There are few things that tell you more about the overall health of your app than a good, hard look at user engagement. While acquisition and activation data give you important insights into the early stages of your user experience, user engagement gives you a look at the relationship over the long term. And for SaaS, long-term relationships are what it’s all about.

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The tricky thing about user engagement is that it’s a little different for everyone. There is no silver bullet. The good news is that once you’ve accurately defined what engagement means for your product, there are a lot of ways you can influence it to build a stronger relationship with your users.

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In this comprehensive guide to all things user engagement, we clear up some misconceptions about what user engagement is and isn’t, explain why it’s so crucial to SaaS success, cover the 7 key user engagement metrics (and the 4 biggest measurement mistakes), talk analytics, and walk through our 12 favorite best practices for improving user engagement.

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Let’s get started!



What is user engagement? User engagement is the lifeblood of your SaaS company. It is literally the thing that keeps your business viable in both the short and long term.

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Put simply, engagement happens when a user is realizing value through an interaction with your product or brand.

Exactly what this looks like varies from category to category and from app to app. There is no single universal metric or benchmark that everyone can use to measure their user engagement. It’s all about understanding how your specific app creates value for your unique users at any given time in their user journey. (Pro Tip: How a user derives value from your app will change over the user/customer lifetime, so creating engagement is never a once-and-done kind of thing.)



However, no matter what kind of app you offer, who your users are, or where they are in the user journey, 2 things are always true:

• Engagement involves users taking meaningful actions in your product, again and again.

• Highly engaged users are your most profitable users.

The goal of user engagement—which is typically measured in terms of the frequency and intensity of specific activity and interactions—is to make your product invaluable to your users.

What is an engaged user? All engaged users share some common attributes. Studies have shown that there are 4 distinct stages of engagement:

1. Point of engagement—When the user invests in the interaction

2. Engagement—When the user is actively engaged in completing actions or tasks

3. Disengagement—When the user stops activity

4. Re-engagement—When the user returns to the activity

Image adapted from L. O’Brien and Elaine G. Toms.

These 4 stages make up a kind of engagement lifecycle—one that a user can go through multiple times in the course of a single session or over the long-term relationship with a product. In general, strong engagement requires that an app maintains a user’s attention and interest. (Which brings us back to the idea of delivering value. When you deliver tangible value, users become and remain interested.)



Interestingly, disengagement can be either positive or negative. While a user might disengage because they are bored or frustrated, they might also disengage temporarily because they successfully met their objective. In either case, the goal at this point is to inspire reengagement via timely and relevant communication such as in-app messaging, push notifications, and email.



An important takeaway: Engagement is not an on/off switch. It exists on a continuum from completely disengaged to highly engaged (a power user). Maintaining and increasing engagement, therefore, requires an equally expansive and flexible strategy that addresses all the shades of gray in between.

What is the difference between user and customer engagement? Many people use the terms “user engagement” and “customer engagement” interchangeably, but there are some important distinctions to make.

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Companies using the term “customer engagement” typically embrace a high-touch relationship model. “User engagement,” on the other hand, is most often used by organizations leveraging a low-touch relationship model. Teams focused on customer engagement may invest more in in-person product training, for example, whereas teams focused on user engagement may invest more in their in-product onboarding experience.

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The difference between a high-touch and low-touch relationship model can be defined by the one-to-one vs. one-to-many approach of customer interaction.

Customer engagement

• Low-touch relationship model

• Greater contract value per account

• Product is more complex

• Pay up-front to use the product

User engagement

• High-touch relationship model

• Lower contract value per account

• Product is less complex

• Free-to-paid usage of product

When you really think about it, users and customers have completely different contexts, motivations, and abilities. Users don’t really have the time or patience to consume everything about your product. They want gratification without having to work too hard. Customers, on the other hand, have made an investment in your product, so they are more motivated to take full advantage of your product’s capabilities. They’ll give you more of their time and attention, but they will expect more in return, too.



