Customer retention is a vital topic for any business

We’ve written before about how retention strategies are going into overdrive, as more and more media businesses have shifted to subscription models, and need to find ways to retain customers. In this article, we will share examples of retention tactics from the FT and beyond that we hope can help your own business think creatively about how to keep your customers happy (and paying). 

But first, let’s remind ourselves why retention is so important: a small reduction in churn can lead to a substantial increase in lifetime value for your business. Some studies show that the cost of acquiring a new customer can be anywhere between five and 25 times more expensive than retaining an existing one (HBR). Below is a graphic for visual learners that was shared by a Managing Director at FT a few years ago.

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At The FT, we structure our approach to retention around the customer lifecycle. From early life to the moment of renewal, each stage provides an opportunity to reduce churn – and we are constantly testing new interventions to that end. While some interventions are specific to news publishers, we believe there are common lessons for all. Indeed, we will happily admit that inspiration often comes from beyond the world of publishing, particularly in OTT, Telcos, or online retail businesses. In the next paragraphs, we’ll show some of the tactics for each stage of the lifecycle, as shown below.

different types of churn

 

1. Pre-membership

Even before a user subscribes to your product, there are steps that can aid in the eventual retention of that subscriber to ensure a longer lifetime value. 

The core strategy is to push users to subscribe to an offer that has a lower number of potential renewals (or bluntly opportunities to churn), a concept we’ve explained through our Normalised Churn Rate metric in a previous blog post. Typically this means creating a compelling subscription landing page that shows the benefit of an annual subscription by, for example, slightly discounting the annual offer compared to the annualised monthly one, and displaying that saving for the user. Some publishers have even tried lifetime subscriptions (like Maddyness in France), while The Economist, as shown below, clearly delineates the savings users can make via longer term plans. Of course, all subscription offerings need to be tested and can be tweaked based on whether acquisition or revenue is the current strategy – lower-priced monthly offerings in fact can help attract users with lower propensity to commit.

survival curves by biling frequency-1

2. Early days

Most subscription businesses see the most dramatic churn early in the customer lifecycle. The numbers are typically stark for publishers. For example, Piano finds that 40% of subscribers who disable auto-renew, do so within the first 2 months. It’s a similar story in the world of subscription e-commerce (e.g. monthly meal kits and personal styling), McKinsey found that more than one-third of consumers who sign up for a subscription service cancel in less than three months, and over half cancel within six.

So what can go wrong in the initial days and weeks following purchase? One typical problem is that your new customers may struggle to understand your product. Another is that customers are not getting the level of value they anticipated. One of the best ways to address both challenges is with a solid customer onboarding strategy. This strategy should be focused on helping people make the most of your product, and build the foundational habits that will retain them in the long term. 

Slack provides a great example of an intuitive onboarding experience. When you sign up you are introduced to the product in context via overlays within the app. You are also given specific tasks and helpers. For example, Slack provides some pre-written welcome messages that you can send to your first channel. At the same time, Slack keeps things simple by resisting the urge to explain everything at once. Valuable secondary features (e.g. “do not disturb”, voice calls and app integrations) are not introduced in the initial onboarding. Instead, the priority is to get people up and running with basic usage.

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At the FT, we have built our onboarding journeys around the insight that engagement is the most important driver of retention. Low usage following signup leads to some immediate churn, and at the same time, there are huge challenges in recovering engagement after the early days of a subscription. Furthermore, it is far easier to nurture and sustain engagement than to re-engage the disengaged.

To prevent both short and long-term churn, the priority of our onboarding is to drive usage and encourage the habits that lead to long-term engagement. Our data analysis has shown that the following habits have the greatest impact:

  • Signing up to the app & receiving push notifications
  • Organically following topics on myFT (a personalised space based on the topics/authors/formats that users follow)
  • Signing up for newsletters
  • Engaging with comments
  • Reading on a Saturday or Sunday
  • Reading the FT across multiple devices
  • Viewing graphics / visual journalism

That is to say, readers who complete the above actions tend to be the most engaged, and are in turn, less likely to churn.

To this end, our onboarding programmes for subscribers and trialists are designed to help users develop these habits – introducing them to specific product features and journalism. Below is an example of our onboarding email campaigns. 

unnamed (1)-Jan-27-2025-04-15-39-1772-PMAt each stage, we have found that the most effective approach combines education (i.e. guide users through a particular feature) and reinforcement (i.e. acknowledge their usage of that feature). This process is coordinated across email and onsite messaging. For example, a user might first be sent an on-site message alerting them to a new feature (e.g. myFT). If they then use myFT, they are sent an email acknowledging and outlining the product feature, which reinforces their behaviour (e.g. “You’ve saved your first article to myFT”). If they haven’t used the feature after a few days, the user is sent an email to further educate and promote the feature.

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3. In-life 

A well-designed onboarding journey may set your customers up for success, but your retention efforts should not stop there. While it is true that customers can cancel at any time, some customers are more likely to churn than others. To succeed at in-life retention, it is vital to closely monitor your customer base to understand who leaves and who stays (and for what reasons). This insight typically comes from a healthy mix of quantitative data (e.g. app and web analytics) and qualitative studies (e.g. interviews with existing or ex-customers).

