Customer Happiness Blog

Guide to Keeping Your Customers: 24 Customer Retention Strategies

25 min read

Customer retention is the act of keeping customers engaged, creating customer advocates, and reducing churn before it happens.

Imagine you never acquired another customer. Your sales team went home, and all you had left was your current group of customers. You’d probably spend a lot more time trying to retain them, right? Every customer that cancelled or didn’t repurchase would have a big impact on your business. That’s where customer retention comes in.

The funny thing is, customers who churn have the same effect on your business even when you are still making sales. If your churn rate is 10%, you need to be acquiring even more customers to replace the ones that are leaving. It’s like trying to fill a bucket with holes in the bottom. Sure, you might be able to fill it, but it would sure be a lot easier if you didn’t lose so much water out the bottom!

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What is customer retention?

Patching the holes in your bucket is what customer retention is all about. Customer retention is the act of keeping customers engaged, creating customer advocates, and reducing churn before it happens.

Calculating Retention Rate

To calculate your current monthly retention rate, take the number of customers you have at the end of the month, subtract the number you’ve acquired during the month and divide that by the number of customers you had at the start of the month. This calculation will give you the percentage of customers you’ve retained for the month.

The higher the retention rate, the more customers you’re keeping around each month. As you increase your retention rate, the “bucket” gets less leaky and your total customer base grows much faster!

Why you should focus on Customer Retention

The benefits of strong customer retention are enormous. Keeping customers engaged and happy means you’ll see more referrals and fewer cancellations. Bain and Co suggests even a 5% increase in customer retention can increase a company’s profitability by 75%. Any investment in customer retention programs pays off in the form of higher revenue and reduced customer acquisition costs.

Great companies think long term when it comes to keeping customers around. SaaS and eCommerce have been around long enough that some companies now have customers for over a decade. Imagine signing up a customer 10 years ago and still being relevant and valuable to them today. The 10-year customer isn’t just a myth. By putting into place effective customer retention programs early, you can make sure customers would never think of walking out the door.

Really happy customers are the secret sauce to long term success. And we’re going to help you delight them.

How to use this resource

If you’ve been tasked with increasing customer retention, boosting customer engagement or lowering churn, this post should provide inspiration on how to get started. You might find you’re already trying some of these. That’s great! We’re hoping we can get your brain juices flowing to help you find your next strategy to improve even further.

Where possible we’ve provided examples and templates to make implementing these tactics quick and easy. Many tactics are backed up with research and studies that you can take to your boss if they need convincing.

I recommend saving your top ideas to a Trello board or project management software so that you can track progress on them. Many of these are also great projects to delegate to newer team members looking for their first project to dig into!

A focus on customer retention will pay off. On average, companies that operate with a focus on customer retention increase revenue by 80% in a 24 month period.

We’ve broken down the best customer retention ideas into 6 sections. Customer retention strategies need buy-in from every part of the business, and approaching the problem from multiple angles will drive even greater returns!

Improving Customer Retention

Understand what’s making customers leave

Perhaps the first place to start is to understand why customers aren’t sticking around. When do customers become disenfranchised? What’s driving them to look for other alternatives? Implement your choice of strategies below to get a peek into your customer’s brains.

Cancellation follow-ups

What happens after your customer cancels? If you let them go silently into the night, you’re missing out on a big opportunity for clear, unfiltered feedback. Customers who have already left don’t have any reason to hold back – they will tell you exactly what went wrong.

Groove started emailing customers who canceled with open-ended questions. By keeping it open-ended they got specific, actionable feedback that they didn’t expect. Customers shared bugs that Groove didn’t know about,  discussed UX hangups that Groove hadn’t caught, and divulged use cases that Groove hadn’t considered. They received a 20% response rate from these emails.

Baremetrics also automates a follow-up email to canceled accounts. Notice they don’t try to win customers back or make excuses. It’s just a simple request for information about what didn’t work for them.

Track the right metrics

Keeping a customer happy and loyal for the long term is a serious task that includes working on various processes such as monitoring and observations, the creation of accurate data collections, calculations based on processed information, and finally, constant improvements of strategies in different business aspects. 

