Friday 21 April 2017

Build Customer Lifetime Value Using Data Driven Retention Strategies

Customer Retention Strategies that Work

''It costs up to ten times more to acquire a customer than to retain one. To maintain their competitive edge, businesses need to effectively manage customer attrition and grow their existing relationships. Our customer retention strategies maximize profits by helping you keep the customers you’ve invested in.''

Identify At-Risk Segments with Campaign Tracking & Reporting

Client retention hinges on your organization’s ability to deliver on its value proposition. That’s why the most successful retention strategies start before customer attrition, at the outset of the relationship. Collecting and analysing customer data can identify audience segments that are at-risk of defecting over time, giving businesses the opportunity to mend fences and grow customer lifetime value.
We work closely with your team to gather and analyse these consumer insights to uncover opportunities that will increase your conversion and customer retention rates.

Earn Repeat Business with Customer Loyalty & Referral Programs

One of the best ways to encourage repeat business is offering incentives, including customer rewards and coupons. Incorporating gamification into loyalty programs that reward customers for purchases and referrals is a highly successful strategy that many businesses have implemented. By leveraging its existing relationships, we’ll help your brand develop a retention strategy that works best for its target market.

Increase Share of Customer with E-mail Marketing

An effective e-mail marketing strategy uses customer insights to drive more conversions. Optimizing your campaigns by segmenting e-mail lists to deliver more personalized content improves the user experience and increases ROI. Our e-mail marketing specialists will work closely with you to improve open-rates and develop a campaign that increases your share of customer by increasing the
relevancy of brand messaging.


Tactics for product and brand positioning

It's hard to retain customers if they aren't even paying attention to you. Below are our favorite bits of research on how clear communication and messaging helps create engagement and loyal customers.

1. Stand for something
Customers are more likely to ignore you if your company doesn’t stand for anything. Research from the Corporate Executive Board that included 7,000 consumers from across the U.S. found that of those consumers who said they had a strong relationship with a brand, 64 percent cited shared values as the primary reason. If you want loyal customers, you need create real connections with them. What do you stand for?
2. Utilize positive social proof
While negative social proof ("Nearly 90 percent of websites don't use heat mapping software!") has been proven to dissuade customers rather than encourage them, numerous studies on customer motivation have shown that positive social proof (like testimonials) are commonly the most effective strategy for getting people to listen.
3. Invoke the inner ego
Most people prefer products and companies that “resemble” them in some way. This cognitive bias is called implicit egotism, and is an important thing to keep in mind when talking to customers. To attract the customers you want, you need to identify your target customers down to the last detail, then craft a message that matches their pains, goals and aspirations. It's easier to fill this existing demand than to create one.
4. Position around the before and after
“This is your world before our product, and this is your world after.” Providing a contrast for customers can make for powerful marketing, but first you have to understand where they are (how they describe their pain) and where they want to be (how they frame their solution). Speak to that, and show how your product can bridge the gap, and you’ll catch their interest.

Tactics for customer marketing and education

If customers don't enjoy your education, marketing, and sales process, they'll likely never do business with you again. Selling to customers the right way is an integral part of creating customer loyalty. Below are a few studies to help you improve the process.

5. Use the words they love to hear
Not all words are created equal. Certain words encourage customers to buy more than others. In particular: free, new and instantly. When customers hear these words, and the promises they imply are backed up, they'll enjoy their purchases more than they would have otherwise.
6. Reduce pain points and friction
All businesses, no matter the industry, are going to have to sell to the three types of buyers that are out there. According to research from Wharton Business School, nearly a quarter of these buyers will be conservative spenders, or "tightwad" customers. George Loewenstein of Carnegie Mellon University recommends using bundles, reassuring words (e.g., change "a $5 fee" to "a small $5 fee") and reframing as a better way to sell to conservative buyers.
7. Capture your product’s momentum
When exciting improvements are being made to your product, everyone in the company feels the momentum. But do your customers feel the same way? They won’t unless you take the time to share your work. Today this often falls under the growing list of product marketing responsibilities, but either way it’s the execution that counts. Create excitement with current customers by showing them what your latest features let them accomplish.
8. Don’t just sell, educate
According to serial entrepreneur David Skok, sales is often more effective when you have an existing relationship with a customer, and when you’ve already provided value. This matches up with research from TARP Worldwide, which shows customers do enjoy receiving helpful recommendations on new information and products that will help them achieve better results.

Delivering surprise reciprocity and delight

Reciprocity is the social construct that makes the world go 'round and keeps customers coming back. The premise for is simple: when “delighting” customers makes sense, it’s best served up as a surprise.


9. You don’t have to overspend to delight
Handing out discounts and freebies can be costly. Instead, you should embrace the art of the frugal wow — creating reciprocity through small, thoughtful gestures. In fact, psychologist Norbert Schwarz found that as little as 10 cents can create reciprocity between two individuals (it really is the thought that counts).
10. Utilize surprise reciprocity
Although reciprocity works incredibly well on it's own, research shows it’s far more powerful when started by surprise. For a simple example, recall a time that someone did something nice for you unexpectedly — the gesture probably wasn't all that unusual, but the fact that it came out of nowhere left a strong impression on you. Thank you notes and proactive emails and messages are a nice, lightweight way to put this into action. For more ideas, check out 25 Ways to Thank Your Customers.
11. Make it personal
In a study from the Journal of Applied Social Psychology, researchers found that waiters and waitresses could increase their tips by 23 percent by the simple act of returning to tables with a second set of mints. The researchers concluded that the mints created the feeling of a personalized experience for the customers who received them. So, it was the personalized service that made their day, not the small gift in itself.
12. Reduce effort before delivering delight


How great service retains customers

You can't build customer loyalty without an exceptional customer service to keep people coming back. Let’s debunk a few customer service myths, as well as tackle some important things you need to keep in mind when offering support online.

