two men talking about equipment dealer forecasting

Equipment Dealer Revenue Forecasting: How to Stop Making Decisions Based on Guesswork and Bad Data

Every month, equipment dealers make decisions worth millions: How much inventory to order? How many technicians to hire? Which branches to invest in? How much to spend on marketing? The outcome for each decision depends on a single question: what will revenue look like over the next 3, 6, and 12 months?

When the answer is wrong, everything downstream breaks. Equipment sits on the lot. Parts overflow the shelves. You staff up for a surge that never comes, or scramble to hire when it does. Marketing gets cut right before a strong quarter. Reactive decisions stack up, and competitors with better forecasts pull ahead.

Most dealers know their forecasts are off. They just are not sure how to fix them. Better forecasting is not about a smarter formula. It is about using the right data, structured the right way, and updated often enough to reflect what is actually happening. Below is what that looks like, where most dealers go wrong, and how to turn invoice data into predictions you can act on.

Key takeaways

•  A reliable forecast uses 3 years of invoice data, not 3 months

•  Equipment, parts, service, and rentals each need their own projection

•  Customer level detail catches risk that aggregate revenue hides

•  Customers in their third year buy 2.9X more equipment than in year two

•  Monthly updates are the single biggest lever for forecast accuracy

•  Peer benchmarks tell you whether a flat quarter is your problem or the market’s

Why forecasting is harder for equipment dealers

Equipment dealer revenue forecasting uses historical data and current trends to predict future sales. That means equipment, parts, service, and rentals, broken out by branch and customer. Several realities make accurate revenue prediction harder for dealers than for most other businesses:

  • Long sales cycles. Equipment can sit in the pipeline for months before it closes. If you only look at this month’s invoices, you are already behind.
  • Multiple revenue streams. Equipment sales swing with the economy. Parts and service are steadier. Rentals follow seasonal patterns. Lumping them together hides what is really happening.
  • Customer concentration. A small number of accounts drive most of your revenue. Losing one quietly can distort your numbers for an entire year.
  • Geographic limits. Most dealers operate within a 60 mile service radius because technicians have to reach customers fast. That ceiling caps realistic growth from any single branch.

What inaccurate business forecasting actually costs

Bad revenue forecasts create real financial pain across every department.

Inventory mistakes
When you forecast demand that does not materialize, you tie up capital in equipment and parts sitting on shelves. Forecast too low, and you lose the sale when a customer needs a part you don’t have.

Staffing errors
Hiring technicians takes time. If you wait for demand to arrive, then you’ve already lost the window. But if you hire ahead of a surge that does not come, then you are carrying payroll you cannot cover.

Marketing cut at the wrong time
When revenue looks shaky, marketing is often the first line item to go. If the forecast was wrong and a strong quarter was ahead, you just throttled the pipeline that would have fueled it.

Missed warning signs
A forecast that only looks at aggregate revenue misses the moment a top customer starts buying less. By the time it shows up in the top line, the customer may already be gone.

The underlying issue is the same in every case: decisions are being made on information that does not reflect reality.

How to forecast revenue for your equipment dealership

Sales forecast accuracy does not come from a formula. It comes from using the right data, in the right structure, and updating it often enough to catch changes early. Here is the approach that works.

Start with 3 years of invoice data
Three months of data only captures what happened during those 3 months. Three years of invoices separates real trends from one-off events, shows seasonality clearly, and reveals how customer behavior changes over time.

Segment by revenue type, branch, and customer
Rolling everything into one number hides the patterns that matter. Each revenue stream — equipment, parts, service, rentals — should have its own projection. Each branch should have its own. Each customer segment should have its own. That is how you staff and stock each department based on its real demand.

Track the right metrics at the customer level
For each segment, track customer retention, purchase frequency, average transaction size, and active accounts. Top line forecasts can look healthy right up until a key account leaves. Customer level detail surfaces problems early and is how you identify at risk customers before they stop buying.

Customer longevity matters here. Customers who stay with you into their third year purchase 2.9X more equipment, 9.1X more rentals, 4.1X more service, and 5.6X more parts compared to their second year. A forecast that ignores the life cycle of your accounts ignores one of the most predictable growth drivers in your business.

Benchmark against similar dealers
Knowing you grew 5% does not tell you much on its own. Knowing you grew 5% while comparable dealers grew 12% tells you something is off. Benchmark your forecast and your current performance against peer dealerships.

Update monthly
A forecast is not a one time exercise. Markets move. Interest rates shift. A top customer takes on a big project, or a new competitor opens a branch nearby. A forecast updated 12 times a year is far more accurate than one refreshed once a quarter.

Common mistakes that hurt sales forecast accuracy

  • Relying only on last year’s numbers. Straight line projections assume conditions will not change. They always do.
  • Ignoring purchase frequency. If existing customers are buying less often, that is a leading indicator of revenue trouble. Most forecasts do not track it.
  • Forecasting in isolation. When sales, service, and ownership all have different numbers, no one trusts the forecast and decisions get made on opinion.
  • Treating all customers the same. Your top 20% of accounts behave very differently from the rest. Averaging across the whole base hides the accounts that drive revenue.

How Winsby forecasts revenue with 96%+ accuracy

At Winsby, we analyze 3 years of invoice data for each client and benchmark their performance against a database of comparable dealerships. Every month, new invoices come in, key metrics refresh, and we forecast forward.

Then we sit down with our clients to walk through it. Which customers are trending up. Which are at risk. Where revenue is being left on the table. Where they stand against peer dealers. We talk through the decisions on the table — inventory orders, hiring plans, marketing spend — and quantify the revenue impact before the call gets made.

