You've successfully subscribed to Thematic
Great! Next, complete checkout for full access to Thematic
Welcome back! You've successfully signed in.
Success! Your account is fully activated, you now have access to all content.
Success! Your billing info is updated.
Billing info update failed.

Customer retention analytics: 5 strategies to reduce churn

Think customer loyalty programs are all about getting generic discounts, points and rewards? Think again. That was the old school way of doing things. Today, it’s more about offering customers something as personalized as possible, so that they feel truly special.

So, let’s look at ways to reduce customer churn with customer retention analytics and why it’s important in the first place.

What is customer retention?

Customer retention refers to the actions and strategies a business uses to try and keep existing customers. To enable these actions, customer retention analytics provide predictive metrics of which customers might churn — which enables them to get ahead of it.

Why is customer retention important?

A data-driven customer retention strategy can reap rewards in a big way, if you do it right. In fact, it’s proven to drive profit. A McKinsey report states that “executive teams that make extensive use of customer data analytics across all business decisions see a 126% profit improvement over companies that don’t” (McKinsey, 2014).

As much as companies talk a good game about big data, they do not seem to leverage it, or customer retention analytics, to its full extent. Interestingly, according to a study by Broadway Business, only 32% of respondents are satisfied with their company’s use of analytics to create a competitive advantage. Thus, there’s lots of opportunity and room for improvement.

Machine learning is one of the least adopted practices in customer programs (38% of companies). Seemingly, customer professionals lack proficiency in, or access to, three important data science skills: programming, mathematics, statistics. Customer professionals said their biggest barrier was the inability of translating customer insights into business operations.

While the intention to use AI and analytics is there, according to Forrester, “only 15% of senior leaders actually use customer data consistently to inform business decisions” (“The B2B Marketers Guide to Benchmarking Customer Maturity”, Forrester, 2017).

New Call-to-action

3 benefits to improve customer retention with analytics

1. Reduces cost to acquire customers

It’s much cheaper to keep an existing customer than it is to earn a new one. In fact, it can be five times more expensive to attract a new customer, than to keep an existing one.

Stay best friends with your loyal customers, as they are extremely valuable. Once you know why your happy customers stay and why some leave, you can take the right measures to keep the right customers.

2. Easier upsell/cross-sell opportunities

It goes without saying, but your existing customers are much easier to market and sell to. Consider that usually, there are no huge customer acquisition costs associated with selling a new product or service to your existing customer base.

3. Facilitates sustainable growth

Keeping existing customers allows for more sustainable growth. Says Bain & Company,  increasing customer retention rates by 5%, can increase profits by anywhere from 25% to 95%. It’s clear that retaining existing customers makes the most business sense, but doing so isn’t quite that simple. One way many companies are finding a competitive advantage is through customer retention analytics.

5 types of customer retention analytics

Keen to know more? Here is a quick rundown of 5 common types of retention analytics.

 1. Prescriptive Analytics

Facilitates focusing on answering a specific question, and can help to determine the best future solution among a variety of options, and suggest options for how to take advantage of a future opportunity or illustrate the implications of each decision to improve decision-making. For customer retention, examples of prescriptive analytics include the next best action and next best offer analysis.

2. Predictive Analytics

This is the most commonly used method. Predictive analytics uses models to forecast what might happen in a future, specific situation. This could be next best offers, churn risk and renewal risk analysis.

3. Descriptive Analytics

Not always the best value results, and fairly time-consuming, it can still be useful for uncovering patterns within a certain segment of customers. This technique provides insight into what has happened historically and will provide you with patterns and trends to be able to investigate the detail. Examples of descriptive analytics include summary statistics, clustering and association rules used in market basket analysis.

4. Diagnostic Analytics

This technique is often used when trying to identify why something happened, such as looking into churn indicators and usage trends amongst customers. Examples of diagnostic analytics include churn reason analysis and customer health score analysis. It mainly looks to past events, focusing on causal relationships and sequences.

5. Outcome Analytics

Also known as consumption analytics, outcome analytics gives insight into customer behavior that drives specific outcomes. This approach is focused on consumption patterns and associated business outcomes. Use it to understand your customers better and learn how they are using your products and services.

