Using Confluence to document and share customer interviews can help with every step of the process, including the most important, final step: using customer feedback to create brilliant products and features your customers will love.

If you’re currently putting your customer interview data in a Word doc, Evernote file, or ______ (fill in the blank) and sharing with your team via email, you’re in for a treat.

How to standardize your customer interviews by creating a page template

We have loads (technical term) of customer interviews documented on our internal Confluence instance, so we thought we’d share our best practices for creating an interview page template. Feel free to make modifications to better suit your process. Remember, Confluence is a canvas to design as you like.

Create your first customer interview page

Start off with the essentials. Design your page so you can add company and background information where it’s easily accessible. You’re providing context for your team, so include details about your relationship with the interviewee, the role of that person, and how the interview came to be. Also, make sure to add what product(s) they use.

The goal is to capture the critical details at the top of your page so anyone can quickly grasp who you interviewed, why, and what you talked about.

A design for your page might look something like this:
Customer interview page

The top section of this page is set up to capture the essential interview details we’ve talked about. It features a detailed title, and company and background sections.

To create a page with a similar design, try this:

  1. Use the Page layout button from the editor toolbar (see screenshot) to decide how you’d like your information displayed. Here a Two column section is selected which splits the page into two equal sections.
  2. Add page elements. Select Insert table from the toolbar to add a table like in the above company section and add as many columns and rows as you need.
  3. We’ve inserted a Table of Contents macro (select + button in toolbar > Other macros > Table of Contents macro). This macro creates a list of heading links for quick access to more detailed information. In this example, a list of headings for each problem observed.

This is what it looks like after you save the page:

Customer Interview page Confluence

Note the list of headings created by the macro. The information these heading links are pointing to is described in the next section.

Pro tip: The Table of Contents macro creates a list of headings (in this case, each problem title) that link to a specified section where the full details live. In this example, the headings appear where we inserted the macro in the top “Problems Observed” section and link to the detailed information about each problem in the next section. You can configure your Table of Contents macro to grab headings and create similar lists by selecting edit in the macro and completing the necessary fields. Learn more about the Table of Contents macro.

Now, create a section for the details of the problems collected from the customer. This is how you begin to turn interviews into insights. In our example, there’s a place to add use case details:

Customer interview page

And an area set up to capture the minute details of each problem:

Customer interview page

Note the Table of Contents macro used in the first section grabbed the headings “Design Capabilities” and “Problem 2 – Problem title,” which link users here where the full details of each problem are found.

To design the next section of your page like the above:

  1. Create a new section (select + Add section from toolbar, then choose Single column section). Our example starts of with use cases.
  2. Below that, in the same section, is “Problems observed.” To organize this information, we’ve inserted a Panel macro. (Select + from the toolbar > Other macros > Panel macro.)

For each problem, try this method:

  1. Write a one-line problem statement. Be concise and articulate the user’s intention but not their feature request.
  2. Note all observations that led you to confirm the problem. Be sure to include screenshots, recordings, or practical examples to provide additional context for your team.
  3. Add opportunities you have to solve the problem. Link to related epics, tasks, or feature requests in Jira (or whatever you use to manage your team’s backlog).
Pro tip: Add images to your customer interview pages. Company photos and product screenshots make your customer interview pages better, and adding them in Confluence is drag-and-drop easy. (Or select Insert files and images from the toolbar. Also easy!).

Create a customer interview page template

Once you’ve created a customer interview page you like, Confluence lets you “templatize” that page so you can use it again and again. Learn more about creating a template.

By standardizing your customer interviews with a page template, you’ll establish consistency for everyone who conducts customer interviews. The next steps involve organizing, centralizing, and sharing your customer interview information.

How to organize your customer interviews

Add labels to your customer interview page template

Labels make searching for customer interviews simple. At the top of the page where your title ends, select the label icon. Add a label like “customer-interview.” Boom! You’re done.

Add page labels

Choosing a standard label for every customer interview helps with organizing all your interviews.

