How to Build and Expand Your Customer Base

How to Build and Expand Your Customer Base
Your loyal customers will purchase more with you, and more often. And they can be an incredibly valuable marketing tool.
by Square Jan 17, 2020 — 5 min read
How to Build and Expand Your Customer Base

Racking up sales is wonderful, but it won’t keep the doors open if these are just one-time customers. You need to retain your existing customers and turn them into diehard brand loyalists.

Your loyal customer base will purchase more with you, and more often. And they can be an incredibly valuable marketing tool that can help you grow your customer base through referrals and word-of-mouth.

If you don’t already have one, now is the time to put a plan in place to harness the power of your existing customer base. Here are the steps you can take to engage them and build customer loyalty for your business.

Understand Your Customers

Because you need your customer base to relate to your brand, you have to understand what they’re all about. You accomplish this through market research.

Market research is gathering information about the market you want to enter or operate in — your target market. The end goal is to find out how successful your offering can be to customers in your target market and to understand how best to engage that customer base.

There are two approaches to gathering this information: primary (research you do yourself) and secondary research (public-facing research compiled by a third party).

Examples of primary research include:

Examples of secondary research, which can also help you analyse your competitors, include:

By searching Google for keywords that you know your customers are already using to find businesses like yours on the web, you can analyse competitors, understand how they are messaging to their customer base, and gain ideas on how to refine this for your purposes.

Using your point-of-sale as a research tool

Your point-of-sale software is a powerful research tool because it automatically tracks sales across every location (as well as online) and it ties those sales to customers so you can better understand their purchase behaviour, it is a great source of data to easily identify opportunities for growth within your customer base.

Your point-of-sale gives you access to internal data that you’ve accumulated from each customer interaction, such as:

By analysing that data, you can spot customer trends, as well as opportunities to grow your business. For example, if you notice that a specific loyal customer base regularly spends more than others, you can make it a point to alert them each time you have a new promotion.

By learning your customers’ unique behaviours, you’ll be better able to market to them.

Don’t Just Market to Your Customers; Reward Them

One of the reasons you market to your customer base is to grow your sales. But that doesn’t mean that it’s all about you. Think about marketing as an opportunity to create a win-win situation for your business and your loyal customer base.

While each of your marketing campaigns should be designed around solving a specific business problem you have, you can also use your marketing as a way to provide value to your customers. These are called customer engagement campaigns.

Suppose you’re checking your point-of-sale data on a regular basis, and you keep noticing that:

Let’s look at how to build a customer base, as well as solve each problem with different types of customer engagement campaigns.

If your problem is growing your customer base

You can use your existing customers to grow your base of new customers through a referral program.

Set up email campaigns for your existing customer base to promote the program in which your existing customer gets a free gift or a free month’s subscription in exchange for successfully sending a friend to your website to sign up or buy something.

If your problem is growing your sales per customer

If you’re aiming to increase the number of sales per customer, you could start a volume-based discount program to incentivise them. Here, your loyal customer base would get a discount if they buy your product in bigger quantities.

Similarly, you could easily create an email campaign announcing this program and then even automate it to send reminders out to your customer base at regular intervals.

If your problem is retaining your customers

If your issue is customer retention, then you have to build customer loyalty in them to keep them coming back. Customer loyalty programs are ideal at achieving this, with research indicating a 40 percent increase in customer-visit frequency for sellers who use customer loyalty rewards.

You might create a customer loyalty program where customers are rewarded with points each time they make a purchase. Over time, these points accumulate, with a specific number of points corresponding to a gift or one of your products that they can then redeem. For instance, coffee shop loyalty programs are especially popular, and retailers see 1.67 times more spend from customers enrolled in their loyalty program than those who are not enrolled. The net effect of rewarding your loyal customer base like this is you motivate them to return to you.

You can design and manage an entire customer loyalty program right from your point-of-sale.

Maintain First-Rate Customer Service and Relationships

A separate Square study found that 63 percent of customers indicated that the No. 1 factor that keeps them loyal to a business is stellar customer service. And a HubSpot research report shows that:

All the marketing in the world won’t help you if your customer service isn’t also top-notch.

You’ve already explored who your customer base is as a group, but delivering great customer demands to know who they are as individuals. By keeping track of them and getting to know their unique preferences, their purchasing behaviours, and their feedback about your business, you’re able to provide the best customer service possible, while creating unique customer experiences.

While manual, pen-and-paper lists may work when your business has a smaller customer base, your point-of-sale can help you keep track of all your customer relationships automatically no matter how large your customer base grows.

Automatically generate entries in your customer directory (right from your point-of-sale) to keep a running record of all your customers’ interactions with your business, like their past purchases, feedback, contact information, and specific preferences and behaviours. Equipped with this knowledge, you can work on constantly improving customer service on a personal level.

For even more direct communication, there’s nothing like proactively asking for and addressing customer complaints and feedback from your loyal customer base—before they ever think about taking their issue to a public forum. By encouraging open channels of direct feedback in this way, you allow for private resolution of any problems, which keeps your customer base happy and protects your reputation and bottom line.

Regularly Monitor Your Customer Sales Data

From time to time, the information you’re acting on can get stale and out of date. That’s why it’s crucial that you have the most up-to-date information for your customer engagement campaigns.

Let’s say that you want to set up a promotion with customer loyalty rewards. You can set up your point-of-sale to identify the loyal customer base that visits your store 10 or more times a month, then you can create a marketing campaign that targets only those customers with a special promotion every month. The system will automatically keep this list of customers updated to ensure that only the loyal customer base who still fit your criteria will keep receiving promotions.

By staying on top of this information, you can adjust your marketing campaigns to account for changes in customers’ spending habits, preferences, and behaviours. The result is a happy customer base, more consistently.
Besides reviewing your internal data from your point-of-sale, make it a habit to also regularly conduct the primary research we mentioned earlier on. Send your customers surveys and polls from time to time, asking them their opinions and feedback on your products or services, as well as how you can improve their experience and create customer loyalty.

In doing this, you’re not only providing great customer service, but you’re also engaging your customers, which is the hallmark of successfully growing your loyal customer base.

Square
The Bottom Line is brought to you by a global team of collaborators who believe that anyone should be able to participate and thrive in the economy.

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