Set up customer success

Build an onboarding and retention system that keeps customers engaged, identifies risks early, and turns satisfaction into longer relationships.

Set up customer success

Introduction

It’s easy to focus all your energy on acquisition, but the real growth often comes from keeping the customers you already have. For B2B service companies especially, long-term relationships are what drive real stability.

This playbook shows you how to design better customer journeys—from the first handover to long-term engagement. You’ll learn how to build onboarding experiences that reduce confusion, increase confidence and make clients feel taken care of from the start.

The goal is simple. Create an experience that makes customers want to stay. When people feel supported, they’re more likely to keep working with you, refer others and expand over time.

If you want to reduce churn, strengthen trust and improve the value of every account, this is where to start. Marketing plays a key role in retention, and this playbook shows you how to get it right.

Chapters

1

How to design customer onboarding

Map the first 30-90 days to deliver quick wins, set expectations, and prove value before customers question their decision to buy from you.

2

How to build customer feedback loops

Create systematic processes to gather customer input, surface issues early, and act on feedback before problems become churn events.

3

How to monitor customer health

Track engagement, usage, and sentiment to identify at-risk customers before they churn so you can intervene early with targeted outreach.

4

How to design renewal processes

Make renewing frictionless and proactive so customers don't have to think about it whilst you spot risks early enough to address them.

5

How to prevent and reduce churn

Identify churn patterns, build early warning systems, and create win-back campaigns for customers considering leaving to salvage relationships.

Set up customer success

tools

HubSpot

HubSpot

All in one CRM with marketing, sales and service, strong when you want one system that teams adopt.

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45

per month

Customer.io

Customer.io

Customer.io sends targeted messages across email, SMS, and push notifications triggered by user behaviour and product data for SaaS companies.

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100

per month

Amplitude

Amplitude

Product analytics for events, funnels and cohorts, useful when you need to see how users move and where they drop in product journeys.

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61

per month

Notion

Notion

Flexible workspace for docs, wikis, and lightweight databases ideal when you need custom systems without heavy project management overhead.

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12

per month

Fireflies.ai

Fireflies.ai

Fireflies.ai transcribes meetings, extracts action items, and syncs notes to CRM with searchable meeting library for team collaboration.

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18

per month

Books

Managing The Professional Service Firm

David H. Maister

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Managing The Professional Service Firm

A classic on leading expert teams. Balance sales, delivery and culture with numbers that keep the firm strong.

Principles

Ray Dalio

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Principles

A set of tools for clearer thinking and teamwork. Create principles, run post mortems and make better decisions together.

Wiki

Net Promoter Score (NPS)

Measure customer loyalty by asking how likely they'd recommend you to gauge satisfaction and identify promoters who drive referrals versus detractors risking churn.

Renewal rate

Calculate what percentage of customers renew subscriptions to measure product-market fit and customer success effectiveness at delivering ongoing value.

Customer satisfaction (CSAT)

Survey customers about satisfaction with specific interactions or products to catch problems early and identify what drives positive experiences worth replicating.

Health score

Combine usage, engagement, and satisfaction signals into one metric that predicts churn risk so customer success teams prioritise accounts needing intervention.

Customer success

Proactively help customers achieve desired outcomes to drive retention and expansion by ensuring they extract maximum value from your solution.

Usage metrics

Track how customers interact with your product to identify power users, detect at-risk accounts, and guide feature development toward actually valuable capabilities.

Lifetime Value (LTV)

Calculate the total revenue a customer relationship generates over its entire duration to guide acquisition spending and retention priorities.

Related topic

Revenue per customer

How do you keep happy customers that keep buying from you?

Set up customer success

Other playbooks

Increase pricing

Increase pricing

Raise prices strategically through better packaging, value communication, and positioning so revenue grows without adding customers.

Increase line items

Increase line items

Develop cross-sell and upsell motions that expand accounts by solving more problems for customers who already trust you.

Increase contract length

Increase contract length

Build retention strategies, success milestones, and renewal processes that keep customers committed for longer periods.

Improve win rate

Improve win rate

Strengthen your closing approach — objection handling, negotiation, and follow-through — so more proposals turn into signed contracts.

Improve offer rate

Improve offer rate

Streamline your proposal workflow and improve how you present solutions so more qualified deals receive a clear, compelling offer.

Improve qualification rate

Improve qualification rate

Sharpen your discovery process and scoring criteria so more meetings convert into qualified pipeline with real potential.

Keep reading

Retention begins before the ink dries. During closing, confirm the success metric the customer will use at the 30-day mark reduced workflow time, faster reporting, or a tangible cost saving. Record that figure in your CRM and reference it at every internal hand-off so onboarding aligns to the outcome, not the feature list.

Build a “day-zero” kit that lands within one hour of signature. Include login details, a two-minute setup clip, the first milestone date, and the name plus calendar link of their dedicated contact. Immediate clarity lowers anxiety and frames you as organised and responsive.

Map the first month into weekly checkpoints. Week one verifies access and completes the basic configuration. Week two guides users through one high-value workflow with live support. Week three delivers the first results snapshot screenshots, numbers, or a short Loom video that shows the gain. Week four runs a retrospective call to celebrate wins, capture blockers, and agree on next objectives. Each checkpoint is logged so progress is visible to both sides.

Quantify value relentlessly. Use before-and-after metrics wherever possible: time on task, error rate, revenue protected. If hard data is slow to emerge, collect quick quotes from power users and share them internally with the client’s sponsor. Early social proof buys patience for the bigger gains still in flight.

Coach for depth, not breadth. Identify two under-used features that directly support the client’s goal and create micro-training sessions ten-minute calls, annotated GIFs, or in-app tours. Adoption of these features typically predicts renewal and future spend better than total seat count.

Automate gratitude. Trigger a handwritten card or small branded gift when the customer hits their first milestone. Tangible recognition stands out in a digital sea and reinforces partnership.

Monitor health signals weekly: logins, feature usage, support tickets, NPS comments, executive engagement. Colour-code accounts so customer success knows where to intervene before frustration becomes churn.

Finally, plan the expansion conversation only after demonstrated success. Present a brief ROI recap, propose the next logical step aligned to their roadmap, and tie the upsell to further measurable outcomes. When the customer already believes you deliver, the price discussion becomes secondary.