Bridging the Gap Between Customer Expectation and Perception

Bridging the gap means actively aligning what a customer expects with what they actually feel after an interaction, turning potential disappointment into quiet satisfaction.

People often confuse expectation (hype they build) with perception (the aftertaste). A flashy ad sets sky-high hopes; a slow email reply shifts the mood, so the gap feels wider even if the product is fine.

Correct Spelling and Rules

The phrase is always spelled “bridging the gap,” never “bridgeing.” Use “bridging” as the continuous verb form and keep “gap” lowercase unless it starts a sentence.

Common Mistakes

Writers drop the second “g” in “bridging,” write “costumer” for “customer,” or swap “perception” with “perspective,” each slip quietly widening the very gap they’re discussing.

Is it ever “bridge the gap” without -ing?

Yes, as an imperative: “Let’s bridge the gap.” But when describing ongoing alignment, use “bridging.”

Can “gap” be plural?

Yes, you can bridge multiple gaps, but keep the verb form consistent: “bridging the gaps.”

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