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Have you seen The Customer Experience Factbook?

In this 180+ page report, you'll find all the information and support you need to build a profitable, effective CX Improvement Program that spans every part of your business. You'll be able to implement and manage meaningful and profitable change, and grow your bottom line despite a slowing economy.

Get it on Amazon (Kindle/Print)
 

Lessons from the World's Customer Retention Record Holder

By Brian Woolf
September 29, 2014

"Customers are the center of our business" is a common mantra heard from CEOs and CMOs. Given that, why do so few know how many customers they retain? One retailer who does, publishes its result quarterly. Its Retention Rate is an amazing 91%!

Costco's Customer Retention Rate in North America has been inching up over the past decade. Currently it's 91%. That means 91% of their customers (who pay $55 or $110 annually to shop in one of their 552 US/Canadian Warehouses), renew their membership fee each year. It also means that their Attrition Rate is only 9%. In contrast, a typical North American food retailer with a free "loyalty card" program has an annual attrition rate 4-5 times that of Costco. What is also impressive is that Costco raised its remarkable retention rate despite increasing its membership fee twice in the past eight years!

Can Food Retailers Achieve A Similar Retention Rate?
Unlikely, but many certainly could improve their current results.

A major reason why the average food retailer's retention rate is lower than Costco's is because its clubcard program is free and open to all who walk through their doors. Therefore, assuming some form of benefit is offered to members (eg, 1% rebate program, two-tier pricing, or fuel discounts), most customers will sign up to take advantage of the free benefit. And customers repeat the signup process when they enter a competitor with a similar program. Their thought process? "They are giving it away; I may as well take advantage of it." The rewards are always there and there is often no penalty for splitting one's shopping. Therefore, presenting a clubcard simply becomes the price of entry into the store whether the customer is a frequent or infrequent shopper.

And there's the rub, as Shakespeare once penned. When offered a card program that has no constraints, many convenience and other occasional customers will sign up. Unfortunately, the nature of such customers is that they are large in number and have a high attrition (ie, low retention) rate. They often comprise half a food retailer's customer base and experience a 50% annual attrition rate (and 50% retention rate).

Another, lesser, part of the gap comes from a food retailer's new customers. Each quarter, we usually see new or reactivated (those who once shopped, were absent for months, but returned this quarter) customers comprising at least 10% of total customers. Their combined attrition rate is abysmal, typically 65-75% (ie, an annual retention rate of 25-35%).

Convenience customers and new customers both sign up for membership "because they may as well take advantage of it" but many of them, given their high attrition rates, obviously are not serious about a long relationship as is a new Costco member who pays $55 or $110 for a year's membership. It comes as no surprise, therefore, that Costco has a superior retention rate than a food retailer. The question then becomes what can the food retailer learn from Costco?

What Can A Food Retailer Learn from Costco?
Without question, the first lesson is Costco's obsession with customer retention. Their marketing and metrics focus on this. They completely understand that if most of their customers renew their membership each year, they are doing the right things and providing good value. And comparable sales keep growing. Now let's ask ourselves: How obsessed are we with our company's customer retention rate; if not of all customers, then at least of our higher-spending customers? Do we have a retention goal? Are results posted monthly or quarterly? What elements are we planning to add to our clubcard that build and/or reinforce their retention?

As explained earlier, the typical free food retailer clubcard program creates two main customer segments: frequent regular customers and infrequent convenience customers. To achieve a better focus on customer retention, here are three possible approaches to help stimulate your thinking:

Closing Thought
If customers are the center of your business does it not make sense to do all possible to retain them and measure your retention rate like Costco? It helped them become one of the world's largest and most successful retailers.

Copyright © 2014 - 2025 Brian Woolf

About the author...

Brian Woolf is a global leader in loyalty marketing and has written three definitive works on the subject, Measured Marketing: A Tool to Shape Food Store Strategy, Customer Specific Marketing, and Loyalty Marketing: The Second Act. He devotes his time to helping retailers develop, critique and strengthen their loyalty programs.

The techniques and metrics Brian Woolf has developed have become guiding principles for those operating some of the world's most successful programs. He is the President of the Retail Strategy Center, and has consulted, and spoken at conferences, in the US, Europe, Japan, and Australasia.

Prior to his total commitment to loyalty marketing, his corporate roles included Deputy Managing Director of Progressive Enterprises, a major New Zealand retailer; and Chief Financial Officer of Food Lion, a leading US food retailer. He has an M.Com. (Economics) from the University of Auckland, New Zealand, and an MBA from the Harvard Business School.

Have you seen The Customer Experience Factbook?

In this 180+ page report, you'll find all the information and support you need to build a profitable, effective CX Improvement Program that spans every part of your business.

You'll be able to implement and manage meaningful and profitable change, and grow your bottom line despite a slowing economy. Grab this goldmine of easily adaptable and up-to-date strategies, walk-throughs, trends, technologies, research, suppliers and partners, plus all the supporting arguments you need to build a solid CX strategy.

While most marketers could list maybe a dozen key points for improving their brand's Customer Experience (CX), the researchers and writers at The Marketing Factbook have identified FORTY main 'CX Keys' which will help you drive your customers to new levels of delight, loyalty, advocacy and profitability.

The areas in which customers have direct contact with your organization are perhaps the most obvious places in which CX improvements can be made, and this report addresses all 24 of these 'Direct CX Keys', applicable to offline and online businesses alike.

At the same time there are many other areas that indirectly affect CX (such as the supply chain, policies and processes) in which every business can make simple but far-reaching improvements. This report guides you through the problems and solutions for all 16 of these 'Indirect CX Keys', many of which are often forgotten or under-played even in the best CX strategies.

Get it on Amazon (Kindle/Print)
 
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