How do emotions in the customer journey affect your NPS score?

Emotions throughout the customer journey have a direct and measurable impact on your NPS score. Customers who experience positive emotions during touchpoints are significantly more likely to recommend your organization. Negative emotions, such as frustration or disappointment, cause customers to drop off or actively spread negative word-of-mouth. In this article, we answer the most frequently asked questions about the relationship between emotion and customer recommendations, so you can focus on improving the customer experience.

Which emotions are most common throughout the customer journey?

The most common emotions in the customer journey are frustration, relief, trust, disappointment, and surprise. Frustration often arises from long wait times or unclear information. Relief and trust follow when a problem is resolved quickly and effectively. Surprise—whether positive or negative—has a disproportionately large impact on how customers rate the overall experience.

What stands out is that negative emotions linger much longer than positive ones. A customer who becomes frustrated by poor IVR routing will remember that feeling long after the problem has been resolved. Positive emotions, such as the feeling of having truly been helped, slowly build trust, but are more vulnerable to a single bad experience.

In practice, organizations with frequent customer contact find that frustration is by far the most commonly cited emotion. This is directly related to fragmented systems, employees who transfer calls, or customers who have to repeat their story multiple times. Recognizing these emotional patterns is the first step in effective customer journey mapping.

How exactly do negative emotions affect the NPS score?

Negative emotions lower the NPS score in two ways: they reduce the number of promoters and increase the number of detractors. Customers who experience frustration or disappointment are more likely to give a score of 0 to 6 and are also more active in sharing that negative experience with others. A single strongly negative touchpoint can undo multiple positive experiences.

This principle is also known as the negativity bias in customer experience. Research in the field of customer experience consistently shows that negative experiences carry two to three times more weight in a customer’s overall assessment than comparable positive experiences. For organizations with a high volume of customer contact, this means that even a small percentage of frustrated customers can put significant pressure on the NPS score.

To put it simply: a customer who has to repeat his story twice because he was transferred perceives this as a sign that the organization does not respect his time. That feeling directly translates into a lower recommendation score, even if the problem was ultimately resolved.

What is the difference between functional and emotional customer satisfaction?

Functional customer satisfaction measures whether a customer has achieved their goal, such as having a question answered or seeing a problem resolved. Emotional customer satisfaction measures how the customer felt during that process. Both are important, but emotional satisfaction has a greater impact on loyalty and word-of-mouth behavior than purely functional satisfaction.

A customer may be functionally satisfied—after all, their problem has been resolved—but still give a low NPS score because the interaction felt unpleasant, cumbersome, or impersonal. Conversely, a customer might be emotionally and positively surprised by a friendly employee, even if the final solution wasn’t perfect.

For organizations working on customer journey mapping, this distinction is crucial. You can optimize processes for efficiency, but if the emotional experience lags behind, your NPS won’t improve accordingly. It’s the combination of a functional solution and positive emotion that creates promoters.

How do you measure emotions in the customer journey besides NPS?

In addition to NPS, you can measure emotions throughout the customer journey using the Customer Effort Score (CES), sentiment analysis of calls and chats, post-contact surveys with open-ended questions, and speech analysis of inbound phone calls. Each of these methods reveals a different layer of the emotional experience that the NPS score alone does not capture.

Quantitative Methods

CES measures how much effort a customer had to expend to achieve their goal. A high level of effort correlates strongly with negative emotions and a lower NPS. CSAT scores by touchpoint provide insight into which specific step in the customer journey is the most emotionally taxing.

Qualitative Methods

Sentiment analysis of text and speech makes it possible to identify patterns on a large scale in how customers talk about their experiences. Open-ended questions in surveys, such as “What could have been different?”, provide rich qualitative insights that you would miss with purely quantitative data. Combine both to get a complete picture of the emotional customer journey.

Which touchpoints have the greatest impact on NPS?

The touchpoints that have the greatest impact on NPS are the first contact (the first impression), the moment a problem is resolved, and the final touchpoint (the conclusion). Customers remember an experience most vividly based on its peak and its conclusion—a principle also known as the peak-end effect.

In practice, this means that a long wait time during the initial contact, a confusing IVR menu, or an agent who cannot help immediately can have a disproportionately negative impact on the overall experience. Conversely, a warm, proactive way to end a conversation can leave a positive impression of the entire interaction.

For organizations with omnichannel customer interactions, channel transitions—the moment a customer switches from chat to phone or from email to a representative—are also emotionally risky moments. If the context isn’t taken into account, the customer feels misunderstood, and the NPS drops immediately.

How can you improve the emotional customer experience to increase NPS?

You can improve the emotional customer experience by simplifying touchpoints, maintaining context during channel transitions, supporting employees with the right information, and communicating proactively before customers reach out. Every step that reduces effort or repetition lowers negative emotions and increases the likelihood of a higher NPS score.