The result is a clear picture of where the business is headed, with the data to back it up. Decisions stop coming from gut feel and start coming from evidence.

Start making decisions based on better information

Poor revenue forecasting is expensive. Good forecasting is not. The difference is structured data, the right segmentation, monthly updates, and a benchmark that shows how you stack up against other equipment dealers.

Schedule your Winsby assessment to see what accurate equipment dealer revenue forecasting looks like for your business. We will use your invoice data and our peer benchmarks to show you what 96%+ forecast accuracy means in practice.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

How accurate should an equipment dealer’s revenue forecast be?
A well built forecast uses 3 years of invoice data, customer level detail, and monthly updates to reach 96% accuracy or better. If yours is off by 10% to 20% regularly, it is not reliable enough to plan inventory, staffing, or marketing against.

How often should I update my revenue forecast?
Monthly. Market conditions, customer behavior, and pipeline change faster than a quarterly review can catch. Refreshing monthly with new invoice data is the single biggest lever for improving forecast accuracy.

What is the difference between sales forecasting and revenue forecasting?
Sales forecasting focuses on the pipeline, including open deals and the probability they close. Revenue forecasting is broader, covering every revenue stream (new equipment, parts, service, rentals) and the behavior of your existing customer base. Equipment dealers need both.

Why should I compare my forecast against other dealers?
Your own history only tells you how you are doing relative to yourself. Benchmarking against comparable dealers tells you whether a flat quarter is a you problem or a market problem. The answer changes what you should do about it.

What data do I need to start forecasting accurately?
At minimum, 3 years of invoice data segmented by revenue type (equipment, parts, service, rentals), customer, and branch. Without that history, you cannot separate seasonal patterns from real trends or identify which customers are trending up versus at risk.

Can I forecast revenue without specialized software?
You can build a basic forecast in a spreadsheet, but maintaining customer level detail, monthly updates, and peer benchmarks at scale gets hard fast. Most dealers either invest in dedicated tools or partner with a firm that does the analysis for them.

What is the most common forecasting mistake equipment dealers make?
Forecasting in aggregate. Lumping equipment, parts, service, and rentals into one number hides the patterns that matter, like a top customer buying 30% less than last year while overall revenue still looks healthy. By the time the issue surfaces in the top line, the recovery window is mostly gone.

Categories

CUSTOMER RETENTION
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION SURVEYS
EMAIL MARKETING
EQUIPMENT DEALER MARKETING
KEY METRICS
Key Metrics Reports
LEAD GENERATION
LIST EXPANSION
MARKET RESEARCH
MARKETING FOR MANUFACTURERS
MARKETING STRATEGY
ONLINE PRESENCE
REPUTATION MANAGEMENT
SEO
SOCIAL MEDIA
WEBSITES

Ask a Question

business key metrics

How Key Metrics and Accurate Forecasting Drive Smarter B2B Decisions

B2B companies often face challenges and must make decisions that impact their bottom line every single day. These choices affect operations, revenue planning, resource allocation, and customer relationships. Without reliable, accurate data, these decisions easily become reactive instead of strategic.

Key metrics provide measurable insights into business performance, while forecasting helps organizations prepare for future outcomes. Together, they reduce uncertainty and support informed planning across all your departments, including sales, marketing, finance, and operations.

Understanding Key Metrics in a B2B Context

Key metrics are numbers that reflect how well your business is performing against its goals, how effectively you’re serving your customers, and whether or not your marketing is working. Some of the most important key metrics that you should track include:

Customer retention rate

Customer retention measures the percentage of customers that purchased within the last 12 months that also purchased within the prior 12 months. Long term retention is crucial for your
business’s profitability, because the longer someone keeps buying from you, the more they spend. In fact, increasing customer retention by just 5% can grow profits by 25% to 95%.

Purchase frequency

Purchase frequency tracks the number of times a customer buys products or services from a company within a given period. There is no such thing as a “one size fits all” number for purchase frequency, but higher is always better. Understanding purchase frequency can also help you identify areas of your business where you need to improve. If the purchase frequency of a loyal customer goes down, you know there is an issue that must be addressed.

Types of purchases

To better understand your business and your customers, you have to take a close look at what they are buying from you the most, if you offer multiple products or services. By analyzing the types of purchases your customers make from you, you can determine which products sell the most, how often they sell, and which branches or departments sell more or less of specific products.

At risk customers

At risk customers are ones that are thinking of leaving you. When a customer’s purchase interval becomes longer than usual, it is normally a sign that they are also doing business with one of your competitors. By identifying which customers are at risk, you can take specific actions to keep those customers, rather than lose them to a competitor.

Revenue per customer

The best way to increase revenue per customer is to hold on to those customers. For example, for equipment dealers, customers purchase 2.9X more equipment, 9.1X more rentals, 4.1X more service, and 5.6X more parts in the third year of working with you. By tracking this metric, you can better understand customer value and behavior.

Distance for geographic market

Distance for geographic market measures the number of miles that customers will travel to do business with you. If distance is important, it will be very difficult to retain customers beyond the range that is comfortable for them to travel. Recognizing this number will help prevent wasting resources on people who are extremely unlikely to work with you.

Additional important analytics that help you understand your business’s growth and performance include:

  • Net growth rate for number of accounts
  • The number of active accounts
  • Top customers
  • New customers
  • Lost customers
  • Historical revenue
  • Growth in the number of invoices

By tracking all of these metrics, your organization can identify patterns, assess efficiency, and evaluate whether current strategies are delivering the results required for success.

