We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.
To revive its catering business, Dig In hired one person to call a list of lapsed customers from their ordering platform. Instead of a complex new campaign, this simple, low-cost effort to understand churn reasons successfully recaptured significant revenue.
To combat a high 44% churn rate, the company implemented a simple feedback loop. They surveyed every user who canceled to ask why and what features they wanted. Each month, the team reviewed the feedback and built the most popular requests, steadily improving the product and retention.
After missing goals, the immediate priority is rebuilding confidence, not just pipeline. Calling existing, happy customers provides a "shot of adrenaline" by reminding you of past successes and positive relationships. This creates the psychological foundation needed to start chasing new deals again.
Reacting to churn is a losing battle. The secret is to identify the characteristics of your best customers—those who stay and are happy to pay. Then, channel all marketing and sales resources into acquiring more customers that fit this 'stayer' profile, effectively designing churn out of your funnel.
Systematically call every customer who has churned, not to win them back, but to thank them and understand why they left. This provides invaluable, unfiltered market research. By the 19th call, you'll have identified core product or service issues that data alone cannot reveal.
Instead of viewing them as separate efforts, businesses should link customer retention and acquisition. By unifying data to better re-engage existing customers via owned channels like email and SMS, brands increase lifetime value. This, in turn, reduces the long-term pressure and cost associated with acquiring entirely new customers.
The fastest way to increase revenue and profit during a recession is by creating new, irresistible offers for existing customers. They already know and trust you, which eliminates customer acquisition costs and dramatically improves profit margins compared to chasing new leads.
Instead of randomly contacting a large list of neglected accounts, use modern tools to make an educated guess about where to start. AI can quickly summarize past interactions, identify former buyers who have moved to new companies, or flag potential champions within an organization. This allows for a more strategic and personalized re-engagement effort.
Analysis shows that approximately 70% of customer churn is not caused by issues with product, service, or pricing. The primary driver is emotional: customers leave because they feel neglected and unimportant. Retention strategies should therefore focus on making clients feel understood and valued, which is often a low-cost, high-impact activity.
To ensure long-term client retention for a high-ticket service, implement a mandatory three-call onboarding process in the first month (e.g., day 1, day 14, and day 31). This intensive, early engagement builds a strong relationship and solidifies value, preventing future churn.
Instead of cold prospecting with a hard pitch, re-engage dormant contacts with a simple, human message: "I was thinking of you and wanted to catch up." This low-pressure approach feels authentic, yields a much higher response rate, and effectively turns cold outreach into warm conversations.