When you have both users and customers, it’s important to avoid mixing your messages. Remember the differences between them, and craft your conversations accordingly. Ultimately, engagement helps you deepen your relationship with users so they eventually become customers.



Why is user engagement so important? TL; dr: No engagement = no customers = no revenue = no business.



Active and engaged users are the foundation of every successful SaaS company—without a steady stream of users regularly using your product, you don't really have a viable SaaS business. And you certainly won't achieve product-led growth.



That's because the SaaS model only works if your customers keep paying month-over-month. Even the healthiest SaaS companies can take upwards of 5 to 7 months to start generating positive revenue.



Without engagement, you get the familiar, tragic story of quick initial growth followed by a drop in signups, churn, and increasingly difficult acquisition. The reason so many companies end up riding this kind of shark-fin curve is that they aren't looking at the numbers that really matter.



The hard truth is that an awful lot of people who sign up for a free trial will only use a product once before abandoning it. Signups on their own can be a vanity metric that gives you a good feeling, but doesn't necessarily signify success in generating loyal customers. In order to grow, teams have to not only acquire new signups, they also need to engage them so they become avid users and, eventually, paying customers.



It really is that simple. When your users are more engaged, they are more likely to keep using your product. They are also more likely to level-up to a paid product and promote your product to their friends and colleagues. All of these factors contribute directly to your overall profitability.



How and why do you measure user engagement? As Peter Drucker famously said, “If you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it.” So, to improve user engagement, you’re going to need to get a really good handle on what’s working and what’s not.

The why Tracking how many users remain truly engaged with your product is a great indicator of overall product health, and any changes in this metric can be a leading indicator of potential problems down the road.



In the simplest terms, the engagement rate represents the percentage of users who remain active within your product over a defined period of time.

Looking at your overall engagement rate gives you high-level insight into 2 key areas: churn and retention. Churn and retention are effectively 2 sides of the same coin. Obviously, for growth, you want less churn and more retention. It’s helpful, however, to measure and analyze both.



If your engagement rate is dropping/churn is going up, that’s a valuable early warning that something is wrong. It’s an opportunity to identify exactly where your product is falling short so that you can create a better user experience and reverse that trend before it takes you down.



If your engagement and retention rates are going up, you know you’ve found your secret sauce. You’re successfully delivering the value that users want. Keep doing what you’re doing, but don’t stop searching out new opportunities to drive even more engagement.



By digging a little deeper, you can measure and analyze a whole range of specific behaviors to gain insights that can help you with things like:

• Prioritizing and targeting your sales efforts

• Optimizing your customer success efforts

• Refining your product messaging

• Identifying potential user advocates

• Forecasting your business

Quick tip: Measurement is different for every app

The first step in a successful metrics strategy is knowing what to measure. The metrics that matter most change depending on the type of product. Some examples:

• Media site: News outlets and blogs often depend on ad or affiliate revenue, so these types of sites are most concerned with daily usage, time on site/page, clicks, comments, and shares.

• Ecommerce app: An online retail outlet will be most interested in metrics that reflect buyer intent and conversion, so they focus on things like visit frequency, site usability, adding items to cart, cart abandonment, and product reviews.

• B2B software: Work-related apps need to help users do their jobs, so they tend to pay attention to overall usage (daily, weekly, or monthly) as well as app-specific tasks and activities. They are also interested in new user invites, since that’s an indicator of growth within an organization.

Apps—enterprise or otherwise—usually focus on app launches, time spent, and the quantity and specific type of actions completed.

4 common engagement measurement mistakes

Before we get into the nuts and bolts of what to measure and how to measure it—a word of caution on a few common mistakes.

1. Failing to drill down to the actionable metrics

Measuring your top-line user engagement number gives you a big-picture sense of what’s going on. But, if you stop there, you’re missing out on a lot of important context. Knowing that engagement is up or down is good; knowing why it’s up or down is money in the bank.



When you get down to the nitty-gritty details, you uncover opportunities to take action that makes a difference.