What Is Accurate Forecasting?

Forecasting is the process of using historical data and current trends to predict future outcomes. In B2B environments, forecasting often covers revenue, demand, capacity planning, and market performance. Accurate forecasting takes into account the most important business key metrics to show you where your company is headed. It helps you reduce uncertainty and provides guidance to determine whether changes are needed to achieve better results.

How we handle forecasting

At Winsby, we look at three years of invoices to generate an analytics report for our clients’ businesses. Then, we compare their numbers to businesses just like theirs, to see how they are performing against them. Each month, we update the database with new invoices to show any changes in trends, highlight what will happen if they make certain changes or leave things the same, identify growth opportunities, and remove guesswork from decisions by forecasting future performance with 96%+ accuracy.

Reduced Business Risk

Uncertainty is a constant in B2B decision making. There’s no way around it. But effective forecasting will identify potential risks early, enabling organizations to prepare contingency plans. This proactive approach supports stability and minimizes the impact of sudden market changes or demand fluctuations.

Common Challenges in B2B Forecasting

Despite its importance, forecasting can be difficult to do correctly. Common issues include:

  • Inconsistent data collection
  • Overreliance on historical trends
  • Limited cross department alignment
  • Rapid market changes

Best Practices for Smarter Forecasting

Smart forecasting depends on using accurate data, reviewing key metrics regularly, and adjusting assumptions as conditions change. These practices help B2B organizations plan with greater clarity and minimize uncertainty in decision making.

Review and Adjust Regularly

Forecasting is not a one time task. Routine reviews and changes are necessary for organizations to adapt forecasts to new information, conditions, or goals.

Align Forecasting with Business Objectives

Forecasts should support decision making, not exist in isolation. Using forecasts to determine business goals ensures insights remain relevant and actionable.

Long Term Value of Data Driven Decisions

Over time, organizations that consistently use key metrics and accurate forecasting develop stronger decision making capabilities. This approach leads to:

  • More predictable growth
  • Improved operational efficiency
  • Better stakeholder confidence
  • Reduced reliance on assumptions

Start Putting Your Company Data to Better Use

Key metrics and accurate forecasting are essential tools for smarter B2B decision making. They provide clarity on current performance, while forecasting enables organizations to prepare for what lies ahead. Together, they reduce uncertainty and support informed, strategic choices. By focusing on relevant data, maintaining accuracy, and regularly reviewing forecasts, B2B organizations can strengthen planning, effectively manage risk, and build a more sustainable approach to increasing revenue.

Contact the Winsby Inc. team to understand how key metrics and accurate forecasting can support clearer planning and better B2B decision making.

Categories

CUSTOMER RETENTION
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION SURVEYS
EMAIL MARKETING
EQUIPMENT DEALER MARKETING
KEY METRICS
Key Metrics Reports
LEAD GENERATION
LIST EXPANSION
MARKET RESEARCH
MARKETING FOR MANUFACTURERS
MARKETING STRATEGY
ONLINE PRESENCE
REPUTATION MANAGEMENT
SEO
SOCIAL MEDIA
WEBSITES

How to Know What Your Customers Are Buying from You Most Often

If your company offers multiple products or services, identifying the specific types of purchases your customers are making is a key part of fully understanding what’s driving your success. By analyzing customer purchasing data, you can uncover which items are in highest demand, how frequently they’re bought, and which departments or locations are the highest and lowest in the rankings. These insights serve as important business metrics that help you make more informed decisions, optimize how resources are allocated, and ultimately increase your profitability.

Why you should track types of purchases
For equipment dealers, connecting customers with the best product or service at the right time is core to building loyalty and driving growth. That process starts with understanding which types of purchases are most common. By identifying customer buying patterns, you can adjust your marketing and advertising to highlight what they are purchasing most often and point out why they should buy those items from you.

Using business analytics reporting and a data driven approach, you’ll not only improve your marketing ROI, but also avoid unnecessary spending promoting products with lower demand. Instead, you can focus time and budget on what performs best—driving better results for your dealership and improving overall customer satisfaction.

Identify your trigger products
Trigger products or services are the initial reasons a customer thinks to do business with you. In a grocery store, they are staples like bread and milk. For equipment dealers, they often include services like emergency repairs, seasonal tune-ups, or machine breakdowns that can lead to a rental or replacement and parts like filters and fluids. These types of purchases serve as entry points and can often lead to larger transactions or long term customer relationships.

By consistently evaluating your business’s invoices each month, you’ll begin to recognize which products act as these triggers for your dealership. Once you know them, you can feature them more prominently in digital campaigns, on your website, and in sales conversations—ensuring your business is top of mind when the need arises. And because trigger products often open the door to additional purchases, promoting them strategically can lead to increased sales across other product categories.

Use business metrics to maximize impact
Your time, marketing dollars, and operational resources are limited. That’s why making strategic use of business metrics is so important. Regularly reviewing which types of purchases are being made most often helps you prioritize which products to promote, where to allocate inventory, and how to target your advertising.

These types of insights go beyond marketing—they influence larger business decisions. For example, if a certain product is selling well in most branches but underperforming in one, that discrepancy may signal a local issue that you need to investigate. When you track and analyze your business metrics monthly, you gain the understanding required to troubleshoot inefficiencies, uncover missed opportunities, and keep performance consistent across all your locations.

Expand awareness and sales through strategic upselling
If you understand what your customers are buying—and why—it becomes much easier to offer them additional products and services. A customer might visit your site or store with a specific need, but a smart upsell strategy can introduce them to other things they hadn’t considered.