At the FT we realised that we could be doing more to specifically help subscribers understand the value that they were getting from their subscription. To this end, we created a “Year in Review” campaign, much like Spotify’s yearly campaign which tells a story based on your listening data. In our case, we play back the topics, journalists and stories that individual readers engaged with, as well as sharing insights about their reading patterns.

This campaign proved hugely successful, achieving a 3.3 percentage point uplift in retention rates and saving approximately 50 subscribers per week. For those without the budget or time to invest in this sort of bespoke solution, we have seen other publishers use relatively low-tech solutions to achieve similar aims. For example, a letter from the editor re-capping the year’s most popular stories across all readers might be sufficient to remind subscribers of the value of your journalism.

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As well as sustaining in-life customers, we believe that it is important to consider growth as a key part of your retention strategy. By this, we mean that you should proactively drive customer value by targeting the right customers at the right moments with opportunities to upsell and “rightsize”.

At the FT, we are particularly active in the 21 days leading up to renewal. At this point, we segment readers based on their propensity to renew. Based on this information, we provide personalised recommendations around moving to more appropriate tiers. For an engaged user on our standard tier, we might provide a discounted offer for a Premium subscription. 

While upselling is the obvious preference, it is important to rightsize in both directions. We are experimenting with offering readers with a low propensity to renew – and those not making full use of their higher-tier subscriptions – a more appropriate lower-tier product or a price freeze. We have found that the payoff of keeping these customers is well worth any reduction in individual recurring revenue.

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Another way to “grow” within the retention cycle is to offer a referral scheme. For example, mealkit subscription service Hello Fresh offers discounts and free boxes for referrals. While this is primarily a smart acquisition method, referrals also offer a way to increase brand loyalty (and even grow revenue) from existing customers – particularly if you can pick a relevant incentive (e.g. discounts, credits, free products or gift cards). Gifting is another similar technique. In news media, El Diario’s “gift a news subscription” page allows higher-propensity to pay members to pay more to “subsidise” the cost of a subscription for readers who cannot afford the subscription, in line with their mission to serve the public. 

4. Pre-renewal or cancellation

Renewal is a crucial moment in the customer lifecycle – particularly for subscription businesses. Unfortunately, it is inevitable that some customers will actively decide to cancel their subscription. Previously at the FT, if someone decided to cancel their only option was to contact our call centre. Customers hated this experience, and we developed a hunch that the friction involved was counterproductive, making those who did manage to cancel far less likely to return. To address these issues, we developed a new online flow that allowed customers to cancel online. Within the flow, we hoped to persuade customers to change their mind in the process with ‘save’ offers and other features. This new journey doubled our previous save rate (6% of people who started this flow decided not to cancel, compared with 3% previously). We continue to actively experiment with our cancellation flow, and have had success with bespoke prize freezes and “fear of missing out” messaging (e.g. reiterating product features and brand values).

FT - cancellation flow

Even if customers don’t actively want to leave, there is a further risk at the point of renewal: Involuntary Churn. This refers to churn occurring passively due to payment failure, a particular risk for businesses that hold credit card details on file. At the FT, we have specialists in Involuntary Churn who develop close relationships with payment companies, and actively test new methods that can mitigate this challenge (e.g. adjusting the timing of payments, automated customer messaging, intelligent retry, automatic card updater). With this investment, we have been able to increase our involuntary churn recovery rate to 66%.

5. Post-renewal

Sometimes, it simply isn’t possible to prevent churn. But there is an opportunity to win these customers back – something we specifically aim to do within the “regret” window. FT experiments in this area have included email campaigns, onsite messaging and call centre interventions. In order to better coordinate and personalise these results, we aim to retain ex-subscribers as registered users (i.e. they are still able to login to the FT website, but cannot access paid content).

“Pause my account” is one option used with success by subscription businesses such as Hello Fresh and Amazon Prime. This allows subscription payments and benefits to temporarily end. The benefit here is that you can maintain a customer relationship during this time, and by retaining user data and payment details you are able to reduce the friction involved in a user resuming their paid account. Taking this concept one step further, Audible allows you to place your membership on hold for a three month period – after which service automatically resumes.


How FT Strategies can help

FT Strategies has helped a number of businesses effectively approach the challenge of retention across all stages of the customer lifecycle. We have seen that an important first step is understanding your current performance, particularly relative to industry benchmarks and best-in-class examples. Once you understand where you are, the next step is to define your strategy for mitigating churn and size initiatives based on potential impact. At this point, you will be ready to take tangible steps to test new approaches – via customer discovery work and well-designed experiments.

If you would like to find out more about retention strategies, please get in touch here.

About the author

Lamberto Lambertini, Senior Insights Consultant
Lamberto Lambertini, Senior Insights Consultant
Lamberto is a Senior Insights Consultant at FT Strategies, co-leading on original research and supporting the building of media and subscriptions expertise. He has worked with publishers across EMEA and done extensive research on how newsroom can tranform in the digital era to meet evolving audience content and product preferences. Prior to joining, Lamberto worked as a Research Analyst at Enders Analysis, a media research firm, writing about the transformation of the publishing industry towards reader-revenue models. He holds a Msc in Media and Communications Governance from The LSE.