Specifically, these are the most effective improvements:

  • Ensure that customers only have to tell their story once by making their customer history available on every channel
  • Reduce wait times through smart routing that directs customers directly to the right employee or department
  • Offer self-service options outside of business hours so that customers don’t get frustrated and give up
  • Train employees not only on the subject matter, but also on how to communicate empathetically in stressful customer situations
  • Use data from all channels to understand why customers reach out and address the underlying cause

Customer journey mapping plays a key role in this. By visually mapping out the entire customer journey—including the emotions customers experience at each stage—you can prioritize which touchpoints will yield the greatest improvement in your NPS.

How Pegamento Helps Improve the Emotional Customer Experience and NPS

At Pegamento, we understand that a higher NPS starts with eliminating frustration in the customer journey. Our contact center technology brings all channels together into a single, easy-to-use platform, so agents always have the right context and customers never have to repeat their story. Here’s how we help organizations:

  • Omnichannel integration: phone, chat, WhatsApp, and email all on one platform, without silos or separate vendors
  • Smart routing: Customers are directed straight to the right employee or department, without unnecessary transfers
  • Real-time insights: dashboards that show why customers reach out, through which channels, and with what results
  • Self-service options: Agentic AI assistants that handle simple inquiries outside of business hours, allowing employees to focus on complex cases
  • Everything under one roof: from implementation to management and support—a single point of contact for the complete package

No costly custom development—just a smart combination of proven modules that integrate seamlessly with your organization and customer processes. Want to know what your customer journey looks like and where the biggest opportunities for emotional improvement lie? Get in touch, and we’d be happy to brainstorm with you.

Frequently Asked Questions

How quickly will you see results in your NPS score after improving the emotional customer experience?

The speed of improvement depends on which touchpoints you address. Technical improvements, such as smart routing or making customer history available, can have a noticeable effect on your NPS within a few weeks, as frustration decreases immediately. Structural improvements, such as employee training or redesigning the entire customer journey, take more time but yield more sustainable results. Measure progress along the way using CES and post-contact surveys to track improvements at each touchpoint.

What are the most common mistakes made when improving the emotional customer experience?

The most common mistake is focusing exclusively on functional improvements, such as faster turnaround times or more efficient processes, without paying attention to how the customer feels during the interaction. A second common mistake is measuring customer satisfaction solely through the final assessment, even though it is precisely the intermediate touchpoints that have the greatest emotional impact. Finally, organizations regularly underestimate the effect of channel transitions: the moment a customer switches from one channel to another without the context being carried over is one of the biggest sources of frustration and a drop in NPS.

How do you involve employees in improving the emotional customer experience?

Frontline employees are the first to pick up on customers’ emotional cues every day, making their input indispensable. Actively involve them by regularly asking which situations frustrate customers the most and what tools or information they lack to better assist customers. Share NPS results and customer feedback with the front-line staff so that employees see the direct link between their approach and the recommendation score. This not only boosts engagement but also yields practical ideas for improvement that are easy to overlook from a management perspective.

Does the peak-end effect also apply when a customer has multiple touchpoints over a longer period?

Yes, the peak-end effect applies both within a single interaction and across a longer series of contact moments. For customers who reach out multiple times about the same issue, the overall experience is strongly influenced by the most emotionally charged moment and the very last contact. This makes the conclusion of a long-running customer inquiry especially important: a warm, proactive conclusion that gives the customer the feeling that their problem has truly been resolved can partially offset a series of difficult interactions. Conversely, a poor conclusion can still cast a negative light on an experience that had been positive up to that point.

How do you get started with customer journey mapping if your organization has no experience with it yet?

Start small and practical: choose one customer segment or one common customer scenario, such as a complaint or a product inquiry, and visually map out all the steps the customer goes through. For each step, note the emotions customers are likely to experience and where the biggest friction points lie, based on existing customer feedback, CES scores, or conversations with employees. You don’t need an expensive external agency to get started; a focused workshop with employees from customer-facing roles, operations, and IT will already yield valuable insights. Then gradually scale up to other customer segments and channels.

What is the difference between measuring NPS at the transactional level and at the relationship level, and which is best suited for emotional insights?

Transactional NPS measures willingness to recommend immediately after a specific touchpoint, while relational NPS gauges a customer’s overall loyalty at a given point in time. Transactional NPS is best suited for mapping emotional impact per touchpoint, as it allows you to precisely trace which interaction led to which emotion and score. Relational NPS provides a broader picture of how customers view the organization as a whole, but is less suitable for identifying specific pain points in the customer journey. Ideally, a combination of both is used: transactional NPS for operational guidance and relational NPS for strategic insight.

How do you handle customers who, despite a positive emotional experience, still give a low NPS score?

This phenomenon occurs more often than expected and usually has two causes: the customer may be positive about the interaction itself but negative about a broader factor such as price, the product, or a previous disappointment. A second cause is that the customer interprets the recommendation question differently than intended—for example, as a judgment of the organization as a whole rather than of the recent interaction. Use open-ended follow-up questions in your survey to determine the actual reason behind the score. This way, you’ll avoid focusing your improvement efforts on the wrong touchpoints and gain a more nuanced understanding of what truly drives loyalty among your customers.

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