Every management authority on the circuit says that loyal customers and their repeat purchases are the cornerstone of your long-term successful business. The reason is obvious: it is less costly to get your existing customers to buy more than it is to find new ones. The lower cost of sale leads gives you higher operating margins, which you can then invest in other business building activities, and so it goes.
Since I'm bringing this up at all, you've got to ask yourself, "Is this old saw true?"
For incremental growth up to around 20 percent per year, the answer is yes. It's true.
Spend your energy selling more to your top customers and you'll do just fine. And 20 percent year after year is definitely nothing to sneeze at.
But what about faster growth? Massive growth, mega growth, breakthrough growth? What if you've just got to take over your market, fast?
To get revenue increases of 50 percent, 100 percent, or more, that expert wisdom is just plain wrong. To get quantum growth in your business you're going to need more people buying your products and services - and lots of them.
Product development mastermind Doug Hall conducted research using the Scan Database, which contains over 9400 products with Universal Product Codes. Hall's statistical model shows that new customers are 2.8 times more important to rapid revenue growth than repeat purchasers.
It's not hard to understand when you consider this question: How much money can each customer or customer spend with your company? Can they double their spending? Maybe. If that's true, you might squeeze that 100 percent growth from your loyal base.
But is that reasonable to expect? Perhaps for one year. But repeatedly? That's just not likely, and companies that focus all their attention on retention are eventually going to see revenue growth stall or decline.
But can you double your customer base?
Yes, you can. And you can do it repeatedly. It doesn't matter whether you call them customers or clients, the equation is the same: it's easier to geometrically grow the customer base than the money each customer spends.
Of course, the strongest companies do both. They increase the spending of each loyal customer, and aggressively court new ones. But because they think it's more cost-efficient, too many entrepreneurs focus on developing repeat business and limit their new customer activity. Don't get caught in that trap; while you're creating loyalty, your competitors will expand around you and with their riches, drive you right out of the market.
Developing new customers is not easy, but here are few steps to get you on the road and keep you there.
Follow these five steps and you will be on the road to quantum growth. Remember - that as you're driving new customers to your door you must make sure to build loyalty at the same time. In another article we'll talk about ways to do just that.
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About the Author:
Paul Lemberg is the President of Quantum Growth Coaching, the world's first fully-systemized business coaching program designed to create More Profits and More Life for entrepreneurs, Guaranteed.
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Read more of Paul's articles at his business coaching website.