How to approach customer churn measurement in banking

When you hear the word ‘bank’, what image comes to your mind? For hundreds of years, people have associated the banking business with grand, fortress-like buildings that securely guard their bills and coins. However, that traditional concept is now changing. More and more customers see a bank mostly as a virtual entity: a mobile app or a website, manifested by an ATM or an office you visit once a year at most.

Nearly half of the US retail banking clients have already switched to all-digital. Online access means it only takes a few clicks to quit a bank for a competitor, with no prior warning. Of course, corporate customers might at least be obligated to give you a notice before they churn. Still, one thing is for sure: churn and retention go hand in hand, and tracking them has become more important than ever.

Saving a client who’s already decided to leave is much harder than winning over someone who’s still hesitant. Monitoring and predicting churn ahead of time allows you to devise an action plan on how to pre-empt it. In this article, we’ll discuss the different instruments for customer churn measurement in banking. We’ll also explore what churn means and what role customer experience plays in preventing it.