How SlicePay, a digital payment platform, uses Journeys to drastically reduce its sales conversion time by 64%

Kinjal Shah
3 min readApr 7, 2020

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This case study was originally published on the WebEngage platform.

Customer Profile

SlicePay is a digital payment platform for students to purchase products on credit without collateral. Using SlicePay college students can avail everyday products and services by making flexible monthly payments.

The Objective

Slicepay operates with a fairly straightforward process for lending money to students. The process begins with users signing up on the platform, followed by uploading required documents for verification purpose and selecting a preferred repayment plan. After completing these steps the user receives a credit limit using which she can shop the products of her liking online as well as offline.

Invariably, there’s drop-off at every stage of the funnel. Slicepay, while focusing on improving operational efficiency also aimed to optimize conversions at every stage of its conversion funnel. Overall, Slicepay was looking to improve their sales conversion rates.

The WebEngage Effect

To begin with speeding up the process time between step one and three and increase the overall conversions, SlicePay segmented users into two groups:
Segment #1. Signed up but didn’t apply (for credit limit).
Segment #2. Approved Credit but not transacted

They created separate workflows catering to these broad segments of users. The workflows automated the communication based on triggers, user actions, and conditions across the user lifecycle.

Here are the two Journeys exemplifying workflow execution:

Journey #1 — Signed-up but didn’t apply

Get a glimpse of Slicepay’s highly personalized and contextual push notifications here.

Journey #2 — Approved Credit but not transacted

Get a glimpse of Slicepay’s highly personalized and contextual SMS here.

The Result

By virtue of being highly relevant to users the personalized, triggered campaigns gave astounding results.

  • The ‘sales conversion time’ defined by the time between sign-up and first order came down from 72 hours to — a nifty — 26 hours.
  • A whopping 64% reduction.
  • Additionally, the monthly conversions (from sign-up to first order) increased by 58%.

Read the detailed case study right here!

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Kinjal Shah
Kinjal Shah

Written by Kinjal Shah

Content Marketer @ WebEngage. Logophile. Creative. Child at heart. Free spirit. Founder @ Smallogs.

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