Add additional labels

After you’ve added the “customer-interview” label to your page, you can add additional topic labels (product, use case, terminology) at any time. Labels are important in Confluence because they can be pulled into summary lists on an index page via macros. It’s a good idea to get in the habit of tagging up your interview pages using labels. This will give you several display options for your index page, like a list of all customer interviews or a list of popular topics.

How to centralize your customer interviews

Another great aspect of Confluence is not only keeping your information organized, but also centralized. Here are some suggested steps for centralizing your customer interviews in Confluence.

Create a customer interviews index page

It’s a good idea to create a customer interviews space and make the home page a customer interviews index page. An index page is great for keeping all your customer interview information in one place.

If your team is small, you may not need a dedicated space for customer interviews. But if you have multiple teams, it makes sense to create a customer interviews space and make the home page your customer interviews index page. Either way, an index page is great for keeping all your customer interview information in one place.

Tips for creating a space and an index page

Create your customer interview space

  • Select Spaces from the header > Create space > Blank space
  • Add Space name. Add a Space key, or Confluence will create one for you. After you select Create, your space home page looks like this:

Customer interviews index page

Important note: this is the home page. Complete the first task by creating an index page (details below), and the index page becomes the home page.

Create your customer interview index page

  • Select Edit from your customer interviews space home page (or from any page if not using a dedicated space)
  • Start creating your customer interviews index page!

Check out this example from our own Atlassian customer interviews index page, in edit mode:

Customer interviews index page

And here’s what it looks like when you save:

Customer interviews index page

As you can see, the most important information is front and center. You’ve come to this page for two reasons: you’re looking for a customer interview, or you’re interested in creating a new one. These two options are at the top of the page, above the fold.

Pro tip: Two macros are doing the heavy lifting in this example. Let’s take a quick look at each:

  1. Livesearch macro – lets you add a search box, which can be configured to best suit your needs for your index page. Find out more about the Livesearch macro.
  2. Create from Template macro – add a button on your index page that opens a page template (like your newly created customer interview page template) when clicked. Check out more about the Create from Template macro.

Your index page can also contain lots of other information that will be helpful to your users, and macros (yes, more macros!) can help you display it. Check out this example, in edit mode:

Customer interviews index page

And here’s what it looks like after you save:

Customer interviews index page

You can organize the information you need on your index page however you wish, but these design ideas should get you going in the right direction. Just remember, you have control of the parameters of these macros and you can create good looking pages and powerful reports. Happy creating!

How to share your customer interviews

The final step of your customer interview process is sharing the information. You can do this in two simple ways:

  1. Use the share button and send a customer interview to anyone on your team or in your organization
  2. Blog your product’s successes and “room for improvement”s with your organization
  • Example shared blog post: “Splunk uses Atlassian to run their entire business”

Splunk blog post

At a glance: what did you just learn?

Creating a customer interview page—and an index page to organize and centralize all your customer interviews—will help you to both communicate customer feedback to your team and organization and turn interview information into insights about your products. Remember to experiment with you pages to make them work best for your process.

Here’s a list of what we covered:

  • Page layouts: organize your page with different column layouts
  • Table of Contents macro: create a list of heading links for quick navigation.
  • Panel macro: helps organize information by creating a container.
  • Creating a template: pages used again and again can be turned into templates.
  • Adding labels: labeling pages does two things: organize information and help macros do their magic.
  • Creating a space: a dedicated customer interview space is a good idea for any team.
  • Creating an index page: make the home page of your space an index page for quick reference.
  • Livesearch macro: add search to help quickly locate customer interviews.
  • Create from Template macro: add a button to open a new page with the template you created from your page.
  • Labels List macro: create a quick reference list from the labels you attach to pages.
  • Content by Label macro: use this to create a list of all customer interviews.

This post is part of our latest collection, A Software Team’s Guide to Confluence. Click the lovely green button below to see the rest.

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Creating insightful customer interview pages using Confluence