Perhaps you’ve heard that we are now in what is known as the Engagement Economy. Nearly a decade ago, the Institute for the Future, an independent, nonprofit strategic research group, explored what they referred to as the “Burgeoning Economy of Engagement.” The idea has continued to gain traction, and today the basic premise is that every organization needs to create personalized experiences that foster genuine relationships with customers. The Engagement Economy requires taking a different approach to measurement. The Engagement Economy is less about lead generation and more about retention and loyalty. This has major implications for customer metrics.
A fundamental aspect of the Engagement Economy is that everyone and everything is always connected, and therefore the focus is on how people interact with us, our brand, and our products across every touch point.

What the Engagement Economy Means to Marketing
It takes a different kind of Marketing organization to succeed in the Engagement Economy – one that is intensely focused on creating customer value. Organizations like this are committed to:
- Reversing the value chain in order to deliver what customers truly value. The customer’s needs, wants, and priorities are the catalysts for developing products and services and selecting channels.
- Creating mutually beneficial relationships designed to maximize the customer’s product and service experiences. The organizations have processes, systems, and tools in place to develop and optimize touch points and channels that create positive customer experiences.
- Formulating a customer strategy focused on creating a state of purchase readiness and long-term loyalty.
The Most Helpful Customer Metrics for the Engagement Economy

The customer metrics used by Marketing organizations seeking to thrive in the Engagement Economy need to demonstrate how Marketing strategies resonate with customers and tie back to the bottom line. The most common question we’re asked is, “What are the best customer metrics for the engagement economy?” There really isn’t a one-size-fits-all list for every company all of the time, and it’s almost impossible to come up with one metric or a set of metrics that will be in place forever. However, here are three broad customer metrics that have financial implications that can serve as a useful barometer for your Marketing organization.
1. Share of Wallet
Growth comes from acquiring new customers as well as expanding your footprint with an existing customer. This expansion can be a result of a customer buying more of a product they already purchase to address an increase in volume, buying more of product they already use to utilize in a completely new application, buying additional products they are not currently purchasing from you, or some combination of these situations. The notion of an existing customer buying more falls into what is referred to as “share of wallet.”
The total amount that a customer can spend in a specific product category is known as the customer “wallet.” Share of wallet, then, is how much a customer spends with a particular seller. The simplest way to calculate share of wallet is to measure how much of a customer’s total category spending you own vs. what the customer spends in that category and then compute the resulting ratio.
Using share of wallet as a metric improves your understanding of where added value may exist among your existing portfolio of customers. By understanding the total wallet and the share of wallet, you can identify which customers are the most loyal and which customers have the greatest growth potential. Both the ratio and the actual difference are important: The first tells us the share of wallet, the second the potential value.

2. Customer Stickiness
Most research supports the claim that acquiring new customers is more expensive than retaining current customers. Some studies suggest that a 2% increase in customer retention has the same effect on profits as cutting costs by 10% and that a 5% reduction in customer defection rate can increase profits 25%-125%, depending on the industry. There is solid data that suggests that companies with high retention also grow faster. Therefore, you need to know how “sticky” your customers are.
You can determine your stickiness by measuring and monitoring both your customer churn and your customer retention rate. A simple way to calculate churn is by calculating the number of customers who discontinue a service during a specified time period divided by the average total number of customers over that same period.
Churn Rate = Customer loss during a specific period/total customers at the start of the period
While it is important to understand the rate at which you are losing customers, you will also want to calculate the revenue lost, or churned, as a result.
The customer retention rate calculation is slightly different. Take the number of customers at the end of specific point in time and subtract any new customers acquired in this same time period. Divide this number by the total number of customers at the start of the time period and multiply by 100.
Retention Rate = [(Number of customers at the end of a time period) – (Number of customers acquired during the time period)/(total number of customers at the start of the time period)] *100
The key is knowing how many are defecting and why, as well as how many are staying and why. The reasons customers leave and why they stay are often different, and a customer doesn’t necessarily leave for the exact opposite of the reason they stay. For example, a customer might stay because switching may be extremely difficult. Or, they might choose to leave because the technical support is poor. It is important to work both sides of the equations.
3. Customer Lifetime Value
Without customers there is no business. Therefore, customers are a company’s most valuable asset. The longer a customer is a customer, the more valuable that customer is and the more value that customer creates both in terms of real revenue and hopefully referrals. Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) is a measure that reflects the value of the customer over the customer’s life cycle. CLV represents the value of your organization’s relationship with the customer. Determining which types/profiles of customers produce the highest CLV helps you determine in which existing customers to invest.
There are various approaches for calculating CLV. At its core, CLV is built from the following equation:
CLV = (Frequency of Purchase) X (Duration of Loyalty) X (Gross Profit)
Compared to their colleagues, best-in-class organizations are significantly better at impacting this metric.
Shift Your Customer Metrics from Lead Gen to Customer Loyalty

It might take a little work to shift the focus from lead gen to customer loyalty. Often, companies have so many years of experience doing something one way that it’s hard to turn them in another direction. If this sounds familiar, hopefully the above mentioned customer metrics have given you some ideas on how to make a change. And if you need a little more help, reach out for a free 20-minute consultation.
(written by Penn of Sintra.ai)
A1: The Engagement Economy is the idea that every organization must create personalized experiences that foster genuine customer relationships. With customers and channels always connected, competitive advantage shifts toward how people interact with your brand, products, and services across every touchpoint—not just how efficiently you generate leads.
A2: Measurement must shift from primarily tracking lead generation to tracking retention, loyalty, and relationship value. In an always-connected environment, the most useful metrics are those that show whether customer experiences are resonating and whether those experiences translate into financial outcomes.
A3: It takes a Marketing organization intensely focused on creating customer value—one that reverses the value chain (starting with customer needs), builds mutually beneficial relationships through optimized touchpoints and channels, and formulates a customer strategy designed to create purchase readiness and long-term loyalty.
A4: Because customer strategy, buying dynamics, and business models differ—and metrics must evolve as markets, offers, and customer expectations change. The goal is not a permanent list; it is a set of metrics that reliably serves as a barometer for customer value creation and business impact.
A5: Three broad customer metrics with clear financial implications are share of wallet, customer stickiness, and customer lifetime value (CLV).
A6: Share of wallet is the portion of a customer’s total category spending that goes to you. It helps identify where expansion value exists within your current customer portfolio by revealing both loyalty (current share) and growth potential (the gap between what you have and what you could earn).
A7: Estimate the customer’s total spend in the category (the “wallet”), measure what they spend with you, and compute the ratio. Both the ratio and the absolute difference matter: the ratio indicates your share; the difference indicates the potential value you could capture.
A8: Customer stickiness reflects how well you keep customers over time. Since acquiring new customers is generally more expensive than retaining current ones, improving retention can materially improve profitability and growth—making churn and retention essential metrics in the Engagement Economy.
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