To successfully deal with all these activities you are also going to need a reliable system of metrics for tracking customer retention.

Customer Churn Rate

Knowing your CCR will help you determine your customer lifetime value which can show you your business’ growth ability. Even though it may seem to you like something complicated, this rate is metric whose value grows every time a customer decides to bail on your business. Keeping this rate at the lowest level is something you should pay attention to if you want your business to grow.

The higher your CCR is, the lower are chances for your business to blossom since you’ll be experiencing huge customer retention costs. Having this in mind, it’s obvious that CCR tracking is one of the key activities for any serious business. Analyzing and lowering CCR means having a larger number of loyal customers, and therefore, a higher customer retention rate. The decrease in CCR can be provoked in numerous ways, such as by:

Repeat Purchase Metrics

If you want to take your CRR to a higher level, you should seriously focus on this set of metrics. According to a research of shopping habits performed by Bain & Co, an average shopper’s fifth purchase is 40% larger than their first purchase – and this speaks a lot about the importance of observing changes in three main purchase rates. These are:

  1. Repeat Purchase Rate
    Calculation: Number of customers who have shopped more than once/number of customers
  2. Purchase Frequency Rate
    Calculation: Number of orders/number of unique customers
  3. Repeat Purchase Probability Rate
    Calculation: (number of customers that purchased your product X how many times)/ total number of customers

All these metrics can be incredibly useful tools when realizing if you are bringing customers back to your store as much as you want. The most efficient yet relatively simple way of making these strongly related rates jump to a higher level is the personalization of your marketing efforts and strong incentives for repeated purchases. This means that your customers will be more likely to repeat a purchase more often, while also increasing the value of the purchase if you:

Finally, remember that 45% of online shoppers decide to repeat a purchase if a site offers personalized content.

Average Order Value

Apart from stimulating repeat purchases, if you want to run your business successfully, you shouldn’t overlook the amount of money spent by your customers in a single purchase. 

And this number is what Average Order Value represents.

The importance of knowing your AOV lies in the fact it helps you realize how worth your shoppers are. The more existing customers spend per transaction, the worthier they are, hence, you don’t have to put too much effort in engaging new customers. Accordingly, increasing AOV is a way more cost-efficient option than constant investments in the attraction of new customers.

The best way of increasing your AOV is to make sure your customers are aware of all the complementary products they can get when they purchase from you. You should make sure to let them know what product/service combinations can improve their experience with your product, while at the same time making sure you’re not too pushy in these cross-selling activities. You may want to:

Redemption Rate

Basically, this rate is supposed to show you how interested your customers are in your loyalty programs. While you may constantly provide them with loyalty discounts, vouchers, and other types of additional value, not all of them will show interest in these programs.

Accordingly, this rate can strongly impact your customer retention. The lower it is, the lower are the chances of repeat purchases and long-term customers. To avoid this type of problem and work on your customer retention from this point of view, make sure that you offer high-quality loyalty programs that will actually attract attention and motivate your customers for real.

Don’t waste your time or energy on programs that are not interesting to your target audience. Instead, expand the list of ways for customers to get rewarded.

Loyal Customer Rate 

Customer loyalty rate is calculated through Net Promoter Score (NPS) which is a key performance indicator introduced as a useful alternative to customer satisfaction survey. What’s more? It can predict and help to improve the business performance in the future, when seen in correlation with the organic growth of a company.

Now, a repeat customer isn’t necessarily a loyal customer, and that’s what you learn from this rate. Analyzing the calculated rate you’ll be able to realize how many of your repeat customers are actually absolutely loyal to your brand.

A loyal customer won’t only buy your products but also spread the word about them and help you acquire new ones. Consequently, the increase in LCR will undeniably positively impact your likeliness of customer retention, so make sure to work on it by:

Customer Lifetime Value 

Combining customer value (AOV multiplied by purchase frequency) with the store’s average lifespan (which represents the average time of customers’ activity before they drop off), CLV provides some important information. This rate lets you know:

Accordingly, the increase in CLV positively affects customer retention since it means that the frequency and value of purchases increase over time. If you want to improve customer retention from this aspect, some of the good ideas are:

Customer Retention Rate

To calculate your current monthly retention rate, take the number of customers you have at the end of the month, subtract the number you’ve acquired during the month and divide that by the number of customers you had at the start of the month. This calculation will give you the percentage of customers you’ve retained for the month. 

