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john jantsch (1)Overview

In step 6 of the 7 Steps to Small Business Marketing Success, John Jantsch makes the case for the part of marketing most founders quietly neglect: the customers they already have. The typical business pours close to 90 percent of its budget into winning new customers and only about 10 percent into keeping, reactivating, and growing the existing ones. Yet a returning customer who buys again and refers others is often worth three to ten times a one-time buyer. That gap is the opportunity this episode sets out to close.

John walks through what he calls the customer experience engine, built on four intentional components: onboarding, repeat engagement, a referral system, and reactivation. He explains why the back half of the Marketing Hourglass, the repeat and refer stages, holds the highest-ROI marketing available to most small businesses, with practical examples that range from seasonal maintenance plans that turn one-time projects into recurring revenue, to reactivation campaigns that bring dormant customers back quickly.

This episode is for small business owners, marketers, and consultants who want more growth from customer retention rather than constantly buying it. If your marketing runs smoothly right up until the sale and then goes quiet, this one gives you a framework for keeping the relationship, and the revenue, going.

Host Bio

John Jantsch is the founder of Duct Tape Marketing and the creator of the Marketing Hourglass and the Strategy First™ approach to small business strategy. He is the author of several books on marketing for small business, including Duct Tape Marketing and The Ultimate Marketing Engine, and he hosts the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast, where he shares practical, real-world strategies for owners, marketers, and consultants. Through Duct Tape Marketing and its network of certified consultants, John helps small businesses install a complete Marketing Operating System.

Key Takeaways

  • Most founders spend around 90 percent of their budget acquiring new customers and only about 10 percent keeping and growing the ones they have. The math rarely favors that split.
  • A returning customer who buys again and refers others is often worth three to ten times a one-time buyer.
  • The highest-ROI marketing sits in the back half of the Marketing Hourglass, in the repeat and refer stages most businesses skip.
  • Treat onboarding as marketing. The first 90 days set the relationship, so build a structured sequence with a clear goal for each touch point.
  • Do not wait for customers to remember to come back. Use maintenance plans, seasonal triggers, anniversary touch points, and simple check-ins to drive repeat engagement.
  • Build a systematic referral approach that asks at moments of truth, when a customer is visibly happy with a result.
  • Reactivation is often the quickest win available. A single campaign to dormant past customers can bring a meaningful share back, sometimes 15 to 20 percent.
  • A strong customer experience produces reviews, case studies, and results-based stories that AI cannot fake, and those assets feed your new-customer marketing.
  • Start by auditing one number: the percentage of your budget going toward customers you already have.

Great Moments

  • [00:01] John introduces step six of the series and opens with the budget question every founder should ask.
  • [02:18] Why a returning, referring customer is worth three to ten times a one-time buyer, and why the back half of the Marketing Hourglass holds the most value.
  • [04:36] Onboarding as marketing: designing the first 90 days, plus repeat engagement through maintenance plans and seasonal triggers.
  • [07:02] Reactivation as the quickest win, and how a campaign to dormant customers can convert fast.
  • [08:21] The application effect: turning happy customers into reviews, case studies, and content that strengthens acquisition.
  • [10:43] John’s closing challenge, plus where to get the full ebook and a consultation.

Memorable Quotes

  • “A returning customer is probably worth three to ten times what a new one’s worth.”
  • “The back half of the hourglass has the highest ROI marketing available to most small businesses.”
  • “The marketing is orchestrated to a T until they say yes, and then it falls apart.”
  • “AI will reward you for clients that are willing to talk about your business.”
  • “What percentage of your marketing budget goes towards customers you already have?”

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