2. Focusing too much on PR-ready “overall” numbers

Vanity metrics are so tempting. They look so good on paper. You’ll get a better grasp on reality, however, if you break things down to the user level. Instead of looking at 576,231 overall interactions per week, look at how many interactions that averages out to per user.



Engagement happens at the individual user level. It’s more useful to look at your metrics that way, too.

3. Taking an everything-plus-the-kitchen-sink approach

More is not necessarily better, even when it comes to data. If you measure every feature, behavior, and interaction, you will soon be drowning in so much information that you won’t be able to see straight.



The secret to successful engagement measuring is doing the up-front work of determining what really matters most—which metrics reflect your app’s true core value. Figure out what those key indicators are, and then stay focused on those.

4. Assuming engagement is totally different for enterprise apps

Some people assume that business apps don’t need to be as polished as consumer apps. People fall into the old paradigm of thinking that work technology doesn’t need to be sexy. But in today’s market, even the most utilitarian piece of software needs to offer a great user experience. The truth is that even if use of a business app is mandatory, employees will find workarounds to avoid a poor experience. Also, the buying process (even in enterprise organizations) has shifted from being top-down to bottom-up. So, if users aren’t happy with an app, they can influence a switch.



👉 Bottom line: Measuring how user experience affects engagement is a very worthwhile pursuit.

What to measure

For better or worse, there are a lot of ways to measure engagement, and which ones will give you the most valuable insights depends on the unique nature of your app and your users. In general, you want to choose the metrics that are most closely related to your app’s core value.

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To find the right user engagement metrics for your product, you need to ask yourself the right questions.

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Who are my power users, and what attributes do they share? Which features do customers use the most/least? What percentage of users are successfully completing key actions?

Then think about what you have to measure to get the answers to those questions.

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While there are an almost infinite number of things to measure, there are 7 metrics that everyone should track.

Retention/churn

Retention and churn are 2 sides of the same coin. They both help you keep tabs on the overall health of your app’s user base. To make these metrics more actionable, you can segment your retention/churn rates based on how long someone has been using your app. By looking at retention after the first day, the first week, the first month, and so on, you can identify specific drop-off points. Knowing where and when people are hitting the road allows you to address those points directly through a better user experience, in-app messaging, and other methods.



It can be particularly helpful to look closely at week 1 engagement since that is a direct reflection of whether your onboarding process is doing its job. That initial week is crucial. If a user isn’t diving in during that honeymoon phase, there’s a pretty good chance the long-term relationship is doomed.

User activity (DAU, WAU, MAU)

Aggregate user engagement is typically measured by day, month, or year:

• Daily Active Users (DAU)

• Weekly Active Users (WAU)

• Monthly Active Users (MAU)

How helpful these metrics are depends on how you define “active user.” A log in, for example, does not an engaged user make (at least not usually). What does a user need to do to be considered active in your app? Do they need to use a specific tool, perform a specific task, or visit a specific page?



The other thing to keep in mind about these measurements is that they don’t tell you anything about who those users are. And without knowing who they are, it’s challenging to know a) if you’re reaching the right people, and b) where you might have opportunities to improve your marketing message or user experience.



Creating user profiles in your analytics tools helps you drill down on more specific user needs, which helps you deliver more value, which increases engagement.

Stickiness

Stickiness is an indicator of long-term retention. The stickier your app is, the more frequently a user comes back to your app. The more frequently a user comes back to your app, the more likely they are to evolve from being a monthly active user to being a daily active user.



One way to calculate stickiness is:

(Daily Active Users/Monthly Active Users) x 100

You want the resulting percentage to be as close to 100 as possible.



Another way to calculate stickiness is to find the average between your user retention and engagement rates:

(Retention rate + engagement tate) / 2

When measured this way, the average app stickiness rate across industries hovers around 20 to 25%.

Time in-app

This one can be a little tricky. You have to look at this number in context, because the optimal time for users to stay in your app depends entirely upon how your app is designed to be used.



