When sales are soft, the instinct is to spend more on marketing — pour more water into the bucket. But if the bucket leaks, more water just runs out faster. For most businesses, the cheapest growth isn't winning new customers. It's keeping the ones they already have.
A new customer typically costs far more to acquire than it costs to keep an existing one happy. And existing customers spend more, refer more, and forgive more. Yet most owners pour their attention into the top of the funnel — the chase, the new logo — and almost none into the relationship after the sale. That's backwards.
Before you spend another dollar on ads, ask: what happens after someone buys? Do you stay in touch? Do you make them feel valued? Do you give them a reason and an easy way to come back? For many businesses, fixing the leak is faster and far cheaper than turning up the tap.
Marketing fills the bucket. Retention decides whether it stays full.
Building the systems that turn one-off buyers into loyal, repeat customers is a key thread in the Grow course.
Free first step: the free Business Stage Assessment.
Annie
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