5 strategies to reduce churn with data

If you’re looking at using data to reduce churn and in effect improve your customer retention, we’ve got 5 tips up our sleeve that should help you off on the right foot.

1. Develop a data roadmap and stick to it

As many as 30% of the executives in the aforementioned Bain & Co study said that they lack a clear strategy for embedding data and analytics in their companies. McKinsey’s findings show that taking an integrative approach, meaning seeing analytics as a strategic driver of growth instead of using it in silo or only as a part of IT, ultimately leads to achieving the desired result (McKinsey, 2014).

Successful companies do two things differently: First, they make use of the data they have. Second, they implement the organizational changes once they understand what the data tells them. So, you have the data – make sure you actually use it and enforce any changes needed in the business to make it happen quickly.

A good approach is to develop a data roadmap and stick to it. Steps that you take within the organisation can be to:

  1. Ensure corporate KPIs are automated, scalable and repeatable.
  2. Gather key stakeholders and define the top 3 business problems you want to solve.
  3. Categorize the issues into data vs. systems issues (often you’ll find that the issue is not with “data” at all, but with how people use it or manage it).
  4. Prioritization of tasks is required along with assessing the technical feasibility of your plan.
  5. To stay on track, reassess progress every 3 months.
  6. The human factor – ensure behavioral change

Another key factor is hiring senior executives who take a hands-on approach to customer analytics. Not only do they need to understand the importance of analytics but also have the skills to analyze it themselves, so use this as a benchmark when hiring.

Although 70% of companies have data strategies in place, many will fail to deliver what’s needed due to one factor alone: people. You may have the most advanced tools and excellent data scientists; however, all efforts fail without the correct behavioral changes needed internally to ultimately take action (Bain & Co 2017).

Employees may not be committed to using data analytics, internal teams may not be communicating with each other, or the data solutions adopted aren’t user-friendly. Behavioral change, continuous monitoring of results, along with a “one-team approach” is needed to ensure that advanced analytics within an organisation can survive and prosper (Bain & Co, 2017). No surprises here, behaviour change being the hardest part of any performance improvement plan and why as many as 38% change efforts fail (Bain & Co, 2016).

2. Only focus on high-quality leads

Customers are less likely to churn if they are similar to your primary target customers. If you have access to data about both your customers and a list of potential customers, this is a great opportunity to focus on only those who are less likely to churn.

New Call-to-action

How? By applying algorithms comparing the features and characteristics of your customers to those of your potential customers. Those that have similar characteristics (FTE size, annual spend, job title, type of industry) to your existing customers are probably those most likely to want your product, to find it valuable and therefore stick around. Your segmentation now becomes crucial. Each customer segment provides you with distinct features that help easily identify your next customers.

For example, tools like HubSpot provide this type of information in an integrated way, where you can see characteristics and patterns easily.

3. Use machine learning methods to create predictive models

Companies analyze data using different types of analytics, including predictive analytics, which is used to look at the relationships among different metrics.

To create solid customer retention strategies, we can use predictive analytics to make predictions about the future, by looking at historical data, to learn what customers may like or dislike.

Often, you might be overwhelmed by the number of variables you have to manage and analyze all at once. Although you may have a highly skilled data analyst at hand, it’s still time-consuming and labour intensive to manually and quickly sift through the sheer volume of data to find the optimal predictive model.

To create the best predictive models of retention, rely on the power of machine learning to quickly and accurately uncover the underlying reasons why customers are churning or why they’re loyal to your brand.

Machine learning uses math, statistics and probability to find connections among variables that help optimize important outcomes such as retention. These models are then applied to new customer data to make predictions.

Machine learning algorithms are iterative and learn on a continual basis. The more data they ingest, the better they get. Compared to human performance, they can deliver insights quickly thanks to the processing capability of today.

For example, you can use analytics to identify which up-sell or cross-sell products will be the most relevant based on your customer’s past purchase or browsing history.

Often, companies don’t have employees with high-level analytics (data science) skills. Third party providers can provide a solution that automates data integration and analysis.