The higher the retention rate, the more customers you’re keeping around each month. As you increase your retention rate, the “bucket” gets less leaky and your total customer base grows much faster!

CRR is the ultimate rate that should be tracked constantly. It shows in a single number how all of the previously listed rates impact your customers’ retention. And NPS can help you achieve this objective without hindrance effectively.

This rate will show you how many customers choose to stay loyal to you in the long-term, so your work on improving customer retention rates will directly affect your customer retention. And if you’re asking yourself how you can increase this rate, you may want to think about:

Knowing what your customers are actually doing in-product can be a huge help in preventing churn and increasing usage. New technology improvements make digging through all this data much more reasonable too. AI and machine learning are becoming more common in customer experience software, which means every company has the tools they need to crunch the numbers and find insights into their usage data. 

As Blake Morgan reports in HBR, companies deploying AI-based software in customer experience are seeing promising results. 

“Sprint deployed predictive and self-learning analytics to identify customers at risk of churn and proactively provided personalized retention offers. As a result, Sprint reduced customer churn by 10% to historic lows, while also increasing its net promoter score by 40%, boosting customer upgrades by 8 times, convincing 40% more customers to add a new line, and improving overall customer service agent satisfaction.”

Analyze those cohorts

While knowing your churn rate is a good first step, you’ll want to see what types of customers are churning and when. The way to discover this is through cohort analysis. A cohort is a group of customers who have similar characteristics. In SaaS, the most common cohort analysis is done based on the time of signup.

Christopher Janz has created a spreadsheet template for companies to start tracking churn by cohort. You can get it here.

Step into your customer’s shoes

While numbers are great, sometimes you need to actually see what the customer sees. This is where FullStory comes in. By adding a small Javascript blurb to your site, you can actually replay user sessions to see exactly what the user sees. You can filter by customer type, email address, users who have experience errors, signed up recently and a whole host of other criteria.

Ben McCormack, Hugger at FullStory, talks about the value of seeing customer’s actions on customer retention.  

“When you can see exactly how a customer is engaged on your site, you get a much clearer picture of the value that they’re getting and where you may be falling short. This allows you to reach out to customers who may be having a poor experience and offer help specific to their needs. Equally important is that the information you gain from FullStory will help you to develop a better product, which is the highest leverage way to retain your customers. When you focus on the experience of actual humans, everyone wins.”

You might know that customers have trouble getting started, but until you actually sit down and watch it through their eyes, it’s hard to feel their pain.

Boost Engagement

Active, engaged users who are continually realizing value from your service don’t leave. Engaged customers are ones who interact with your company often – chatting on social, offering feedback, providing testimonials and referrals. Here are four strategies for boosting engagement with customers before they think about walking out the door.

Engage customers on social media

A recent study found that customers who have had social media interactions are less likely to churn. This was especially true in the case of “passive cancellations” where the customer simply drops off, rather than actively cancels their contract.

Interacting with customers on social can be as easy as searching for mentions of your brand and responding or giving them a like. We also love Buffer’s examples of companies going above and beyond with social media engagement.

We get the social media interactions started early by welcoming our new customers to Nicereply on Twitter.

1.2 billion people use Facebook to interact with brands. 37% of all tweets are customer service related. If you aren’t spending time talking to your customers on social, you can bet your competitors are!

Meet customers offline

Because most of us spend our days in front of the computer, there’s a real benefit to engaging your customers offline. Jason Lemkin, the founder of Echosign, has claimed never losing a customer he actually visited in person. While visiting every customer’s workplace might not be practical, anything you can do to make an offline connection helps forge a closer relationship with your customers.

For example, attend industry conferences. In 2016 we attended SupConf in New York City and were able to meet with several of our customers while learning more about our industry. Conferences are a great opportunity to meet several customers in one area.

@viktormagic great to meet you at #SUPCONF, you really are magic ?. Digging into to @nice_reply and would love to do an integration ?

