tutor2u Business Studies Blog

Tracker Pixel for Entry

Q&A - What is repeat business and why is it important?

Friday, May 01, 2009
Print Tweet This!Save to Favorites
Recommend on Google+

Getting a profitable customer to buy from a business for the first time is often difficult and expensive.  The key to a successful business is to persuade that customer to buy again, and again.  That is what is meant by repeat business.

However, many businesses focus on amassing new customers and making more sales from them. They will try anything to land a new customer, including making promises they cannot keep or offering more than they can afford. Even when tactics like these do work, the customer will usually leave for a different business when they see the true nature of who they are dealing with!

Imagine you gain a new customer.  Great!  However, it is the second (or repeat) sale that a customer gives you that is so important. This is because it shows that the customer is happy with your business and wants to continue trading with you. Any customer that returns for more is known as a repeat customer, and it is often said that it is five to ten times cheaper to keep a customer than to get a new one.

What methods are available to a business to encourage repeat business? Here are some ideas that usually work:

• Regularly remind them of the business – send an email, a postcard or a catalogue periodically
• Treat repeat customers like they are special (they are!).  Offer repeat or regular customers special offers, exclusive deals or other promotional incentives.
• Pick up the phone, or jump in the car, and contact them.  A visit or phone call can generate new sales and help a business obtain useful information on customer needs
• Make ordering and delivery as easy and efficient as possible


blog comments powered by Disqus




BUSINESS TEACHER RESOURCE NEWSLETTER
Get first news of business teaching resources, ideas and other materials from tutor2u. Over 9,400 business teachers from the UK and around the world receive our regular teacher email newsletters. Sign up for free here!

*  Your Email Address:
*  Preferred Format:
    Full Name:
*  Country:
    Job / Position:
    Postcode:
    School / College:
    Town / City:
    AS/A2 Applied Business Board:
    AS/A2 Business Studies Board:
    BTEC First:

    BTEC National in Business:

    GCSE Applied Business Board:
    GCSE Business Board:
*  Enter the security code shown:







Popular Topic Tags

recession, demand, prices, price, unemployment, profit, economics, costs, investment, inflation, supply, employment, trade, competition, gdp, risk, china, debt, euro, entrepreneur, capacity, production, innovation, downturn, tutor2u, revision, pay, exports, manufacturing, confidence, profits, food, incentives, banks, strategy, globalisation, aqa, expectations, oil, csr, usa, startup, retailers, housing, productivity, sterling, supermarkets, takeover, google, economies of scale, mortgage, cash flow, advertising, quiz, leadership, property, buss4, tesco, economic growth, video, efficiency, enterprise, motivation, stakeholders, apple, deflation, corporate social responsibility, ebea, market share, airlines, pricing, taxation, merger, slowdown, bank of england, acquisition, interest rates, market failure, borrowing, competitiveness, sustainability, product life cycle, credit crunch, budget deficit, aqa business studies, facebook, twitter, aqa business, bbc, nelson thornes, philip allan updates, starbucks, philip allan, monopoly, diversification, recruitment, organic growth, stocks, training, oligopoly, starter activity, shareholders, uk economy, poverty, emerging markets, dollar, government failure, retailing, management, suppliers, buss1, marketing mix, tim harford, cpi, branding, opportunity cost, breakeven, government spending, hodder education, vat, product, customer service, eu, losses, wages, evaluation, india, external growth, wealth, environment, edexcel, location, promotion, technology, information failure, business studies revision, sources of finance, franchise, aqa gce business, elasticity, regulation, spare capacity, welfare, jobs, economic cycle, marketing, zondle, strategic direction, british airways,
View all tags for the Business Blog
Blog RSS feed Blog RSS Feed

Latest entries

Categories