4. Get data-driven insights with text analytics

To get deep, data-driven insights, don’t forget to analyze your free-text responses to your open-ended survey questions. If you don’t you may well miss them!

You can do this with text analytics solutions. With a text analytics tool that uses sentiment analysis, it’s easy to spot customer pain points.

And, if you collect lots of data, make sure you actually use it. One study found that only 15% of senior leaders actually use customer data consistently to inform business decisions (Harvard Business Review).

At Thematic, we have developed an AI algorithm that automates analysing free-text feedback in surveys using machine learning and natural language processing, and in essence, simplified the way businesses are getting insight from their customer data.

5. Segment to focus on retaining the right customers

Using data analytics to segment people into different groups, means you can identify how each segment engages with your brand and product. This then allows you to look at each subgroup and draw insights, followed by adopting different communication and servicing strategies to increase retention for your most wanted customers.

Analyze data such as your customer demographics, lifestyle, products purchased by each category and type of customer, the frequency of purchase and purchase value. In this way, you’ll discover which type of customers are driving the most revenue. Some cost too much to deliver revenue, so you’ll know if you want to focus your efforts on.

Understanding the difference between these types of customers, can in some cases make or break a business, especially if you’re just starting out. Knowing customer value is crucial to be able to make critical decisions. You can segment by historical value, lifetime value, value over the next year or the average customer value by segment. Using the right segmentation, you’ll then create highly targeted product recommendation offers. Segment your customers to offer relevant discounts for different channels (in-store, online, mobile). Mix it up a bit, every customer doesn’t have to receive the same offer.

Another useful way to use segmentation is to monitor the time-sensitivity and seasonality of your promotional codes. By monitoring sales data, you can see whether these codes are redeemed more often in the morning or afternoons or perhaps straight after a sales communication. The more you know about what a demographic responds to, the more you can focus on taking the right actions.

3 Customer retention analytics best practices

1. Gather multiple data points to make relevant recommendations

Be pragmatic and avoid making assumptions from solely one piece of data. Because someone living in California buys winter boots doesn’t mean they want to be bombarded with similar product suggestions. Maybe they bought them for their sister who lives in Chicago!

2. Leverage social proof where you can

If your customers don’t respond to certain products, maybe all they need is a little reminder that others similar to them are using them and are happy with them. Pull in positive testimonials from surveys and social media comments, to your marketing communications and website.

3. Turn insightful data into concrete action

It’s a fact: better data means better results. If you don’t have good data now, you can test your way to better data. Just by improving your internal data collection, you can often arrive at better data. In other cases, you might have to purchase better data. Good data is not static, it’s a continual process of observing, acting and learning.

Last words…

The challenge of the vast data volume that large businesses have, is also the opportunity. Bringing together structured and unstructured historical data across organizational silos, and combining it with key data about an ongoing customer interaction provides a compelling opportunity to influence customer experience in real time. Here’s a good example of how we at Thematic use customer retention analytics.

Ready to scale customer insights from feedback?

Our experts will show you how Thematic works, how to discover pain points and track the ROI of decisions. To access your free trial, book a personal demo today.

Recent posts

How Watercare drive customer excellence with VoC and Thematic
How Watercare drive customer excellence with VoC and Thematic
Members Public

Watercare, New Zealand's largest water and wastewater utility, are responsible for bringing clean water to people and managing the waste water systems that safeguard the Auckland environment and citizen health. On a typical day, Aucklanders don’t say much to Watercare. Water as a sector gets taken for granted, with

Customer Journeys
How to theme qualitative data using thematic analysis software
How to theme qualitative data using thematic analysis software
Members Public

Become a qualitative theming pro! Creating a perfect code frame is hard, but thematic analysis software makes the process much easier.

AI & NLP
How to measure customer satisfaction: the complete guide
How to measure customer satisfaction: the complete guide
Members Public

Everyone says they want customers to be satisfied, but what are you actually doing to make customers happy? How do you know if you’re on the right track? How do you know if your customer satisfaction efforts make a difference? Why even aim for customer satisfaction at all? We

Churn & Loyalty