— Tyler Wanlass (@twanlass) November 18, 2016

While you’re traveling in a new city, look up customers who have offices there and invite them for coffee or dinner. They will be so pleased to have your undivided attention, while you get to learn more about your customers.

Encourage User-Generated Content

Reviews, testimonials, and social media shares are all ways of engaging your customers through User Generated Content. It might seem like popular companies have tons of customers lined up providing reviews, sharing pictures on Instagram and recommending their service to friends. But that doesn’t happen organically. In order to get reviews, you have to ask for them.

Wool and the Gang actively recruit content from customers. Every package comes with a suggestion to #shareyourknits on Instagram. The company keeps an eye on this hashtag and shares any pictures they like on their own page. Seeing other people enjoy the product is positive social proof – an effective psychological marketing technique!

Social proof is a phenomenon where people base their own decisions on the actions and opinions of other people. It’s most effective when the proof is from someone the customer identifies with or aspires to be. For example, if you’re an aspiring professional snowboarder and your hero posts an Instagram picture with a specific snowboard. You’ll likely have a better opinion of that brand because someone you admire has a good opinion of it.

You don’t need to sell physical products to generate online content from your users. Procore (a construction software company) partnered with an influencer to showcase #hardhatheros. They recruited stories from customers that worked in the industry and showcased them on social media.

Post-purchase follow-up for reviews drives repeat business. Customers are twice as likely to make a repeat purchase if they leave a review (Hubspot, 2017). If customers leave a bad review, it’s a good customer service opportunity to intervene and set things right.

Deploy Mobile Marketing strategies

Most people have their cell phones glued to their hands these days. This makes mobile marketing an extremely effective channel for retaining customers and driving engagement. SMS messages see a 98% open rate, while 90% of text messages are read within 3 minutes of receipt.

How can you get started? Begin by making sure your site is ready for mobile users. If a customer lands on your homepage, are they able to navigate to what they need? Can they purchase or update information without needing to sit down at their desk?

Secondly, think about ways you can connect with customers through their mobile phones. Push notifications are a great way to engage inactive users. Sending surveys or promotions through SMS (text messages) can get you much higher open and response rates.

Deliver Amazing Service

A huge part of retaining customers is delivering consistent, helpful customer service.

Customers who experience bad service are far more likely to churn. 92% of customers say they make a decision to repurchase based on their call center experience. That’s a lot of potential revenue in the hands of customer support.

And companies haven’t solved this problem yet. It’s estimated that failed customer retention, specifically due to poor customer service alone, costs UK businesses £12 billion each year! Imagine how much better customer service could get by investing that money back into front line teams.

Being proactive means thinking ahead and not waiting for the customer to get in touch before jumping into action. Being proactive is what raises a customer service team from ordinary, to extraordinary.  

If you spend time heading off problems before customers run into them, you can save a lot of money in contact center costs.

Instead of waiting for customers to realize something’s wrong (like a late delivery), companies can send an automated email apologizing with an updated delivery date and prevent the customer from calling in. 

Anything you can do to help customers before they need to contact support can help make your team more efficient.

When we’re busy responding to customers, it can be tough to look up from the daily grind to wonder how we got here in the first place. 

And that’s one of the reasons why customers happy to pay more for great customer service too. In an American Express study, two-thirds of customers are willing to pay more to deal with a company known for great customer service. On average, they’d be willing to pay 13% more for great service. That’s a big markup on premium service!

Hire people who care and empower them

42% of customers will quit doing business with you after just two bad experiences. That’s a ton of pressure on your front line team to not drop the ball. Instead of micromanaging every interaction, just hire people who genuinely care and they will do the job for you.

Talented front line customer service staff can be tough to find. But we have a few tips on what you should look for. 

While product and technical knowledge can easily be taught, there are certain customer service skills that you should look for in the hiring process.

Empowered customer service agents feel comfortable asking questions, and making changes on a bigger scale. They notice trends and understand that taking the time to solve the root cause helps more customers down the road.

Make it easy to do business with you

96% of customers who have high-effort experiences report being disloyal in the future. A “high-effort experience” is anything that makes the customer feel like they have to work hard to get what they need. It might be a confusing UI or difficult customer service conversations.

