Customer Retention VS. Customer Loyalty
When acquiring a new customer costs up to 5 times more than keeping a current one, it’s no wonder the topics of customer retention and loyalty are at the forefront of ecommerce conversations. But, what are the differences between customer retention and customer loyalty and how can businesses ensure consumers will return time and time again? Let’s find out!
What’s the difference between a customer loyalty and customer retention strategy?
Before we get into the details of how to gain customer loyalty, let’s define what customer retention strategy and loyalty actually mean. Customer retention is a measure of whether an existing customer continues to purchase from your brand. Sounds great, right? But, if your brand has the extra edge of customer loyalty — the measure of a customer’s predisposition to select a brand every time, tending to resist competitors — your business has the upper hand when it comes to a customer’s final purchase decision every single time!
Knowing that your loyal customers will choose your brand and not consider competitors is pretty powerful. With this in mind, you might be thinking about how you can obtain this level of loyalty from your existing customers. If so your customer lifecycle and customer lifetime value must be considered.
Customer loyalty, lifecycle and customer lifetime value (CLV)
Understanding the customer lifecycle and customer lifetime value of your brand can be the key to finding where your customers usually drop off, engage with certain tactics and return to purchase. A big part of customer loyalty is fully understanding the customer journey to inspire and convert your audience consistently.
How to gain customer loyalty and keep it!
Customer loyalty from the beginning of the customer journey
Brand marketing at Reload is all about knowing when you have reached your full marketing potential with short-term tactics. Sustainable growth happens with brand marketing, dedicated to awareness advertisements through platforms such as programmatic, display, video and DVOD. This type of marketing helps to aid in a positive brand experience as customers have the awareness and knowledge to choose your business simply from a values point of view.
Driving consistent customer loyalty revenue
Diving deeper into this database to explore your diverse customer cohorts is the next step in showing why your customers are (or aren’t) loyal. This tactic is called RFM (Recency, Frequency, Monetary) analysis and is used to rank and group customers based on their recent interactions with the brand, allowing you to target specific marketing campaigns toward them.
Aiken states “RFM is an omnichannel approach to customer retention and loyalty. It is data-driven in nature, but the communications that come from this style of segmentation is based on human behaviour that tells the customer what they want to hear. Having an emotional connection with a brand is how customer loyalty manifests in the long term, but using data to drive this connection further is how it can help your bottom line.”