What Is Customer Retention?
Customer retention is the ability to keep customers coming back. It's cheaper than acquisition and compounds over time.
Key Takeaways
- Retention rate = (Customers at end of period - New customers) ÷ Customers at start × 100.
- Increasing retention by 5% can increase profits by 25–95% (Bain & Company).
- Retention is a measure of product-market fit — satisfied customers stay.
Retention rate formula
Customer retention rate is calculated as: (Customers at end of period minus new customers acquired during the period) divided by customers at start, expressed as a percentage. If you start with 500, acquire 100, and end with 520, retention rate is (520-100)/500 = 84%. The remaining 16% churned.
Why retention beats acquisition
It typically costs five times more to acquire a new customer than to retain an existing one. Existing customers buy more frequently, have higher AOV (they trust you), cost less to serve (they know the product), and refer new customers. Directing even a fraction of acquisition budget toward retention programmes typically produces better returns.
Retention as a product health signal
High retention is evidence that your product or service genuinely serves your customers' needs. Low retention is a product signal — not a marketing problem. Before investing in acquisition, a business with poor retention should fix the underlying reasons customers leave. More acquisition into a leaky bucket makes things worse, not better.
Retention tactics
Post-purchase follow-up and onboarding. Loyalty programmes and rewards. Regular value-adding communications (not just promotional). Personalised recommendations based on purchase history. Proactive customer service. Win-back campaigns for lapsed customers. The right mix depends on your customer type — what works for a subscription differs from what works for transactional eCommerce.