Reducing the effort customers spend doing business with you makes them more likely to remain customers in the future.

To start measuring customer effort, you can use Customer Effort Score, a metric designed by CEB. It’s been found to be 2x more predictive of future customer behavior than measuring NPS alone.

https://www.nicereply.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/customer-effort-score.mp4

When you’re choosing your customer service metrics, Customer Effort Score is great to consider in addition to NPS and CSAT. It’s transactional, actionable and helps find exactly where your customers are struggling to accomplish their goals.

Apologize to customers when things go wrong

Occasionally, mistakes happen. When things go wrong, the best thing to do is to own it and apologize to customers affected. The Carey School of Business found that genuine apologies were the most effective form of service recovery. If a business says sorry on top of giving a credit, satisfaction with the interaction increased from 37% to 74%.

When you’re apologizing, make sure you understand the reason your customer is upset. Use clear language, empathize with the customer’s situation, and explain what you’re going to do to fix it. We break down the perfect apology for customer service on our blog, where you can also find a sample apology to adapt for your needs.

Write great Help Content

Having a thorough Knowledge Base is like having an always-on, 24/7 support team. Customers are always able to help themselves. In fact, more and more customers prefer to search for the answer themselves rather than contacting support at all. Zendesk found that 91% of customers will willingly use help content if they know it’s available.

Fewer customers needing live support means that your support team will be more available to provide high value support – such as proactive check-ins, personalized onboarding, and educational programs.

Plus, good help content improves the overall user experience. MailChimp’s user experience team includes a help content writer. Her job is to build trust in the product and increase product adoption by communicating the benefits and features of MailChimp in their documentation. Learn more about how MailChimp writes great help content on their blog.

Embrace Customer Feedback

Customers who take the time to offer feedback are much more likely to be engaged, long term users. Passionate users have strong opinions about the direction of your product. That is, until you start ignoring them.

If customer feedback goes into a black hole and nothing comes of it, it gives the impression that you don’t care about your customers. However, if you’re always asking for and incorporating feedback into your product, you’ll gain lifelong fans.

Just ask for feedback

Research by Morwitz and Dholakia for HBR found that just the act of asking for feedback resulted in more engaged customers. They surveyed a subset of customers for 10 minutes by phone and were surprised at the difference in customer behavior:

“A year after the survey was conducted, the customers we surveyed were more than three times as likely to have opened new accounts, were less than half as likely to have defected, and were more profitable than the customers who hadn’t been surveyed.”

The more often you seek feedback, the bigger this effect becomes. Your customers will feel involved and accountable for the success of their ideas.

Start tracking Customer Feedback

Suggestions and opinions will come through a variety of channels: customer support tickets, user interviews, sales processes. The first thing to do is have a set process for collating, reviewing and processing this information. If you’re able to keep track of feedback, you can easily see your most requested features and take that into account in your product roadmap.

Feedback methods can either be public or completely private. A public customer feedback board allows you to crowdsource ideas, and let customers vote for their favorite features. Transparency in feature requests allows the product team to respond publicly, and perhaps prevent customers from contacting support in the first place to ask about it! Popular options for managing public feedback forums include Aha! and UserVoice.

It is important to set realistic expectations for customers using these forums, however. Just because a feature made it to #1 on the popularity list doesn’t mean it will be implemented tomorrow. It might not be a good fit for the product, or be technically infeasible. What if all customers banded together and requested a free product?

Monzo, a UK debit card company, does a really great job of explaining and showing their product roadmap to the community on a Trello board, where customers can vote for their favorites.

Whether or not you decide to offer a public view of your roadmap and feedback forum, you should still have a separate method for collating feedback internally. This allows you to score feedback based on different factors – such as the value of accounts requesting it, feasibility, and company strategy.

Show momentum in releases

Customers want to know that the product is heading in the right direction. Even if your solution isn’t 100% perfect for them right now, they will be more willing to stick around if they know you’re working on it and engaging with customer feedback.

