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Why Your 'First-Generation' Customers Are the Most Important Your first generation of customers may have a stronger inherent sense of loyalty to your brand. Make sure you earn it.

Edited by Dan Bova

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Every entrepreneur's dream is to build a business and scale it to ridiculous heights. Google now sees more than 3.5 billion searches every day, but the company started with almost zero. Yet, while the idea of having billions of customers is appealing, most of us also realize it's unrealistic.

Related: Customer Retention Is No Accident -- How Small Business Can Get It Right

With luck, you can reasonably aim for hundreds, thousands or -- if you're especially lucky and smart -- millions of customers, depending on what it is you're selling. And it's those thousands or millions of customers that businesses have in mind when they think about customer service and retention.

However, there's a flaw in this approach; and it leads many startups down a dangerous path. In reality, those thousands or millions of customers aren't nearly as important as the handful you start out with. Though that handful pales in comparison to your eventual sheer numbers, they are your "first generation of customers" and by far the most important.

You need to treat them right if you want to succeed.

Proof of the model

Despite all the great resources available for writing an effective business plan, everything you've researched, brainstormed and hashed out is still just on paper. Your market research might suggest that you'll kick up sufficient demand and that users will have a use for your product or service for years, but what real evidence do you have?

Your first generation of customers will be the ones putting your model to the test, while you still have the flexibility to make changes, as necessary. If you find it nearly impossible to bring on or retain customers with your current plan, you'll know you need to go back to the drawing board.

Working out the kinks

Let's assume your model is solid and you manage to attract a small group of clients to serve as your first generation. Again, no matter how extensively you've planned all this, you are going to see flaws in your products and services.

These early customers will be pivotal in helping you uncover and address those flaws. So, observe them closely; see how they use your products and services, and gather as much feedback as possible. This "beta test" of your business will help you learn which processes need further development or refinement, and allow you to build a more stable enterprise.

Customer loyalty

Your first generation of customers may also have a stronger inherent sense of loyalty to your brand. Consider a scenario in which clients join up with you during your early stages, then stay with you as you scale on multiple orders of magnitude.

You'll probably lock them in at lower pricing and do them favors, and they'll be so used to doing business with you that they'll never want to leave. Essentially, if you can keep your early clients through the rough initial stages, you'll have a good shot at keeping them for life.

Related: Why the First Call From a Customer Is the Most Important

Testimonials and brand evangelism

One of the biggest influencers in consumer decision making is social proof. Basically, if people see that others have used and enjoy a particular product or service, they'll be more likely to buy it. Yet, when you start out, you'll probably have a zero amount of this "social proof," and that will weigh heavily on your ability to attract new customers.

Once you have thousands, this won't be an issue. The pivotal stage, then, is scoring those first few dozen testimonials and brand evangelists. And the only ones capable of stepping into these roles will be members of your first generation of customers.

Decreasing volatility

We may live in a "golden age" of entrepreneurship, but that doesn't mean business ownership is any less volatile. During the first few months (and, sometimes, years) of your business, you'll be in a state of heavy flux -- your products, team members, organizational structure and brand will all likely change. As a result, you can't depend on these constructs to keep your customers around for you; you have to prioritize these people to a position that's above these items, and connect with them on a human level.

A more positive customer experience

It doesn't take much to give your first generation of customers a better overall experience, or to use them as guinea pigs for your business model. In fact, you can accomplish most of these goals by simply paying attention.

Listen to them when they have feedback. Call them up to make sure things are going well. If something isn't going well, fix it. Go above and beyond the call of duty to make sure they're satisfied. These are basic principles that can help you impress and retain that all-too important first generation.

Related: How I Won My First Big Customer

From there, scaling won't always be easy, but it will be relatively straightforward. With your first generation taken care of, you'll have a suitable blueprint to use on your subsequent generations of customers. They'll likely respond the same way your first generation did, and if you're successful, you can repeat these processes for bigger and bigger circles, until your startup is no longer a startup.

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