More time spent is not necessarily better. In fact, in some cases, longer in-app times can indicate a poor user experience that’s slowing users down or even keeping them from reaching their objectives at all. In such cases, a little extra hand holding might be in order via more thorough onboarding, in-app messaging, or training.



To give yourself a frame of reference, it’s helpful to establish a benchmark by calculating the average amount of time a user spends in your app. That way, it’s easier to spot outliers that might indicate problems.

Feature usage

Tracking engagement by feature helps you understand what your users value (and what they could do without). This is a metric that can really help shape your app by providing real-world insight into where you should invest the most development effort.



The best approach here is to start with a handful of key features, calculate engagement with each, and then compare those numbers to the overall engagement rate for your app. You may be surprised at which features are actually bringing people back again and again.



👉 Pro tip: Segment feature usage by user type. This can provide additional valuable insights into how specific user groups are using your app. It can also help you avoid a misstep such as eliminating a feature that had low overall engagement only to find out that it was something your most profitable customers loved.

Net promoter score (NPS)

Net Promoter Score (NPS) is one of the most helpful tools available for measuring customer satisfaction and collecting feedback.



NPS is sometimes criticized as an oversimplification of user sentiment—but when combined with smart product analytics, segmentation, and targeting, it can be a powerful tool for identifying your champion users or, on the flip side, accounts at risk of churn. Used correctly, the Net Promoter Score also provides valuable insights that can be leveraged to make impactful product decisions.



NPS is a very specific kind of survey consisting of a single question asking customers how likely they are to recommend a brand, product, or service. Based on the responses, customers are split into 3 groups: detractors, passives, and promoters. The formula looks like this:

NPS is simple to calculate, provides both qualitative and quantitative feedback, and is quick and easy for users to answer. The keys to making the most of NPS are to:

• Allow users to share additional details about their score.

• Target the right users (folks who have been using your product for a significant amount of time).

• Ask in a moment when customers are actively engaged with your app.

Feedback response rates

Your feedback response rate is an indication of how invested users are in your app. If you’ve earned a high feedback response rate, that’s proof that your users care enough about your app to tell you what they think.



Their willingness to take the time to share their experiences and insights is a tip off that they’re in this for the long haul.



You can help increase feedback response rates by delivering surveys directly in your app, rather than via an email or other channel. In-app surveys can be triggered based on a specific action, which increases their relevance to the user and improves chances of a response.

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Analytics tools

Knowing something is good. Understanding something is better. Analytics tools help you get to the bottom of why certain engagement metrics are trending the way they are. They help you uncover the patterns and information you need to make more effective decisions about how to influence engagement in a positive way.



Affordable and out-of-the-box analytics tools—like Mixpanel, Amplitude, and Heap—have made it easy to measure product engagement by customer. With tools like these, you can gain deeper visibility into engagement with reports on metrics such as: which features are being used by which personas, which cohorts are likely to churn, and how far new users get before dropping off.

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You can also marry your quantitative data with qualitative analytics to create a flywheel of continuous product improvement. For instance, you might use a high-level view to focus attention on your biggest challenges and opportunities, and then "zoom in" to the user’s level through qualitative research by using tools like Fullstory to deepen your understanding of—and solve—the problem.

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The most important thing to remember is that analytics are a way of listening to your users. And listening to your users is more than just counting clicks. It’s about actually making sense of their behavior—which pages they visit, where they travel next, where their mouse hovers, and so on. Your users are constantly giving you feedback. You just need to learn how to decipher it.



12 best practices for improving user engagement Because user engagement is part of every touchpoint between a user and an app, there are many different ways to influence it.

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In this next section, we’ll take a look at 12 best practices for improving user engagement, regardless of your audience or product.

1. Build the right internal structure Better user engagement is a goal that must be supported across your entire organization—everyone has a role to play and a job to do. Since everyone has a hand in driving user engagement, it makes sense to empower everyone to work proactively toward improving it.

