Last week I wrote about how you should design your habit building strategy during the customer acquisition phase. In this Part 2 of the series, I would like to share some research insight on maintaining customer habit in order to reduce customer attrition. I don’t think I need to preach to you about the importance of retaining your customers. But what’s habit got to do with customer retention? Isn’t customer retention about how happy people are with your business? Well, habit has a surprisingly important role in this process.
Declining Habit as Early Warning Signs
There are many reasons why a customer may leave a business, such as no longer having the need for the product, experiencing a negative customer service episode, or seeing a more competitive offering somewhere else. Understandably, businesses devote a lot of energy to keeping their customers, mostly focusing on improving customer experience and delighting customers. These are certainly great things to do, but they are not for everyone and they should not be the only response. Why? Because the harsh reality is that consumers don’t care what they buy most of the time. They might have tried something incidentally, it was good enough, and they ended up sticking to it because it wasn’t important enough for them to try to find “the one”. Even for consumers who cared at the beginning, many eventually fall into a simple habit of buying and consuming a product without a second thought. These are situations where maintaining customer habit is important. In my research, I have seen declining habit as a good early predictor of customer attrition. Depending on the type of product, habit decline is observed from three months to as early as ten months prior to customer leaving the company or becoming inactive. So if you are tracking a customer’s habit and see such a decline, you will have precious time to do something before it is too late.
I should point out two things here. First, it’s not so much the level of habit but the decline in habit strength that spells trouble. So continuous monitoring of customer habit is important. Continue reading “How to Build Customer Habits Through Customer Relationship Management Part 2”