Use your top performing types of purchases as a gateway. Feature them in your email campaigns, social posts, and website banners to capture attention. Once customers are engaged, guide them to complementary services or upgrades that align with their initial interest. This strategic approach—rooted in business analytics reporting—not only increases the average transaction value but also strengthens long term customer loyalty.

The cumulative effect of these practices creates a strong foundation for sustainable B2B SEO success.

At Winsby, we provide equipment dealers with comprehensive business analytics reporting, helping them track key business metrics like types of purchases, purchase frequency, customer retention, and more.

Contact us today to uncover valuable insights and start making data driven decisions!

Categories

CUSTOMER RETENTION
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION SURVEYS
EMAIL MARKETING
EQUIPMENT DEALER MARKETING
KEY METRICS
Key Metrics Reports
LEAD GENERATION
LIST EXPANSION
MARKET RESEARCH
MARKETING FOR MANUFACTURERS
MARKETING STRATEGY
ONLINE PRESENCE
REPUTATION MANAGEMENT
SEO
SOCIAL MEDIA
WEBSITES

IndustryAnalysis

What Is an Industry Analysis and How It Helps Your Company

Many businesses think that the way to be successful is to reach as many people as possible with their sales and marketing messaging. The problem with this approach is that you only have a finite number of resources to connect with prospects and potential customers. So you can’t reach everyone, and you definitely don’t want to spin your wheels trying to, because all you’ll end up doing is wasting time and money.

The key is to make the right decisions about who to target with your limited sales and marketing resources, so you receive the largest return possible. In order to make those decisions, you need an industry analysis.

What is an industry analysis? How it works

An industry analysis tells you which types of customers and prospects have the potential to produce the most value for your company. It’s about finding patterns within your purchase data to understand who your current most valuable customers are—where they are, what they do, what they need, etc. Armed with that information, you can then target prospects with a similar profile as your most valuable customers.

At Winsby, we complete an industry analysis by looking at Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) codes that are represented in your business’s current customer list. Basically, these codes show you which industry any particular company is in. What our industry analysis does is look at customer count, sales volume, revenue, number of potential customers, and other key business metrics for every SIC code found in your list. That way, you can understand the market potential for every segment of your current customer base.

How to utilize your industry analysis

Conducting an industry analysis helps you better understand your customers and how much value different segments produce for you. Once you recognize which types of people are most valuable to you, you will know exactly what industries and types of customers to target going forward. You’ll be able to focus your time and resources on increasing your market share where it matters the most.

After learning which industries to target for your company, you can then tailor your marketing and sales message to speak to those segments. For example, if you sell dozers and learn that the majority of your current customers typically handle road building projects, then you can target more of those types of companies by talking about the aspects of your products that are most valuable for road construction.

An industry analysis tells you who to go after and what messaging to use, helping you waste fewer resources and be more successful in expanding your customer base and growing your sales.

What is an industry analysis? It’s a tool that gives you a better understanding of your customer base and lets you achieve stronger growth. Contact Winsby for yours today!

Categories

CUSTOMER RETENTION
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION SURVEYS
EMAIL MARKETING
EQUIPMENT DEALER MARKETING
KEY METRICS
Key Metrics Reports
LEAD GENERATION
LIST EXPANSION
MARKET RESEARCH
MARKETING FOR MANUFACTURERS
MARKETING STRATEGY
ONLINE PRESENCE
REPUTATION MANAGEMENT
SEO
SOCIAL MEDIA
WEBSITES

AtRiskCustomers

How to Not Lose at Risk Customers

At risk customers are current customers that you’re in danger of losing. These are people who start purchasing less and less from you, and eventually they could go to one of your competitors. The first step towards preventing this from happening is by identifying who your at risk customers are, and the second step is fixing the issue that is driving them away. We’ll go over how to do both.

Look at the key metrics

The best way to identify who your customers are who are at risk is by looking at key metrics, specifically their purchase intervals or purchase frequency. If the customer’s purchase interval is longer than usual, that may indicate that they are considering going with a competitor’s product or service instead of purchasing from you.

If you notice that a customer’s purchase interval is consistently decreasing, then it’s time for your sales team to reach out to them. More often than not, the majority of people will not tell you if your company is not serving them adequately, or if you’re falling short in some way. Understanding their purchasing behavior will give you insights to their feelings.

Key metrics like this are critical to preventing the loss of at risk customers.

Keep at risk customers through satisfaction surveys

By understanding which of your customers are thinking of leaving, you can take the necessary steps to encourage them to continue to purchase from you and boost your customer retention. Acquiring a new customer can cost five times as much as retaining an existing one, so increasing your profits depends on ensuring at risk customers don’t stop being customers.

Conducting customer satisfaction surveys with at risk customers tells you exactly what their problems are. They’ll allow you to determine any issues people are having with your company before they turn into big problems. If you catch the issue early and show the customer that you are taking the steps to rectify it, then the odds are that they will stay with you.

Listen to your customers

It’s not enough to identify your at risk customers using key metrics and then determine what the issue is using customer satisfaction surveys. You have to actually listen to what they tell you and act on it. If you receive feedback from an unsatisfied customer, you’ll have the opportunity to contact them by phone and make things right by addressing their concerns. Nothing tells customers you care like giving them your time and attention.

If you listen to your at risk customers and make the effort to fix what they said was wrong, then they won’t only no longer be at risk, but they typically become your most loyal customers going forward. At Winsby, we use phone surveys to pinpoint issues so you can take action and retain those customers. We see a return on investment in excess of 1,000x for these surveys, due to increased customer retention and more transactions.

