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edit Lis Hubert
event 12/18/2024
pace 4 mins
We explain how to use key sales metrics to understand your sales and revenue – and to shed light on your customer experience. This is the second post in our CX metrics series.
Last week, we kicked off our series with a look at the most important customer experience (CX) metrics. This week, we’ll examine 8 key sales metrics. These not only help you understand the health of your revenue stream(s), they’ll also give you some clues about how your customers feel about your brand.
We’ve already discussed the importance of business metrics in general and explored quantitative vs. qualitative metrics in our first CX metrics article. Now, let’s find out what these key sales metrics can tell us about our business health!
Finding the percentage of customers that are repeat buyers (as opposed to first-time purchasers) is very easy. Simply divide the total of customers who have at least 2 purchases by the number of customers who have 1 purchase. Multiply the result by 100 to get a percentage.
If you have 10,000 customers and 4,309 have placed multiple orders with your company, you have a 43% repeat customer rate.
These key sales metrics give you a good idea of the effectiveness of your sales and marketing teams – particularly at the later Consideration and Decision stages. They can also be valuable pointers to potential problems in the customer and user experience of your brand.
For example, if we see low first-time customer sales, we immediately look at our client’s customer journey map and their target audience profiles and research. Has there been an error or a mismatch somewhere? What about the in-store or e-commerce experience? Are there slow page load times or technical problems with the website? Are in-store checkout lines too long? Is there enough variety in the product mix – or too much?
When you track, analyze, and combine insights from the right key sales metrics, you’ll have solid data on that part of the customer experience. You can use your findings to fix any gaps in the sales process (or earlier in the funnel) and pass on your knowledge to other customer-facing departments later in the consumer’s journey.
Next week, we’ll continue our examination by looking at process and efficiency metrics and their part in the customer experience.
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