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Walking in Dads’ Shoes: How Journey Mapping Helps Programs Truly Serve Fathers

There are moments in every good fatherhood program when the paperwork has to step aside and let a man be seen. Intake forms can stack up while a father sits there with a story burning a hole in his pocket — why he’s late, who’s watching the kids, where the job went, what hope still flickers. 

When we miss that story, we often miss the man. “Journey mapping” is how we fix it.

A brief for fatherhood programs, developed by Fathers Incorporated (FI) through our work with the National Responsible Fatherhood Clearinghouse (NRFC), lays out a practical, human-centered way to redesign services from a father’s point of view. 

In plain terms, Adapting to Fathers’ Needs: Creating Change Using Insights from Customer Journey Mapping asks programs to walk through each step as a dad experiences it. It invites fatherhood program teams to review every touchpoint — from outreach to intake to workshops to follow-up — and name what feels welcoming, what trips fathers up, and what would keep them coming back. The brief translates empathy into operations, and it works.

What makes this tool powerful is the focus it teaches. Fatherhood programs carry real pressures — tight budgets, lean staff time, and complex community needs. Journey mapping concentrates program resources on moments that cause drop-off and adjustments that improve outcomes. 

When teams build a realistic “persona” (a composite dad drawn from data), document their current process, trace his emotional/ logistical journey, analyze the friction, and then test concrete fixes, they move from guessing to learning. (Recommendation: If your team is new to this concept, bring in a facilitator for the first attempt, so staff can fully immerse themselves in the fathers’ experiences.)

Crucially, journey mapping does not second-guess staff expertise — it complements it. Staff know the behind-the-scenes steps; fathers know what those steps feel like. Mapping marries both sources of knowledge and challenges assumptions with evidence: interviews and focus groups with current/past participants, program data, survey feedback, and online reviews. 

The journey mapping process reminds us that participants don’t see our internal logic; they see what happens to them. And sometimes what is routine to us reads as confusing, repetitive, or discouraging to the people we’re trying to serve.

The “Adapting to Fathers’ Needs” brief includes grounded examples of personas and solutions any program can borrow and adapt:

  • Meet “Ben,” a dad traveling 30–45 minutes without home internet, juggling work searches and parenting. Journey mapping shows he (and dads like him) fall off between intake and day one. Solutions? Fill in that space with outreach targeted to father “type,” showcasing tangible benefits (jobs alumni landed; parenting plans in use), and personalized reminders tied to his goals (“We’ll start on your custody questions Monday. Need a ride?”). First impressions matter, including who contacts the father, what they say, and whether the message sounds like help or a hoop.
  • Meet “Andy,” a noncustodial father who is frustrated by garnishments and conflict, frequently moves, and prefers virtual classes. He enrolled in the program then drifted. Journey mapping fixes here center on peer glue: assign a buddy at intake, build alumni mentor roles on social media where local dads gather, celebrate milestones with “mentor-in-training” badges (clear roles, rising responsibility), and add e-mentoring check-ins that fit busy schedules. Retention rises when relationships grow.
  • Meet “Alex,” a married father with one child at home and one he struggles to see,  who works in food service and battles substance use. Here, the mapping shifts case management to a coaching stance — goal-focused, growth-oriented — and pairs it with warm handoffs to community partners and simple, behavioral-science-informed prompts that help Alex navigate systems of support. The point isn’t more forms; it’s smoother paths and steady encouragement.

For FI, this journey-mapping brief is another mile marker in our 16-year commitment with the NRFC to build the field’s “treasure” of practical, evidence-informed tools — resources that researchers can study, practitioners can run tomorrow, and fathers can feel right away. 

We are proud that the work keeps widening the narrative: Responsible fatherhood isn’t a pep talk; it’s a set of intentional designs, habits, and supports that make it easier for men to show up well.

As you consider journey mapping in your own context, here are a few invitations:

  • Program leaders: Put a persona on the wall and walk the route. Where do dads stall? What’s your plan for that exact moment next quarter? Pilot one change per friction point and measure it. Build peer buddy systems. Personalize reminders. Budget for gas cards, childcare stipends, and Wi-Fi access.
  • Frontline staff: Your insight is the engine. Keep notes on the steps that constantly need extra explanation. Tell the mapping team where fathers smile, sigh, or go silent. Those cues are data.
  • Researchers and funders: Invest in continuous improvement, not just compliance. Journey mapping converts qualitative experience into testable changes. Support small, rapid pilots and share results across the network.
  • Fathers: Your voice isn’t an add-on; it’s the blueprint. When programs ask for feedback, be candid. If you’ve completed a program, consider mentoring the next dad through his first three weeks, when many journeys wobble.

Fatherhood programs are at their best when a man can say, “You saw me, and then you changed something because of what you saw.” That’s the promise of journey mapping: a disciplined way to keep fathers at the center, turn empathy into action, and make responsible fatherhood less about navigating obstacles and more about building momentum.

If you’re ready to start, gather your team, print the brief, and pick one persona to map this month. The road gets smoother when we walk it together. 

This FI/NRFC product was produced in partnership with MDRC, Clinton Key, and Dina Israel.