• Step 1: Break down the walls between product and marketing to create a cohesive, omnichannel experience that tells the same story across all channels.

• Step 2: Take an all-hands approach to customer support. Having all employees—from developers to product managers—spend some time on the front lines keeps your entire team in touch with the personalities, pains, and wishes of free trial users and paying customers.

• Step 3: Empower your teams to build great in-product experiences. Appcues makes it easy (like, really easy) for companies and non-technical team members to build, iterate on, and modify in-app experiences that improve user engagement.

2. Find out how users define your app’s value We mentioned this in the measurement section above, but it’s worth repeating: you need to know how your users derive value from your app. The value you deliver is the foundation of your entire user experience, relationship, and engagement.

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Actions speak louder than words. Don’t make assumptions based on what you think users should find valuable. Instead, pay attention to what users actually do in your app. Look for patterns in which features draw users in, which ones keep them coming back, and which ones they ignore.

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Once you understand where the value is for users, you can develop user paths and cycles to guide users to those features, identify places where users might need a little more nudging or handholding to improve the experience, and make informed decisions about your overall product roadmap.

3. Design an onboarding experience that sets users up for long-term engagement First impressions count. This is why onboarding is so crucial—it has a powerful ripple effect that expands across the entire customer journey. Your onboarding sequence is the first hands-on experience your users will have with your product. Think of it as the hook to long-term engagement.

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You should walk each new user through key features of your product, with the goal of helping them find your product's core value proposition—aka, reaching their aha moment—as quickly as possible.

4. Personalize the user experience There are 2 main types of personalization: dynamic content (like adding a user’s first name to their dashboard), and event-driven automation (like choose-your-own-adventure self-segmentation).

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We've called personalized onboarding "the best growth hack in the game."But, we encourage you to go beyond just the first name tag. The best apps use personalization to tailor user experiences to the specific needs of their users.

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Duolingo is frequently cited as an example of personalized onboarding for a reason—they do an excellent job of removing the friction of learning a new language by directing new users through personalized onboarding funnels that are tailored to different levels of experience, ultimately making the app a greater fit for a wider range of users.

5. Improve usability Usability is a key driver of positive user engagement, and users have pretty high standards. Their expectations have been raised by exposure to world-class experiences created by mega-brands. And they expect every app they use to rise to meet that bar.

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Improving usability starts with identifying trouble spots. The best user experiences remove friction to help users achieve their goals more quickly and with less effort. Analyze your user journey to uncover drop-off points, then see what you can do to help users move through and beyond any existing roadblocks.

6. Educate users the right way That shiny new feature you're adding might be incredibly useful—but only if users know it exists. Emails and blog posts are effective channels for announcing new product features, but to really guide your users to discover and adopt your new feature, you need to communicate with them within your app as well.

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But remember, if you haven't got anything engaging to say, don't say anything at all. Chores have no place in your app. Just because you can publish a tooltip tour in minutes doesn’t mean you always should. Make sure to step back from your product and put yourself in your users’ shoes. Take the time to understand your users and target your messaging only to the people who will find it useful.

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Striking the right balance has a lot to do with where the user is in their journey. New users might need (and expect) more communication as they get up and running. Users who have been around the block a few times might be annoyed by an excess of messages. And no user wants to be buried under an avalanche of information at any point. Expose users to new product features gradually and at points in the experience where they are most relevant.

7. Communicate with users Since engagement evolves over the user journey, an earnest attempt at improving it means boosting habitual product usage at every turn. A strong focus on communication and user engagement can help combat churn within your existing customer base, keeping your users up-to-date on product changes, and helping you identify issues before they become bigger problems.

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Another great communication tactic is to celebrate user success. When PMs think about user retention, they often think about the first few days or weeks after signup.

