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Keeping customers in a crummy economy

Companies that rely on consumer dollars are pulling out the stops in an effort to keep their customers coming around while the economy slips into dark times. They're turning to incentives - from freebies to discounts - to retain their customers.

Even before the US economic outlook darkened as the gravity of the financial crisis came into focus, companies started to get more aggressive in their attempts to hold onto old customers and attract new ones. Telephone companies' offers for two months of free service and reduced rates, discounted gym membership renewals, and generous gift cards from high-end department stores all underscore a pervasive fear on Main Street: With the uncertainty around the credit seize-up, consumers may be digging in for a long hibernation.

In upstate New York and other rural communities it serves, Frontier Communications is even sending sales representatives door-to-door to persuade customers to lock in another year's worth of service at a discount rate. Those visits are effective where customers are often two-income families with busy lives, and many of those drop-ins are scheduled in advance, says Brigid Smith, a company spokeswoman. "We're sensitive to what this financial crisis means to them and we have to communicate with them," she says.

It's not only because of the gloomier economic picture that Frontier and other telephone companies are trying harder to hold onto customers. Ongoing attrition of users to more advanced technologies, like wireless, and poaching by cable companies have also called for more aggressive retention efforts. Verizon Communications estimates an average loss of 8% to 9% of its customer landlines a year over the past few years, most of them going exclusively wireless or switching to service from a voice over IP (VoIP) or cable company, says spokesman Bill Kule. The barrage of competition from cable operators was a key impetus for Verizon's fiber-optic service, called FiOS, which bundles voice, high-speed Internet, and television service together into a triple-play package, which had been connected in more than 7 million households by the end of June.

Verizon has long been pitching promotional offers at "customers on the precipice of leaving," says Kule, but those became more urgent after the company saw bigger than expected departures of both broadband and voice customers during the second quarter. Since July, it's been offering all three services for the price of two to keep customers thinking about switching and to win back residential and small business customers who have already left, says Kule. Verizon is also urging customers to sign up for at least a one-year plan, hoping it will help them stick, he adds.

Read the fulll article here.

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