If you want to avoid losing current customers, we can help. Contact Winsby to start looking at key metrics and conducting customer satisfaction surveys today!

Categories

CUSTOMER RETENTION
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION SURVEYS
EMAIL MARKETING
EQUIPMENT DEALER MARKETING
KEY METRICS
Key Metrics Reports
LEAD GENERATION
LIST EXPANSION
MARKET RESEARCH
MARKETING FOR MANUFACTURERS
MARKETING STRATEGY
ONLINE PRESENCE
REPUTATION MANAGEMENT
SEO
SOCIAL MEDIA
WEBSITES

purchasefrequency2

The Most Important Strategy for Boosting Purchase Frequency

Purchase frequency is one of the most critical metrics for your business and for evaluating the behavior of your customers. It measures the number of times a customer buys products or services from your company within a set time period. Although what defines a “good” purchase frequency will change based on your industry and market, generally the higher it is the better it is.

The best way to increase the purchase frequency of your customers is by sending them high quality emails on a consistent basis.

Why should you care about purchase frequency?

There are several reasons why purchase frequency is a crucial metric to track for your business. First, it can let you know that your customers are starting to buy from a competitor instead of you, if their purchase frequency begins to drop off. Second, this metric provides valuable insights about the buying behavior of your prospects, too.

After you have a baseline for your customers’ typical purchase frequency, as well as knowledge about when and how much your customers buy, you can modify your marketing efforts to fit their existing purchasing habits and trends.

Email marketing benefits: Boost purchase frequency

One of the primary email marketing benefits is that you can greatly improve the purchase frequency of your customers. At Winsby, we’ve found that the customers on our clients’ email lists purchase about two to three more times than those who aren’t on the list. The reason for these great results is that emails will remind customers of all the services and products that you offer and, if the emails are put together effectively, customers will be encouraged to purchase again. The clients we send emails for have an average return on investment of about 4,300%.

How to use emails most effectively

Emails will only achieve a higher purchase frequency if they are done the right way. They have to look and read professionally, they need to be compelling to encourage the reader to take action, and they need a CTA that links to your website or landing page. In other words, they have to make it easy for your prospects and customers to act on the information you put in the email.

The best part of sending marketing emails is that you can tailor specific messaging to different segments of your list who have a downward trending purchase frequency. Include a deal or special to push them to buy from you again and increase their purchase frequency back to a healthy number.

Plus, your sales people can see which customers or prospects are more or less engaged by viewing who opens and clicks on the emails. If they follow up with those who are consistently viewing your messages, then they can possibly move them to purchase again.

Want to take advantage of email marketing benefits and increase the purchase frequency of your customers? Winsby can help.

Categories

CUSTOMER RETENTION
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION SURVEYS
EMAIL MARKETING
EQUIPMENT DEALER MARKETING
KEY METRICS
Key Metrics Reports
LEAD GENERATION
LIST EXPANSION
MARKET RESEARCH
MARKETING FOR MANUFACTURERS
MARKETING STRATEGY
ONLINE PRESENCE
REPUTATION MANAGEMENT
SEO
SOCIAL MEDIA
WEBSITES

PurchaseFrequency

Why Purchase Frequency Matters

Purchase frequency is a crucial metric to consider when evaluating the behavior of your current customers and your marketing efforts. It tracks the number of times a customer buys products or services from a company within a given period.

There is no such thing as a “one-size-fits-all” number for purchase frequency, but generally, higher is better. And the best way to boost the number of times a customer buys from you is by sending them emails on a consistent basis.

Why is purchase frequency important?

Here are several reasons why you should track purchase frequency:

  • Reviewing your purchase frequency can reveal whether your customers are buying from your competitors. For example, if their purchase frequency is dropping off, it may indicate that the customer is purchasing from one of your competitors instead of you.
  • Understanding purchase frequency can also help you identify areas of your business where you need to improve. For example, if the purchase frequency of a loyal customer goes down, you know there is an issue that must be addressed. A decreasing purchase frequency is also an opportunity for you to reach out to customers to see if something is wrong. Unprompted, most customers won’t tell you if your company has come up short in some way, but their purchase actions indicate that something is wrong.
  • Purchase frequency also gives you valuable information about the purchasing behavior of your target audience. Once you have a baseline of a normal purchase frequency, as well as knowledge about when and how much your customers typically buy, you can tailor your marketing efforts around existing purchasing habits and trends.

Improve purchase frequency by sending emails

Distributing emails to customers and prospects increase how often customers purchase from you and remind customers of everything you offer. In fact, customers on your email list will purchase two to three times more often than customers who are not receiving emails, as long as the emails are distributed consistently and provide helpful information. Our clients we send emails for have an average return on investment of about 4,300%.

  • Emails done right provide your customers information on all your products, services, and industry best practices to help establish your company as a trustworthy expert in the field and show everything you offer.
  • Emails remind your customers about your company and encourage them to purchase from you instead of a competitor who may not be sending them emails.
  • Your sales reps can learn who is more or less engaged by seeing who opens and clicks on your emails. They can then follow up with anyone who is consistently looking at them and move them to purchase, if they haven’t.
  • You can tailor specific emails to segments of your list who have a downward trending purchase frequency. Include a deal or special to push them to buy from you again and increase their purchase frequency back to a healthy number.