13. Speed is secondary to quality
When it comes to highly rated customer service, data show that quality and completeness matter more than speed. According to research from the Gallup Group, customers were nine times more likely to be engaged with a brand when they evaluated the service as "courteous, willing, and helpful," versus the "speedy" evaluation, which only made customers six times more likely to be satisfied.
14. Customers enjoy businesses who know them
Telling your team to spend more time with customers might seem like folly, but smart entrepreneurs know that isn't the case. Numerous behavioral psychology studies have shown that everybody views their service experience as more positive when they don't feel rushed or ignored. Don't spend time idly, though; have employees attempt to find out key customer traits, just like Derek Sivers did at CDBaby.
15. Choose the right platform
The best way to improve your customer service efforts is to utilize the channel your customers most prefer. Recent research has shown the death of email support has been greatly exaggerated. However, you need to pick the channel that makes the most sense for your business. Hosting companies, for example, know that live chats are critical when their customers’ sites go down; other companies may have customers who prefer using self-service, or even phone support.
16. Make it a communal effort
Countless case studies have made one thing clear when it comes to creating an efficient support system: You need to keep everybody in the loop. At Help Scout, we use our integration with Slack to access real-time notifications of what's happening on the customer end; we were able to improve our response time by 340 percent by creating a support channel for all of our teammates.
17. Support should solve cause and effect
It isn’t enough for your customer service team to apologize; their main goal should be to solve for the immediate problem, but to also find and flag the root cause. In doing so, they can solve a systemic issue and help other customers avoid it altogether. Reducing problems is key — in fact, research conducted by John Goodman found that customers were much more sensitive to price changes, and thus more likely to churn, when they experienced a few problems with the product (or the support they received).

Designing sticky retention programs

The key to creating loyalty programs that work is to know why customers use them and what gets customers to keep using them. Below you'll find consumer research that answers these questions.


18. Get people started
Consumer researchers Joseph Nunes and Xavier Dreze are known for their studies on the Endowed Progress Effect. Their results have conclusively shown that the biggest pitfall in preventing customer loyalty programs from succeeding is getting people started. In their now famous car wash study, participants were twice as likely to finish loyalty cards when they were automatically started (or rewarded) as soon as they signed up.
19. Get ideal customers to be VIPs
Additional research by Dr. Nunes on retention programs has shown that people love being VIP, or “gold” members. There is one caveat, though — this only works when people know there is a class below them on the totem pole. Speaking to human nature, Nunes saw a notable increase in gold members’ participation as soon as he implemented a silver class.
20. Label your customers
Research on voting patterns conducted by Stanford University revealed people are more likely to participate in something if they are labeled with a positive trait. Buffer refer to their premium customers as "awesome" members, and even named their upgraded payment plan the Awesome Plan — a much easier phrase to embrace than "paid member."
16. Make it a communal effort
Countless case studies have made one thing clear when it comes to creating an efficient support system: You need to keep everybody in the loop. At Help Scout, we use our integration with Slack to access real-time notifications of what's happening on the customer end; we were able to improve our response time by 340 percent by creating a support channel for all of our teammates.
17. Support should solve cause and effect
It isn’t enough for your customer service team to apologize; their main goal should be to solve for the immediate problem, but to also find and flag the root cause. In doing so, they can solve a systemic issue and help other customers avoid it altogether. Reducing problems is key — in fact, research conducted by John Goodman found that customers were much more sensitive to price changes, and thus more likely to churn, when they experienced a few problems with the product (or the support they received).

18. Get people started
Consumer researchers Joseph Nunes and Xavier Dreze are known for their studies on the Endowed Progress Effect. Their results have conclusively shown that the biggest pitfall in preventing customer loyalty programs from succeeding is getting people started. In their now famous car wash study, participants were twice as likely to finish loyalty cards when they were automatically started (or rewarded) as soon as they signed up.
19. Get ideal customers to be VIPs
Additional research by Dr. Nunes on retention programs has shown that people love being VIP, or “gold” members. There is one caveat, though — this only works when people know there is a class below them on the totem pole. Speaking to human nature, Nunes saw a notable increase in gold members’ participation as soon as he implemented a silver class.
20. Label your customers
Research on voting patterns conducted by Stanford University revealed people are more likely to participate in something if they are labeled with a positive trait. Buffer refer to their premium customers as "awesome" members, and even named their upgraded payment plan the Awesome Plan — a much easier phrase to embrace than "paid member."


Retaining customers is a balancing act
There are many tactics, but no shortcuts; you can’t “hack” a personal relationship, so why should we assume business relationships are any different? Truth is, the tactics above should hopefully give you some fresh ideas for approaching retention, but they’re not a cure-all. Your product and service will do most of the heavy lifting in keeping customers loyal, and there are no shortcuts for that.


Content Courtesy Of https://www.helpscout.net

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

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