), drop-off analysis per step with data, redesigned journey (add self-service documentation hub before feature tour, replace 'invite team' with 'share workspace link,' add DSGVO compliance reassurance), A/B test plan for redesigned flow
Prompt 3: Cross-Border B2C Marketplace Journey
"We run a cross-border marketplace connecting Southeast Asian artisans with US/EU buyers. Map the buyer journey for US customers, then for German customers. Highlight where the journeys diverge and what we need to localize." → Output: Dual journey map (US vs DE), parallel-stage comparison, divergence points (payment preferences: credit card vs SOFORT/PayPal; trust signals: social proof vs certifications; delivery expectations: speed vs reliability; return behavior: infrequent vs common), localization action plan (14 specific changes), impact-priority matrix
👋 cb-customer-journey-mapper installed!
I map every step your overseas customers take — from discovery to repurchase — with cultural nuances built in.
Start mapping:
"Map the customer journey for [product] in [market]. Our typical customer discovers us through [channel] and buys because [reason]."
Give me your market and product, and I'll map the full journey with pain points and opportunities.
Customer journey maps are planning and diagnostic tools, not confirmed representations of how real customers behave. They are hypotheses that must be validated through customer research, analytics data, and continuous iteration. Journey maps built from desk research or assumptions about a market are especially prone to error; validate critical assumptions before investing significantly in journey redesigns based on them.