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Customer Retention: How to
Keep Customers For Life
Robert Warlow
Small Business Success
Being is business isn't just
about getting a customer, selling him something and moving onto the next
one. It's all about making sure that your customers keep coming back to you
... and spend more money!
But how can you make sure
that your customers stay customers for life? What strategies can you put
into practice to keep bringing them back for more? A planned customer
retention programme is something every established small business should
have in place. That sounds great, but what is a retention plan and what
should it include?
Do the
Groundwork
Before starting a retention
programme, you need to understand where your business stands now as regards
its retention track record. Ask yourself these 3 questions:
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Do you know
how many customers you have lost in the last 12 months
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If you do know
how many, do you know why they stopped dealing with you?
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Have you ever
quantified the impact these losses have had on your bottom line?
Before you can put an
effective retention plan in place, you have to answer these questions. They
are the key to understanding and implementing an effective retention
strategy. Let's look at each of them in turn.
How Many
Have You Lost?
It's essential you know how
many people stop doing business with you at any one time. Keep a database of
all your frequent customers; how often they buy; what they buy and in what
quantity. Every month review the information and see if you can spot any
worrying trends. Has the average order value been declining over the last 3
months? Has one customer's regular order dried up altogether? If someone
orders a large range of items each month but suddenly stops purchasing one
particular range, why?
If you can't track the
customers you are loosing, how can you keep them or tempt them back?
Why Have
They Turned Their Back On You?
Armed with the information on
who's deserting you, the fight back can start in earnest! There are
sometimes very good reasons why business can dry up - the owner could have
died, moved away, or closed down. Not a lot you can do about that! But what
about more worrying reasons? Your product quality has gone down hill; the
customer feels he is no longer getting value for money; your general service
levels have declined. These are areas you have to know about, so you can get
the business back on track.
If you see a slippage in
business and you can identify who is contributing to it, then pick up the
phone and get talking! Find out what the problem is. If you can bring them
back into the fold, then great but if it's genuinely too late, then at least
you have gathered some important knowledge about where the business is going
wrong.
What Has
It Cost You?
You may be thinking that the
odd customer here and there is not going to have a major impact on your
lifestyle. Think again! Remember, it's not just one sale, it's a lifetime of
sales that you are loosing. Supposing a customer spends $1,000 per month
with you. He walks away into the sunset and you never see him again. Imagine
that he could have been doing business with you for the next 20 years
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that's $240,000!
Interested now? Well you
should be! Working out the financial impact of loosing just one customer can
really bring home the impact on the business. This should galvanise you into
action and get you working on a retention plan.
Your
Retention Plan
Having now convinced you that
you need a Customer Retention Plan, what exactly should it include?
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Have a system
in place which allows you to answer all the questions we have just reviewed.
Understand what is going on in the business, so you can identify and put
matters right. Make sure you know who you lost, why you lost them and how
much it has and will cost you
-
Get your staff
together on a regular basis and remind them of the importance of retaining
your customers. If you don't get them on board then you have no hope
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During your
staff meetings hold brainstorming sessions so everyone can come up with
ideas on how to hold onto your customers
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Implement the
good ideas and measure the results so you know what is working and what is
not
A good retention plan can be
just as effective as a good marketing plan; they achieve the same results
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a contribution to profit. So, sit down and have a think about the steps you
can put in place to keep your customers.
I saw a sign in shop one day,
it said, "It's not how many come in, it's how many come back that's
important." Doesn't that say it all!
©
Robert Warlow
Small Business
Success
http://www.smallbusinesssuccess.biz
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