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But SaaS companies are under constant pressure to prove their value to users again and again. Every unengaged customer, regardless of how long they’ve been using your app, is in danger of churning. That’s why paying attention to late-stage retention is paramount. When the excitement of the new app has worn off, you have to concentrate on 3 things:

• Acknowledging small achievements

• Reminding users of your product's impact

• Deepening your relationship with your customers

All 3 of these can be accomplished by celebrating a user’s progress, effectively reminding them about the long-term value they have achieved and stand to achieve using your product.

8. Create stronger engagement loops with gamification Engagement loops are the things users do repeatedly when they are fully engaged with your app. Based on the game theory that makes video games and other systems so addictive, there are 4 main stages to an engagement loop: initial motivation, action, feedback and/or reward, and an emotional response.

Done well, gamification can be an effective way to keep your users engaged and make accomplishing necessary tasks more enjoyable. Done poorly, it becomes distracting and gimmicky.

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It’s important to avoid getting caught up in the novelty of gaming—don’t lose sight of the true purpose of your app. An engagement loop should support and enhance the user experience, not take it over entirely.



Figure out what matters to your users by asking questions or tracking data; then use gamification to enhance or improve the features and functions that your users care about.

• Identify the things within your product that correlate to user success—activation events, sticky features, etc.

• Segment users and track how each group uses the product to help you find and address their pain points.

• A/B test different elements to find the approach that appeals to the most users

9. Involve your power users You have a base of highly engaged users who want to align themselves with your company as product champions. These are some of the most mutually beneficial relationships a company can have. Nurture them and you’ll create a true win-win situation.

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Involving power users is especially helpful during product launches. Give your product champions a sneak peek at your new product and ask them to help you spread the word with tweets, quotes, or re-blogs when you go live.

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You can also engage your power users by asking them to participate in user tests. Get them involved early and incorporate feedback that you hear repeatedly. This is often done via a beta group, but you can also pull a few names out of a hat and spend a half hour on the phone watching them click around.

10. Automatically trigger emails based on in-app behavior User engagement happens outside your app, too. Setting certain events to trigger a timely email can be a great way to reinforce the guidance you're providing within the product through another channel, making it more likely that users will take action.

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Some examples of behavioral emails that you can send:

• Activation/sign-up emails. Welcome emails have some of the highest activation rates of any type email—they're the perfect opportunity for you to introduce your brand and to start building a personal connection with your users.

• One-off emails for specific events. You can set specific in-app events to trigger emails that offer more detailed explanations about certain features that the customer is already using—without interrupting their work in the moment.

• Educational drip sequences. Teaching your users about product features and benefits over time can nurture habitual use and help customers to get the most out of your product.

• Customer feedback surveys. Show your users you value their input, and collect valuable feedback through in-app surveys and feedback forms. Follow-up with users via email based on their response—like Appointlet did using the Appcues <> Zapier Integration.

11. Collect qualitative feedback to identify improvement opportunities Collecting qualitative data from live chat tools, user surveys, NPS scores, and session recordings can provide critical insights about how to better engage users within your product. Using session recording tools, product managers can observe exactly what their users are doing within the product: what they're clicking on (or not clicking on), where they're getting stuck, and so on.

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Customer surveys like CES, CSAT, and NPS can be great temperature gauges for understanding the happiness of your customers. And moving these questionnaires into your app allows you to target exactly the right person at the right moment in time.

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Try asking for feedback right after a user achieves a certain workflow, or target it to a specific persona. This sort of targeting and segmentation means you're not sending email blasts to the same people repeatedly. And because they’re more contextual, in-app customer surveys give you better insights into the when and why behind each response.

12. Ruthlessly cut the features users ignore Sometimes, knowing what users don't need is just as important as knowing what they do need. Rolling out too many features that don't add value creates product debt that can drag your core product down and lead users to believe you've lost focus on the critical features that they signed up for in the first place.

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Removing features is a hard decision, especially when you've put in significant time and development effort. But if your analytics data shows that customers simply aren't using that shiny new feature you rolled out last year, you have 2 choices: You can ask customers why they're not using it and devote more resources to improving the underused feature, or you can cut your losses and scrap the feature entirely.

