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Businesses that focus solely on customer acquisition are overlooking a crucial profit driver. By prioritizing retention, companies can lower costs, boost profitability, and build long-term customer relationships that serve as a protective moat around the business, helping it weather market challenges.
Acquiring new customers is 5x more expensive than retaining existing customers.
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Businesses have a 60-70% chance of selling to an existing customer again.
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Businesses have a mere 5-20% chance to close a new customer.
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Customer-centric companies are 60% more profitable than companies that aren’t. –
Great customer experiences increase the chances of repurchases and renewals by 82%\–
66% of salespeople say the highest quality leads come from existing customers.
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Increasing customer retention rates by just 5% can increase profits by 25% to 95%.
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CLTV helps answer critical questions like:
Stronger adoption of new products: Existing customers are 50% more likely to try your new products.
More revenue per account: Current customers spend 31% more than new customers. Thus retained accounts on average drive more revenue than new accounts.
Time to profitability: Many SaaS companies see a multi-year payback period with new customers.
Lower cost-per-sale: Selling to a new customer costs anywhere from 4-5X more than expanding existing relationships.
Modify customer-acquisition incentives
Reallocate marketing investments
Incorporate or continuously develop your existing mobile app or email marketing approach
Brands use either mobile apps (44%) or email marketing (52%)**
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Build brand loyalty by investing more in the customer experience
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75% of customers say speed of response is most important, followed by 55% consistency across channels.
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Invest in overdelivery within the customer experience
Understand your loyalty drivers - they’ll translate into referrals
Pay attention to what complimentary products and services contributes to growing your CLTV
– Look at sales data for complimentary products or service that could be given as a free trial or surprise “thanks for your business” bonus. There’s nearly a 70% chance that a customer may want to pay for it after trying it!
Know your highest CLTV traffic sources and campaigns - then relentlessly grow them
“Many firms today are wasting half their marketing expenses on disloyal customers who will never stick around long enough to pay back the acquisition investment.”
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Improve “Time-to-value” (TTV) customer onboarding
Understand the shortest distance to “time-to-value” for your customers and craft onboarding processes that speed this up. Customers who experience value quickly are more likely to stay.
LEARN MORE: 30 Growth Hacking Examples to Accelerate Your Business
Churn rate – Measure the rate at which customers stop doing business with you. Lowering churn leads to a direct increase in profits.
User experience (UX) score – A metric that evaluates the overall user experience of a product or service, often considering usability, design, and user satisfaction.
Early renewal / cancellation rate – The percentage of customers who renew or cancel a service before the expected contract or subscription period ends.
Time-to-value (TTV) – The amount of time it takes your new customers to get value from your product or service.
Activation rate – The percentage of users who complete key onboarding actions that are essential for fully utilizing a product or service.
Product feature use – The frequency or extent to which customers engage with specific features of a product, indicating feature popularity and user behavior. Was product feature A used first for higher retention customers or was it feature B or C?
Unsolved tickets – Customer support requests or issues that have not yet been resolved, often tracked in a ticketing system. You want this low and turned around fast.
Net revenue retention rate – A metric that shows the percentage of recurring revenue retained from existing customers, including any upgrades or expansions, minus downgrades and churn.
Gross revenue retention rate – A metric that measures the total revenue retained from existing customers over a period, excluding any revenue from new customers or expansions.
Renewal rate or Repeat purchase rate – This tracks how often existing customers return to make another purchase. The higher this number, the stronger your retention strategy.
Customer satisfaction – A measure of how well a product or service meets or exceeds customer expectations, typically evaluated through surveys or feedback.
Contraction events – Instances where existing customers reduce their spending or downgrade their service level, resulting in lower revenue.
YoY ARR growth – Year-over-Year Annual Recurring Revenue Growth; a measure of the increase or decrease in recurring revenue from one year to the next.
Net promoter score (NPS) – A metric that measures customer loyalty by asking how likely customers are to recommend a product or service to others, typically on a scale from 0 to 10.
Virality Coefficient – A measure of how many new users are generated by each existing user, indicating the viral spread of a product or service.
Churn reason – The specific reason why a customer decides to stop using a product or service, often gathered through exit surveys or customer feedback.
Customer Lifetime Value (CLTV) – Use this metric to understand how much each customer is worth to your business over their entire relationship with you.
Now that you understand the profound impact customer retention can have on your bottom line, how will you take action? Will you start by reevaluating your acquisition strategies or by investing in an onboarding experience that accelerates your customers' time-to-value? Leave a comment or question below and let me know!