Purchase frequency is an essential metric that every business should track. A number that’s too low might indicate that a customer is buying from a competitor or leaning toward leaving your company. Emails are the best method for increasing how often a customer buys your products and services and will ensure that number stays in the healthy range and consistently grows.

Categories

CUSTOMER RETENTION
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION SURVEYS
EMAIL MARKETING
EQUIPMENT DEALER MARKETING
KEY METRICS
Key Metrics Reports
LEAD GENERATION
LIST EXPANSION
MARKET RESEARCH
MARKETING FOR MANUFACTURERS
MARKETING STRATEGY
ONLINE PRESENCE
REPUTATION MANAGEMENT
SEO
SOCIAL MEDIA
WEBSITES

Types 01

What Are Your Customers Buying from You?

One of the most important sales analytics and key metrics that you should pay attention to is types of purchases. To better understand your business and your customers, you have to take a close look at what they are buying from you the most, if you offer multiple products or services.

By analyzing the types of purchases your customers make from you, you can determine which products sell the most, how often they sell, and which branches or departments sell more or less of specific products.

Why are types of purchases important?

This metric is critical to understanding your business and correctly allocating your limited resources. Your best selling products will typically generate a higher return on investment for your ad campaigns than less popular products, and they’ll receive greater traction in sales programs. Knowing what your highest selling products are is important so that you can enhance your marketing and advertising strategies specifically for that product. That way, you can avoid wasting money advertising too much for less popular products that yield a smaller ROI.

Measuring the types of purchases your customers make will help you understand your customers better in addition to your own business. For example, you will be able to see which branches or departments sell more or less of specific products. If a product is selling great at every branch but one, then there may be an issue specific to that branch.

Most importantly, by leveraging the information about which product sells the most, you can create complementary or similar products, and rest assured that you will make more sales.

How to use the types of purchases metric: Focus your marketing strategy

Once you understand why types of purchases your customers are making from you, how should you go about actually using that information? Here are several ways:

  • Once you determine your most frequently bought products, put them front and center in your advertising materials and on your website’s homepage. Let your target audience know the features and benefits of this product on social media — show it off wherever you can to introduce more people to it.
  • Email marketing is one of the most powerful tools at your disposal as a business owner. And there’s no better way to make your marketing emails more effective than including your top selling products as the main feature and then complementary or supporting products as additional features.
  • Use your top selling product to bring customers into your business, build their trust, and then push your other products. You know they like your best selling product, so use that to get your foot in the door and then become their exclusive source for more products in your industry.

Conclusion

Types of purchases is a critical sales metric to track, measure, analyze, and put to use. It gives you key insights into your business and how it operates, as well as into the behavior and needs of your customers.

Categories

CUSTOMER RETENTION
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION SURVEYS
EMAIL MARKETING
EQUIPMENT DEALER MARKETING
KEY METRICS
Key Metrics Reports
LEAD GENERATION
LIST EXPANSION
MARKET RESEARCH
MARKETING FOR MANUFACTURERS
MARKETING STRATEGY
ONLINE PRESENCE
REPUTATION MANAGEMENT
SEO
SOCIAL MEDIA
WEBSITES

bp analytics trends 1

Analytics Are the Pulse of Your Business

For many companies, analytics take a back seat when it comes to their marketing and customer service efforts. Many don’t take the time to analyze the data, or they look at superficial metrics instead of the ones that really matter. They often fail to see the correlation between customer retention, marketing efforts and sales results. At Winsby we see a close correlation and think it’s important to measure constantly how your business is being impacted by your sales, marketing and customer service.

At the end of the day, the only metrics that really matter are the number of customers, how many are new, your customer retention rate, your average order, how frequently your customers purchase, and whether the trends are going up consistently on a rolling twelve month basis. Looking at sales on this basis takes the seasonality out of any business.

Customer Retention
Acquiring new customers is typically far more expensive than selling to your existing customers. Keep your churn rate low for better long term success. New customers usually start out with smaller purchases to test you, so it’s always easier to keep doing a good job with existing customers than it is to ramp up new customers.

New customers take three to five years before they can be categorized as a stable customer. Stable customers purchase six to ten times more and are ten times more likely to be retained year after year.

To understand what your customers are doing and when you are in danger of losing them, you have to look at key metrics. These numbers include how often they are purchasing from you, when was their last purchase, the range of products and services purchased, and their customer satisfaction score that indicates they are on their way out or will be retained.

At Winsby, we’ve developed an online portal where all your invoices are stored and updated monthly, so you can see trends and identify problems, then fix them. Our graphs show you 12 month rolling averages for revenue, number of invoices, and number of customers. Your sales representatives can go online and see the last time each of their customers purchased and how often so they can call them when they haven’t purchased in a usual pattern.

If you are gaining more customers than you are losing, your 12-month rolling number of customers will be increasing. This metric is also important to monitor to make sure your customer retention is high.

Revenue Trends
Closely related to customer retention are revenue trends. What we’ve found at Winsby is that new customers within the past year constitute 51% of the customers a business has, 23% of transactions, and 25% of revenue. However, 61% of those do not purchase again over the next 12 months.

For the same company, people who purchase in the second year represent 20% of customers, 21% of transactions, and 17% of revenue. If you retain these customers in the second year then they more than double how often they purchase for rentals, service, and parts. During the third and subsequent years the frequency in purchasing more than doubles again for all categories.

Customers who have been doing business with a company for three or more years represent 58% of the company’s revenue, 56% of the number of transactions, but only 29% of the number of customers. If you retain these customers in the third year and subsequent years revenue increases more than triple in all categories, except equipment where revenue nearly doubles.

