We all know the math that the cost to retain a client is 20% of the cost to acquire a client.
From a sales and marketing point of view, if you can retain the clients that you bring on board, you're way ahead of the game because you don't want to have to go out and spend literally five times as much money to go acquire new ones. It is one thing to get them, but you need to keep them. Keeping them is what's interesting for a good recurring revenue business. This Podcast will talk through the elements that were identified in a scholarly piece of research. This study validated, with large statistical studies, real data about businesses and the success or not success they've had based on a couple of factors.
There are really three things you need to pay attention to if you want to retain clients. One is the tangible elements of your product and your relationship. The second is the intangible elements around the relationship. And the third is customer expectations.
Tangible elements of your product and relationship
Within tangible factors, there are really three tangible factors you need to focus on when you're thinking about trying to retain clients.
Intangible elements around your relationship
An active relationship with the management, sitting down with them and talking to them on a regular basis. Communication builds trust. It allows you to demonstrate openness, and competency which builds trust.
Managing custom expectations
There are two elements to consider, one is customer selection and the other is expectation management. Customer selection means you shouldn't sell to marginal clients. Once in a while, we are all in a competitive scenario, we're trying to sell somebody, and we know it's a little marginal. Like the product isn't the perfect fit. Our price isn't just right for them. We get the client anyway. Odds are you've acquired a client that's not going to be retained because they're not profiled perfectly for your offer. The price isn't right. The product isn't right.
One of the things to do early in the process is to set expectations for performance. Let's get clear about what the product does and what it doesn't. Let's get talk about, talk about our restock cycles. Let's talk about product availability. We're at 99.5. It won't be better than that. In some cases, you may want to embody that in a service-level agreement.