Release notes can either be dry and functional, or celebratory and engaging. If you’re releasing new features, share them in a blog post highlighting use cases. Fixed a niggling bug? Celebrate on social. Appcues offers suggestions for six different channels to promote your release communications through on their blog. Doing more with your feature releases is key to keeping long term customers engaged.

Feature releases will often bring back inactive customers to try new functionality and see what’s changed.

Follow up with individual customers

If listening to customer feedback leads to changes in your product, customers will be really happy to hear about it.  Sending personalized emails with product updates makes individual customers feel heard.

Here’s an email you can borrow to follow up with customers:

Hey June!

Thanks so much for filling out our survey in January. Your feedback was instrumental in the changes we’ve just implemented in our reporting section. Check it out now, and let us know if we’ve hit the nail on the head – or if we still have work to do.

Happy Wednesday!

Sincerely,

Molly Ringwald

Head of Voice of the Customer

Customers who have had their ideas implemented will be more likely to use the new feature, recommend it to others and to stay engaged in the feedback process in the future.

Implement an NPS program

Gathering feedback from customers can happen in many ways. Running an effective NPS program will keep you up to date on how your customers feel about you while providing actionable insights into opportunities for improvement.

NPS is more predictive of future customer loyalty than traditional customer satisfaction surveys. This means focusing on moving detractors (customers who reply with a 6 or lower) to promoters (customers who reply with a 9 or higher) will have a measurable effect on your average customer lifetime value and your churn rate.

We’ve put together a list of the 30 best resources on NPS so you can learn more about implementing the survey at your own company.

Moments of Delight

Imagine (maybe it’s not that hard) that you were dating someone and they spent a lot of time and effort wooing you, and then stopped the moment you were married. You probably wouldn’t be very happy, would you? Your customers are the same. If you drop all the charm the moment they sign the contract or click Purchase, you won’t see them coming back for more. Keep up the romance with these strategies for creating moments of delight in your customer relationships.

Packaging as a Product

If you sell a physical product, how much attention goes into the packaging? It’s one of the first impressions the product makes on your customers. Is it easy to open? Does it show off the product well? Is it wasteful? These over packaged avocado halves don’t do any of the above – most people would just think it’s excessive and unnecessary.

The beauty subscription company ipsy does an amazing job with the packaging for their monthly deliveries. It’s wrapped in bright sparkly purple, and the samples come with a little “glam bag” that can be reused for anything from a coin wallet to storing stationery.

Taking the time to develop nice packaging for your products can provide a little extra delight for your customers – and make them even more excited about their next order!

Use surprise reciprocity

Studies show that while humans like nice things, they like them even more if they aren’t expecting them. This is called “surprise reciprocity”. While most people would expect a nice gift when something goes wrong, you’ll get much more mileage from swag if it’s sent “just because”.

Although, even though it might seem like “just because” to your customer, doesn’t mean it needs to be random to you. You might choose high-value customers, or ones that have recently undergone a staffing change. Perhaps you’re about to announce a new feature, so you want to make sure customers are engaged and paying attention.

Here’s two articles to read to start thinking about how you can use surprise reciprocity to delight users when they are least expecting it.

Reward long time customers

Mobile phone companies are notorious for treating new customers better than their existing customers. They entice them with discounts and freebies that leave current customer wondering, “What about me?” Rather than rewarding customers for switching, reward them for staying!

80% of your future revenue will come from just 20% of your existing customers. These are the VIPs you should be rewarding. They understand what your product is all about, and find it useful. They are your biggest advocates!

Loyalty programs are becoming more popular and easier to deploy. 57% of marketers are planning to increase spending on customer loyalty programs in 2017. These programs return more than their fair share though. On average, customers who engage in loyalty programs generate between 12 and 18 percent more revenue than non-members.

To get started, start simply. The easier it is for customers to sign up and understand the program, the more buy-in you get. Plus, as Smile points out, starting simply allows you to do a new marketing push for each addition to the program and also get customer feedback as you grow.

Power up your Product Marketing

Product Marketing is responsible for positioning, marketing and selling your product to your customers (along with other teams, of course!). They play a big part in customer retention after the launch of a product. As Drift describes it, “product marketers help with sales enablement and focus on driving demand, adoption and the overall success of the product.”

