『Why UX Should Own Retention』のカバーアート

Why UX Should Own Retention

Why UX Should Own Retention

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Most of the organizations I work with are obsessed with the top of the funnel. Ads, SEO, social media, the next campaign, the next traffic spike. The marketing team has dashboards full of acquisition metrics, and the design team usually gets drafted in to support that effort. New landing pages, better hero sections, smoother sign-up flows. That's all fine as far as it goes. I've written an entire email course on campaign landing pages because I genuinely believe most of them are leaking conversions like a colander. But it does mean something important keeps getting ignored. Most organizations have no cohesive strategy at all for retention and upselling. They pour effort into getting the customer through the door, then more or less forget about them once they're inside. The numbers nobody is acting on This is strange when you stop and think about it. The economics of retention have been well known for years. Acquiring a new customer typically costs around five times more than keeping an existing one.Cross-selling or upselling to an existing customer costs roughly 24% of what it takes to win the same revenue from a new one. You don't need to convince someone who's already bought from you. You just have to not screw it up. Retention falls between the cracks So why does retention keep slipping through? In my experience, it's because nobody really owns it. Every other part of the customer journey has a clear home. Acquisition belongs to marketing.Onboarding sometimes sits with product.Support lives in customer success.Renewals end up with sales. Retention falls into the gaps between all of them, which is a polite way of saying it falls on the floor. A real opportunity for UX This is where I think UX has a genuine opportunity. Not just to help with retention, but to own it. To plant our flag and say this is our patch. I know that sounds like more work for a profession that's already stretched thin. But hear me out. UX has a chronic problem with how it's perceived inside organizations. We're seen as the people who make screens look nice. Helpful, but not strategic. The reason for that perception is partly our own fault. We've spent years talking about users when senior leaders are thinking about revenue. We've reported back on usability scores when the board is looking at MRR and churn. Nobody at the top of an organization wakes up worrying about whether the user's mental model matches the interface. They worry about lifetime customer value. They worry about monthly recurring revenue. They worry, sometimes very loudly, about churn going in the wrong direction. And yet plenty of businesses worry about those numbers without ever actively tracking them. Nobody is responsible for measuring them, so they sit in the background as a vague anxiety rather than a managed metric. If the UX team picked up that responsibility, and started tying our work to those numbers, our standing inside the business would change dramatically. We'd stop being the screen-prettifying team and start being the team that protects revenue. That's a very different conversation to have with a CFO. Why retention is a UX problem in disguise The other reason retention is such a good fit for UX is that the levers are largely ours already. Customers usually leave because something in the experience disappointed them. They couldn't find what they needed.The product didn't deliver what they expected.Support was a maze.The onboarding fizzled out before the value clicked. Every one of those is a UX problem dressed up as a business problem. The same goes for upselling. Customers buy more from companies that have nurtured them properly, where the experience has built trust over time. You can't bolt that on with a clever email campaign three months in. It has to be designed. 🎤 Free workshop: Giving Your Users a Voice in Every Decision with AI Tuesday, 9 June 2026. One hour live, plus Q&A with me. Most personas die quietly in a shared drive. I'll show you how to build AI-powered personas that focus on what users are actually trying to do, and how to make them available on demand so anyone in your organization can consult them at the moment decisions get made. Register for free What this looks like in practice A few starting points. 1. Change your KPIs If you're still reporting on task completion rates and System Usability Scale scores, you're speaking a language the business doesn't really care about. Pick one or two retention metrics and put them at the top of your dashboard. Any of these work: Churn rateRepeat purchase rateLifetime customer value 2. Audit the post-purchase experience Most organizations have spent years polishing what happens before the credit card comes out, and almost no time at all on what happens afterwards. That's where the easy wins tend to be: OnboardingThe first month of useThe renewal flowThe upgrade prompts 3. Get involved in cross-functional work Retention sits across teams, so if you wait for someone to invite you to the ...
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