Why is understanding these numbers important? Because they are ultimately what should be driving your sales team and your marketing efforts. Each year that you hold on to a customer makes them more and more lucrative to your business. That means you need to stay on top of them with sales calls, surveys, and targeted emails encouraging them to purchase from you again.

We Track Key Metrics
Tracking and analyzing your key metrics is what gives your sales team the tools they need to be successful. They don’t know who to follow up with, unless they are alerted with the last time their accounts purchased. Many of them have a routine for following up with customers based on how often they should be purchasing. But how often are they purchasing?

At Winsby, we have a report online that tells your sales team exactly that information, organized by a sales rep. We also track the number of accounts you have and what categories of products and services they are buying. We’ve developed a Growth Score that predicts what will happen, based on your history, assuming things don’t change. That’s why we build our key metrics portal for easy access by our clients and include key metrics in our Core Program.

Analytics are essential for understanding what is working and what isn’t working. Without the data, spending money on marketing is like shutting your eyes and just hoping it does some good. By measuring and making use of key metrics, you can be in the driver’s seat for growing your business.

Categories

CUSTOMER RETENTION
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION SURVEYS
EMAIL MARKETING
EQUIPMENT DEALER MARKETING
KEY METRICS
Key Metrics Reports
LEAD GENERATION
LIST EXPANSION
MARKET RESEARCH
MARKETING FOR MANUFACTURERS
MARKETING STRATEGY
ONLINE PRESENCE
REPUTATION MANAGEMENT
SEO
SOCIAL MEDIA
WEBSITES

bp Equipment Dealers 1

Best Practices for Equipment Dealers

Managing expectations at every point of contact with your customers creates an opportunity to create a raving fan or lose the customer. In fact, the number one reason for losing customers is mismanaged expectations. Here are the primary reasons that customers never return:

  1. Mismanaged expectations
  2. Change of personnel—yours or theirs
  3. Lack of consistent contact—via email or phone
  4. Distance from branch

Price is the primary reason only for price buyers. The percentage of price buyers is now less than 10% of all customers.

Golden Rules

  1. Never make your problem the customer’s problem; they have enough problems of their own, which is why they are calling you.
  2. Always say YES! Then, the question becomes when and how much.
  3. Be proactive, and contact the customer before they contact you.
  4. Manage to customer expectations. Customers often don’t remember what you told them; they only remember what they expected to happen.

Online Reputation

For businesses with online ratings that are less than 3 Stars, 60% of prospects and customers do not contact you.

  • Manage your Google 5 Star Ratings through a customer online reputation management system. We recommend Cleartail.com for this service.
  • Manage your Glassdoor and Indeed ratings through an employer online reputation management system. We recommend 5starmoods.com.
  • Insure your local listings are consistent and correct across the internet. We recommend Cleartail’s local listings management system at Cleartail.com.

Make sure that every touch point at your company is consistent, positive and professional.

These touchpoints include:

  • Inbound and outbound phone calls
  • Texts and emails
  • Marketing and sales materials
  • Interaction with customer service representatives
  • Interaction with sales reps
  • Sales and service proposals
  • Sales presentations, demos and proposals
  • Products and services, from purchase through delivery
  • Service trucks and vehicles
  • Facilities, both outside and inside, look at what the customer sees
  • Equipment delivery and pick up
  • Complaint management
  • Billing

Best Practices

Phone

Answer the phone in 3 rings or less

  • The call drop off rate is 20% per ring after 3 rings.
  • Customer frustration is exponential for each additional ring and each additional unanswered call.
  • Only 2% to 4% leave a voice mail.
  • If the customer has three bad phone experiences, they will start calling a competitor.
  • Proactive calling (text & email) reduces inbound status calls by 60% to 80%.
  • If you cannot deliver parts, service, rental, or equipment as expected or as promised, call the customer. Most customers expect delivery and service on the same day or within 24 hours.

Assume that they will never remember what you promised, if the promise is outside of their expectations.

Say Yes for parts, and over 92% of the time you will be right!
Identify your company, yourself and your department. Understand their problem. Collect contact information and solve their problem: take the order, schedule the service, schedule the rental.

Parts Department

Have a form fill that is always on the Parts Counter—Paper or Screen—to collect the data easily for the Master List/CRM.

Follow the StataPile.com call pattern and score 100% on your employee score

  • Introduce yourself: Company, Branch, Department, Your Name
  • Understand the problem before solving the problem—Listen!
  • Before solving the problem, collect the contact information, including caller name, company, phone, email and shipping/delivery address, even if you know the contact, and add it to your database.

Solve the problem while the customer is on the phone. Identify and sell the part. It takes over three calls to reach someone on a call back with < 50% ever being reached

  • Always ask what else, make a related parts, service, rental suggestion and/or offer a current promotion this will increase the average revenue per order by >20%.
  • Offer service and rental: Do you need help installing the part? Do you need a rental while your machine is down?
  • Answer the phone and say Yes. 92% of the time parts are delivered in 48 hours. Only 8% of the parts order calls require a call back. By saying yes, the conversation becomes when and how much. Less than 20% of the customers ask for the price

Each parts order is worth approximately $1,000. Take the order while the customer is on the phone. Each additional order you take moves the customer toward becoming a Stable Account that generates 5X to 10X more annual revenue.

The top 25% of equipment dealers on StataPile.com:

  • Close >94% of their in-stock parts calls
  • Close >76% of their not in-stock parts orders
  • Are able to find the part >90% of the time. Not found parts is <10% of the orders.
  • Have < 5% parts status calls from customers who have already placed an order
  • Have parts employee scores >85%

Move to chat to allow the handling of more customer requests especially during the peak hours. A chat function provides an easy way to keep your customers informed. We recommend the ChatR.com app for peak calling, reminders and updates 24hrs/day.

