Churn and retention: capturing a lot is useless if you lose just as fast
Filling the funnel at the top is useless if it empties at the bottom. Retention is the other half of growth that the obsession with capturing tends to ignore.
There is a healthy obsession with acquiring new customers and a dangerous neglect of retaining the ones you have. But growth is the sum of acquiring minus losing. If your churn is high, capturing more is like filling a leaky bucket: lots of effort, little level.
Why churn matters so much
Retaining a customer costs much less than acquiring a new one, and a retained customer generates value for longer. A small improvement in retention has a huge compounding effect on growth. Ignoring churn to chase new leads is optimizing the wrong half.
Churn starts in capture
Part of churn is born not in the service, but in the sale: customers acquired with no real fit who were never going to stay. Selling to those who do not fit inflates short-term sign-ups and spikes medium-term cancellations. That is why capturing with fit is also a retention strategy.
- Capture with real fit, not by volume
- Deliver what was promised in the sale
- Support the start (onboarding)
- Detect churn signals in time
- Measure churn as a growth metric
Fit as a vaccine against churn
The best antidote to churn is acquiring customers who truly fit what you offer. A customer with real fit gets value, stays and recommends. That is why fit quality in capture not only improves closing: it protects retention.
Leads with fit, customers who stay
Buying qualified leads, filtered by your ICP, has a benefit beyond closing: it attracts customers who fit and therefore stay. Capturing by fit instead of by volume is investing in retention from the first contact.