British Businesses Lose Nearly £5 Billion Due to Unplanned Customer Churn

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Despite new UK regulations that encourage consumers to save money by changing suppliers, average customer churn increased by only 3.7% compared to 2018, according to the 2020 CallMiner Churn Index released today.

While consumers are showing increased motivation to stay loyal, CallMiner’s study estimates that British businesses still lose £33.4 billion per annum due to overall churn and £4.95 billion per annum due to unplanned churn.

Thumbnail image of Frank Sherlock

Frank Sherlock

“Our research found that while UK consumers want to be more loyal and are less price-sensitive than in years past, brands continue to push customers away with poor service,” said Frank Sherlock, VP of International at CallMiner.

“We estimate that UK businesses lose nearly £5 billion a year to unplanned churn.”

CallMiner surveyed 2,000 UK adults that have contacted a supplier over the past 12 months to understand what makes them stay loyal or switch. Select research findings include:

  • Phone-based customer support increases. Despite the proliferation of self-service options, consumer reliance on phone-based customer support increased 15% since 2018.
  • UK consumers put less weight on price. While price remains the number one driver of churn, it declined in importance by 4% from 2018, despite government programmes that encourage price-based switching. Emotional factors relating to customer experience, loyalty and fair treatment increased in importance.
  • Contact centre performance drives both loyalty and churn. 84.1% of consumers are likely to stay loyal after a positive call centre experience; 78.4% are likely to switch after a bad call centre experience.
  • Super-agents shape customer emotions. 33.9% of customers had their emotional state change from negative to positive following their last call with a brand; 18% report having their emotional state shift because of poor agent behaviour.

Adam Walton

“The rise of self-service has made human support even more critical.”

“Now more than ever, when customers call a provider, we expect one of two things: they are already frustrated due to a lack of information and online support, or they have a complex and sensitive issue.”

“Both cases require emotionally intelligent ‘super-agents’ who can connect, solve problems and deliver exceptional service,” said Adam Walton, COO at CallMiner.

“Customer service agents are on the front line, managing their own transition to working from home and facing significant new demands for help from customers where they are often the only human interaction between consumers and brands.”

“Equipping agents to satisfy the needs of emotionally charged, and sometimes vulnerable, customers is essential for retention, loyalty and revenue.”

In terms of consumers’ preferred channels for customer support, website- and social media-based support declined 34% and 27%, respectively. Text message-based support grew the most since 2018 (+38%), followed by phone support (+14%).

While the average rate of churn experienced little change, some sectors saw significant increases. The highest churn rate increase of 102% was in the banking sector, which saw the number of customers switching more than double from 12.2% to 24.6%.

For more results and insights – including churn by industry, the most popular customer service channels, and the primary reasons why customers switch providers, download the full report – the 2020 CallMiner Churn index – here.

Author: Rachael Trickey

Published On: 12th May 2020
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