This means they touch a lot of what customers see – product direction, onboarding strategy and marketing emails can all come from your product marketing function. Here’s four ways to leverage product marketing team to improve customer retention.

Make your product impossible to live without

I’ve always hated the image of a “sticky” product, but it’s an excellent metaphor. A sticky product is one that your customers would hate to live without, and would be difficult to leave. Sticky product usually offer value that stops the moment the customer cancels. That might be access to analytics, tons of integrations with platforms they already use or benefits that increase with the time used.

To measure whether your product is sticky now, there’s a simple test you can ask your customers. Sean Ellis designed this product/market fit survey to determine how your customers would feel if they lost access to your product in the near future. Could they go on without it?

Here’s the survey to run:

Question: “How would you feel if you could no longer use this product?”

Answers:

a.) Very disappointed

b.) Somewhat disappointed

c.) Not disappointed

d.) N/A – I already stopped using

If 40% or more customers answer “very disappointed” you’re doing pretty well! If customers wouldn’t be disappointed to lose you, it’s time to start building more stickiness into your product.

Review your life-cycle emails

How many emails do you send to your customers? Probably quite a few. One when they sign up, one for their first order, maybe one each billing cycle. Do you send them one when they start showing signs of inactivity? Emails can help deliver information, but they can also help maintain your crucial customer relationships.

There’s two main types of emails you’re probably sending your customers; transactional emails, and marketing emails. Transactional emails are based on an interaction, or something happening. These are your billing emails, your notifications and daily digests.

Marketing emails are strategically written and timed in order to convince your customers (or leads) to do something.

Need inspiration? Baremetrics has published its entire library of the 17 messages they send for customer engagement. Intercom’s messages are designed for in app messaging, but can definitely be adapted to emails as well.

Enhance your onboarding

A first impression matters more than you think. According to Preact (a SaaS metrics company recently acquired by Spotify) 23% of churn is due to poor onboarding. And this makes total sense. If you’re trying out a new service, you sign in, play around and then make your decision on whether to keep investing time in it.

If you don’t immediately see the value in the product, you’re unlikely to continue using it. To retain customers past onboarding, you need to set them up for success early on.

Magoosh, an online prep test company A/B tested a welcome message for new students. They increased conversions by 17% by providing clear options right from the beginning.

Improving your onboarding doesn’t have to be a super involved project either. There’s so many onboarding tools available (here’s 15!) that help you create, deliver and personalize onboarding content for your new customers. Most of them don’t require development team resources to get started.

If you need inspiration, or just a laugh, we highly recommend clicking through Samuel Hulick’s User Onboard teardowns.

Another great tool is Userlane. It’s a customer onboarding automation and retention platform designed to increase activation and engagement and boost conversion rates using interactive performance support. An exceptional customer experience is key to customer retention, and Userlane guarantees its end users an outstanding user experience. Userlane also offers a free customer success program with each plan.

Build Retention into your Content Marketing Strategy

Content is frequently focused on the top of the sales funnel. Marketing teams invest heavily in the awareness, consideration and decision stages of the buyer’s journey. This is great for getting customers to close the deal. But if your content strategy doesn’t include retention, you’ll be losing customers just as fast as you’re acquiring them. Plus, you’re missing a huge revenue opportunity from driving upsells and referrals.

Content designed for customer retention is about helping your customers get as much value out of your product as possible. Educational guides, webinars and deep dives into industry news are all as important to retention as they are to acquisition.

In order to build in retention to your strategy, Content Harmony recommends thinking of your sales “funnel” as an “hourglass” by adding retention as a dedicated stage after conversion. Then, plan your content schedule ahead of time to make sure your editorial calendar is showing love to every stage – including existing customers. Retention content works really well when developed as a collaboration between support and marketing.

Don’t wait until it’s too late

Improving customer retention is an ongoing battle. Preventing cancellations doesn’t start when the customer is on the phone with you asking to cancel. It starts before they even sign up and continues through onboarding and beyond. Customer retention involves every part of the business.

Don’t wait until it’s too late and customers are running out the door. Start building a sustainable customer retention program now.

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