Turning passive customers into brand advocates
Imagine if every customer you worked with was not only satisfied but actively talking about you to their network – sending you more business without you spending another cent on advertising. That’s the outcome of a deliberate shift – moving clients from passive recipients of your service to genuine brand advocates.
This doesn’t require a massive marketing budget or complicated loyalty program. Advocacy grows through clear strategy, smart timing and human touches that algorithms can’t replicate.
5 steps to creating a brand advocate
Step 1 – Identify your advocacy seeds
Your best advocates are often hiding in plain sight. Look beyond one-off compliments and track behavioural patterns: repeat purchases, consistent on-time payments or clients who casually refer others without being asked.
Businesses that grow advocacy systematically measure and track – there is no guessing involved. A basic client history tool can reveal surprising insights: the customer who never negotiates price, the one who always shares your posts or the one whose feedback emails brim with detail. These are not only happy clients, but they are also future ambassadors.
Step 2 – Engage them at the moment of delight
There is a narrow, but powerful window where a customer is at their most vocal: immediately after a standout experience. This is the time to thank them, invite them to share their story or offer a referral opportunity.
Referral programs gain strength when they are relationship-focused. Targeted perks, such as early access to products, exclusive previews or a donation to a cause create deeper bonds than one-size-fits-all discounts. In fact, research on how loyalty programs help small businesses engage better with customers shows that the strongest results come when rewards feel personal rather than transactional.
Step 3 – Make rewards unforgettable
The psychology of loyalty is simple: people remember how you made them feel. A generic voucher fades quickly, but a handwritten note, a surprise upgrade or an invitation to a behind-the-scenes event becomes a story they share.
Research shows loyalty programs shift behaviour: 60% of members changed how they spend after joining. Top-quartile programs see customers 10% more likely to shop, 14 per cent more likely to buy more often and 12% more likely to recommend, with retention up to four times higher than lower-performing schemes. That’s a clear opportunity to design rewards that strengthen connection and spark advocacy.
Step 4 – Use predictive loyalty
Small businesses can outsmart larger competitors by acting on insights quickly. If you know a customer always books services in September, reach out in August with a tailored message. If you know their anniversary or birthday, a timely gesture builds goodwill. This is foresight that makes people feel recognised, not processed.
Building long-term client relationships starts with making customers feel genuinely known. The strongest loyalty grows from that connection, with insight serving as the tool that makes it possible at scale.
Step 5 – Turn touchpoints into trust points
Brand advocacy compounds through consistency. The courtesy call after a project is completed, the follow-up message that feels personal, the note tucked into a delivery – these are the small details that leave lasting impressions.
Every interaction is an opportunity to reinforce why the customer chose you. Over time, these consistent acts build clients who will not only return, but will also become advocates for your business.
The advocacy growth loop
When you know who your best customers are, engage them at peak satisfaction, reward them in ways that matter, anticipate their needs and turn every interaction into a trust point, you can build more than repeat business. You create an advocacy engine.
Brand advocates are your most effective marketing force as they are often the difference between steady business and unstoppable growth.
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Elise Balsillie is Head of Thryv Australia.
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