BRIANWOOLF.COM
 
  Welcome     Marketing & Loyalty     Speaking & Connecting     Brian's View     Books by Brian     Marketing Studies     Contact Us  
 
 

Have you seen How To SELL Anything?

This incredible sales handbook distils an expert's lifetime of sales and marketing experience and hands it to you on a platter, in a simple, easy-to-follow format. With existing customers being the most valuable source of income for any business, this book will teach you how to increase your return business and make more profit from your most loyal customers - and even how to reduce the costs of dealing with your least profitable customers.

Get it on Amazon (Kindle/Print)
 

Top 10% of customers account for 40% of sales

The top 10% of the average North American retail store's customers visit the store more than twice a week, spend more than US$39 per visit, and represent nearly 40% of the store's total sales, according to an analysis of over 2 million grocery shoppers by Concept Shopping Inc.

The study also found that these most valuable shoppers tend to remain very loyal to the store, with 95% continuing to shop there throughout the year. Conversely, only 34% of the store's worst shoppers, those who visit the store less than once a month and spend only US$9 per visit, remain customers.

"Shopper churn is a fact of life for every marketer," said William Young, vice president of sales and marketing for Concept Shopping. "Shopper loyalty continuously ebbs and flows through retail banners and store types, but sorting shoppers by their value helps identify which ones should be courted and which ones can be ignored."

The study divided the 2 million shoppers into ten equal deciles based on their spending levels during a 12 week period, and detailed the total amount spent and the number of trips, as well as the percentage of spending on products which were on sale (i.e. promotional spending).

Only 11% of the money spent by the best shoppers (those in decile number 10) were on promotional items, making these heavy shoppers the most profitable as well. By contrast, more than 35% of spending by the worst shoppers (those in decile number 1) were on promotional items, making them positively unprofitable (assuming a 33% profit margin).

The study also tracked shoppers as they moved across spending levels from year to year, and examined overall shopper retention and defection rates. In one example, a retailer retained 70% of its customers while 30% defected to other retailers, with only 5% of the highest spending group leaving. More than half (57%) of the top spenders from the previous year remained in the top decile, with only 21% declining to the second decile.

"As these charts indicate, retailers should spend the lion's share of their time, effort and promotional dollars on their top-spending, loyal customers," concluded Young. "Moreover, other studies have shown that it costs about five times as much to win a new customer as to keep a current one."


Sources: Concept Shopping /
The Marketing Factbook.
Copyright © 2009 - 2025 The Marketing Factbook.

    Categorised as:

  • Customer Experience
  • Customer Loyalty
  • Knowing The Customer
  • Marketing Know-How

Have you seen How To SELL Anything?

This incredible sales handbook distils an expert's lifetime of sales and marketing experience and hands it to you on a platter, in a simple, easy-to-follow format.

With existing customers being the most valuable source of income for any business, this book will teach you how to increase your return business and make more profit from your most loyal customers - and even how to reduce the costs of dealing with your least profitable customers.

You'll learn to sell yourself, sell your products, and sell your brand on the internet, writing high-conversion landing pages, social media posts, and more. You'll start attracting customers you didn’t even know existed, and learn the top trade secrets for customer retention.

You'll become a lean, mean selling machine. See how the experts do it and learn to adapt what they've done for your own profit. You'll learn to write strong, powerful, effective sales copy, whether it's for a sales script, sales letter, flyer, insert, advert or just about anything else.

You'll learn how to sell whether you're selling by telephone, by mail, or even meeting prospects face-to-face. You'll find out how to size them up, present yourself, nail down their true needs, close the sale, and learn to tackle the tricky ones.

You'll discover the biggest secrets of successful direct mail sellers, sales letter writers, and how to segment and choose the right prospects for each campaign.

Get it on Amazon (Kindle/Print)
 
Copyright © 2001-2025 Peter J. Clark