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8 Customer Retention Strategies (With Examples) For Existing And Churned Customers

8-Customer-Retention-Strategies-(With-Examples)-For-Existing-And-Churned-Customers
8-Customer-Retention-Strategies-(With-Examples)-For-Existing-And-Churned-Customers
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Table Of Contents:

1. Create engaging content
2. Build a social community
3. Reward customer loyalty
4. Listen to the voice of your customers
5. Ask them why they left
6. Incentivise their return
7. Provide social proof
8. Be genuinely helpful

What is customer retention?

Customer retention, in its true essence, is a set of activities that an organization undertakes to stop its customers to defect or go away. It is the most effective strategy to increase the Lifetime Value of a customer and make sense of the acquisition cost spent to bring the customer to the business in the first place. In the holistic view of Customer Lifecycle Marketing, ‘customer retention’ is the fourth and final stage before the cycle resets to acquisition.

The importance and ways to retain customers

One of the few things I remember from my childhood days is the smile of the mom and pop shop owner at the corner of my street. He did that to almost everybody who passed through his shop. He had a cordial relationship with every customer he had, which was the underlying secret of his success. In fact, all of us remember this kind of a shop owner in all of our localities, no matter wherever in this world we grew up in. Then businesses started going online. Every business that sold something wanted to get on to the internet wave and widen their horizon and hence came the e-commerce boom.

Somewhere in the race to acquire customers, the art of retaining them took a back seat. Click To Tweet

Of late, businesses serious about realising the LTV (Lifetime Value) of a customer have been investing efforts in customer retention plan and it is completely justified to do so. A quick glance at the facts and research around Customer Retention Strategy underscores its importance even further:
customer retention example infographics

Customer Retention: In the purview of customer lifecycle management

Customer lifecycle is a term used to describe the progression of steps a customer goes through when considering, purchasing, using, and maintaining loyalty to a product or service. For simplicity, I have considered the 4 phase of customer life cycle. I will be focusing on Customer Lifecycle in another post here itself.

The 4 phases of a typical customer life cycle are:
4 phases of customer lifecycle
Conventionally, customer retention rate is defined as the number of customers doing business with a firm at the end of a financial year expressed as a percentage of those who were active customers at the beginning of the year. According to a research by Adobe out of every 100 customers only 8 are repeat purchasers or returning visitors. The stat doesn’t feel significant at all until you attribute the purchase volume to them. These 8% or returning customers account for 41% of the revenue while the other 92% on whom almost all the marketing budget is spent account for the rest 59%.

Customer retention revenue contribution
Yes, you can now stare into nothingness and repent for not focusing on retaining your customer till now.

Implementing customer retention for your business

As the saying goes – Retention is the new Acquisition. Now that the ‘importance of customer retention strategies’ has been aptly highlighted let us move ahead to harness it to our benefit. Customer retention strategy is tweaking your existing marketing strategy and make room for newer tactics focused on engaging and retaining people with your business. Focusing on customer retention over customer acquisition can offer greater return for any business in the longer run. Through personal experiences of being a customer and a marketer, I have listed a few actionable tactics that can help you in retaining your current customers and also bringing your lost customers back. Here they are:

Retaining your current customers:

1. Create engaging content

Create the content that your customers want to read, share and come back to it. In one of the earlier posts, I talked about engaging the audience to your business by creating content that your user wants. It was how ASDA, a major retail player used Youtube to give out tips and hacks to their customers through their channel named Mum’s eye view. Create a blog, YouTube channel or even a podcast, but talk about things that matter to your customers. Make them come back to you for things that are helpful to them in their lives.

2. Build a social community

The emergence and prevalence of social media have empowered brands to engage in a dialog with their customers with negligible cost and boundless effectivity. Use it to project the humanness of your brand. Connect with people who talk about your brand. Provide a platform for them to speak. Add more people to it, create a community that talks good about your brand, reward them and make that community coveted.

3. Reward customer loyalty

I’ll be honest with you here, I do majority of my shopping online, and I am not loyal to any of the websites. The reason being, at one point of time I have made big ticket purchases on each one of them, and they didn’t care afterward if I returned or not. I would have loved to be presented with an offer here and there, just to appreciate the fact that I give them so much business.

4. Listen to the voice of your customers

Listen to your customer when they want to say something. You customer might speak while browsing your website, on social media, emails or by calling you. It doesn’t matter; you need to be there when he/she speaks. Be as human as you can in your responses, nobody likes to talk to a company. Empathise with your customers in the time of distress and rejoice in the time of joy. Ask them if they like doing business with you through CSAT surveys. Make them feel at home.

customer retention tactics for startups

Getting back your lost customers:

5. Ask them why they left

People who have trusted your product/service in the past would have seen some value in it. But there should have been something that irked them, ask them about it. Collect such responses and analyse them. You would have a list of actionable items at the end of the exercise. Work on them, create tailored programs for different customer segments and welcome them back in to improve your ‘customer retention rate’.

6. Incentivise their return

For a returning-lost customer, you would save a lot of marketing effort and money as compared to getting a new one. Why not pass a fraction of it to the customers and make them feel welcomed.

7. Provide social proof

Get your customers to talk about you. Use it as a social proof and a reminder of your offerings and how people still seek value in your offerings. People trust other people much more than they trust any brand.

8. Be genuinely helpful

Your customers may have left because of some reason unexpected to you. It may be that they could no more afford you or their requirements changed. In any of the cases, do not just bang the phones in their face. If possible, suggest them other service providers they could go to. Give them the right directions and earn brownie points for future.

It is never too early to have more customers. Being honest with your customers is the best ‘Customer retention strategy’ you can ever adapt. Retaining them is the most cost effective way to achieve it. Make your customers feel at home, don’t get into theirs.
Implementing retention marketing is finding the sweet spot between being apathetic to being creepy. Click To Tweet

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Author

Content Marketer, 

Webengage

As a Content Strategist at WebEngage, Rohit spearheads content initiatives for both external and internal audience of the company. He also liasons between PR companies and WebEngage, and educates WebEngage clients with timely product updates. He has been a contributor to a number of blogs and likes to write about CRO, SaaS and Mobile.

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