Service Department

Follow the Artificial Intelligence StataPile.com optimal call pattern, and score 100% on your employee score.

  • Introduce yourself: Your company, branch, department, and name.
  • Understand the problem before solving the problem—listen!
  • Before solving the problem collect the contact information: Caller name, company, phone, email and machine location address for service/pickup
  • Schedule the service while the customer is on the phone.
  • Always ask what else you need to know—directions, other problems, parts and equipment required etc.
  • Offer rental: Do you need a rental while your machine is down?
  • Each service order is worth approximately $1,000 to $8,000. Take the order, and schedule the service while the customer is on the phone.

The top 25% of equipment dealers on StataPile.com:

  • Close >85% of their service calls
  • Have <5% service status calls from customers who have already scheduled service
  • Have service employee scores >85%

Move to a chat function so you can handle more customer requests, especially during the peak hours and provide an easy way to keep the customer informed. We recommend the ChatR.com app.

Inspect with photos 100% of the machines serviced before starting the work. This step will allow for a discussion of what will be done now, identifies other problems, and avoids misunderstandings about the scope of the work. It also ensures the opportunity to schedule the next service date with the remaining work following an inspection.

Once the service is complete, schedule the next service or inspection on a specific date. Call/text/email reminders to confirm the next service date. With this approach, you will keep your shop and field service utilization high. It also provides a reservoir to keep your shop and field service fully utilized during a slowdown.

Photos are worth 1,000 words take photos before and after and include in proposals and billings

Rental Department

Follow the StataPile.com call pattern and score 100% on your employee score.

  • Introduce yourself, including company, branch, rental department, your name.
  • Never answer the question, “Do you have this machine for rent?” If you say no the customer will hang up and call the next number on his list. Instead, understand the job before offering the equipment to rent.
  • Ask questions and listen. Asking questions allows you to offer equipment and attachments you have available that can do the job, rather than just respond to the customer’s request. This approach will greatly increase your equipment rental utilization.
  • Before solving the problem, collect the contact information: caller name, company, phone, email and machine location address for service or pickup.
  • Schedule the rental while the customer is on the phone.
  • Always ask what else you should know—directions, other problems, parts and other equipment required.
  • Offer service and pickup if the rental unit is being used to replace a machine out of service.
  • Each rental order is worth on average $1,000 to $7,000 per day. Take the order and schedule the rental while the customer is on the phone.

The top 25% of equipment dealers on StataPile.com:

  • Close >85% of their rental calls if they have a machine available and if not suggest a equal or better alternative.
  • Have <5% rental status calls from customers who have already scheduled a rental
  • Have rental employee scores >90%

Move to chat to allow the handling of more customer requests especially during the peak hours and provide an easy way to keep the customer informed. We recommend the ChatR.com app.

Whole goods—New and Used Equipment Sales

Follow the StataPile.com call pattern, and score 100% on your employee score:

  • Introduce yourself: company, branch, sales department, your name.
  • Understand the equipment use before solving the problem. Ask questions and listen!
  • Before recommending equipment, collect the contact information: caller name, company, phone, email and machine location address.
  • Schedule the demo while the customer is on the phone.
  • Always offer three alternatives: Good, Better, Best in proposals—new, used, and a smaller or larger machine.
  • Offer a demo especially for used at your yard. ChatR.com works for scheduling used equipment demos.
  • Each equipment order is worth on average $25,000 to $100,000. Schedule the appointment or demo while the customer is on the phone.
  • Always have all calls transferred to the sales rep. Have the sales rep’s primary phone as the company’s direct number with a transfer to a sales rep’s cell. Do not let these calls go to voice mail. Over 80% will call their next equipment dealer choice if they don’t reach someone the first time.

The top 25% of equipment dealers on StataPile.com:

  • Close <30% of their equipment purchase calls that result in a meeting, demo and/or proposal.
  • Have >5% new equipment status calls from customers who have already purchased
  • Have sales employee scores <90%

Over 75% of customers asking about the purchase of a machine will purchase from someone in the next 12 months.

  • Move to auto chat to allow the handling calls to sales on the main line to avoid voicemail.
  • Connect your office phone to your cell phone to avoid missed calls, and we recommend that you use ChatR.com for online chats.

Sales Funnel

Collect contact information, including emails, for all prospects and customers.

Monitor online prospect and customer activity to identify leads who are actively interested in purchasing. Over 94% of all customers and prospects search the web before they call you. Customer emails and URLs are required to identify sales lead opportunities.

We recommend a web tagging program, Cleartail.com, so you can receive alerts on website visitors.

New customers purchase parts, service, rental and used equipment, but they rarely purchase new equipment. Focus on engaging new customers with the full range products and service offered by your dealership.

95% of new equipment is purchased by customers who have been doing business with your dealership for more than 3 years.

Treat your customers as you would want to be treated.

Categories

CUSTOMER RETENTION
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION SURVEYS
EMAIL MARKETING
EQUIPMENT DEALER MARKETING
KEY METRICS
Key Metrics Reports
LEAD GENERATION
LIST EXPANSION
MARKET RESEARCH
MARKETING FOR MANUFACTURERS
MARKETING STRATEGY
ONLINE PRESENCE
REPUTATION MANAGEMENT
SEO
SOCIAL MEDIA
WEBSITES