When Rahul started Knight's Watch Consulting, his focus was simple: deliver good work and keep clients happy. He offered one-time consulting projects, monthly advisory retainers and usage-based support for growing clients. Business was steady, and customers came in consistently.
But over time, Rahul noticed a troubling pattern.
Customers weren't always leaving because they were unhappy. Some missed payments. Some pause services during the slow period. Others forget to update expired cards. A few cancelled, planning to return, but never did.
His inbox started filling with conversations like:

"Sorry, our card expired. Can we sort this out next week?"
"We didn't realise the payment failed."
"We've cancelled for now, maybe we'll restart later."
Each of these moments felt small on its own. But together, they resulted in lost revenue and opportunities.
Rahul realised something important: Customer retention isn't just about preventing cancellations, it's about responding at the right moment, in the right way.
That's where Zoho Billing helped him spot risks early, reduce friction, and maintain customer relationships, even when payments failed or subscriptions paused.
Retention Mechanisms in Zoho Billing
Most customers don't leave because they want to. They leave because something gets in the way. It may be a missed payment, short-term budget constraints or lack of follow-up.
Zoho Billing is designed to catch these moments early and turn them into retention opportunities rather than silent drop-offs.
Staying Ahead with Payment Reminders
One of the simplest yet most effective retention tools is timely communication.
With automated payment reminders, Zoho Billing helps customers stay informed before and after invoice due dates. These reminders gently nudge customers instead of surprising them with service disruptions.
For Rahul, this meant fewer awkward follow-up emails and fewer "We miss this" conversations. Customers appreciated the clarity, and the payment became more predictable.
Reminders help by:
Reducing unintentional payment delays.
Setting clear expectations.
Preventing minor misses from becoming churn triggers.
Sometimes, a reminder is all it takes to keep a customer on track.
Recovering Payment with Dunning Management
Not every payment goes through, and that's normal. Card expires. Bank limits change. Payment failed for reasons outside your control. What matters is how you respond when they do.
Instead of a single failed charge leading to cancellation, businesses can set up multiple retries, both for attempts and notifications.
This structured approach helps:
Recover revenue automatically.
Give customers time to fix the payment issue.
Avoid immediate service interruptions.
In Zoho Billing, you can set up notifications and dunning automation not only for a subscription but also for other subscriptions. You can refer to our earlier post to know more.
For Rahul, dunning turned many "about-to-cancel" subscriptions into successfully recovered ones without any manual effort from his team.
Adding a Safety Net with Secondary Payment Method
Even with reminders and retries, a single payment method can still be a point of failure. Despite the option to notify customers when their cards are expiring, some customers fail to update them on time, which can lead to involuntary churn.
Zoho Billing allows customers to add a backup payment method that serves as a fallback if the primary method fails. This small change had a significant impact on Rahul.
Instead of subscriptions lapsing, payments often succeeded via the backup method without the customer needing to intervene.
This reduces:
Accidental service interruptions.
Frustration caused by an expired card.
Revenue loss due to avoidable failure.
Sometimes, retention is just about removing friction that customers didn't even realise existed.
Using Free Plan as a Retention Safety Net
In the previous post, we explored how a Free plan helps manage trials and failed payments. From a retention perspective, it plays a different role. Instead of cancelling a subscription outright when all payment attempt fails, Zoho Billing allows businesses to move customers to a limited-access Free Plan.
For Rahul, this changes the tone of difficult moments:
Customers weren't locked out suddenly.
Access was reduced, not removed.
The relationship stayed alive.
Customers could continue engaging at a basic level and upgrade back when ready. This approach preserved goodwill and created more chances for recovery.
Identifying Risk Early with Reports
Retention isn't just reactive; it's proactive. Zoho Billing provides reports that help businesses spot trouble before customers disappear.
Under Risk Report
The Under Risk Report highlights customers at risk of churn due to payment failures or delayed renewals. Instead of discovering churn after it happened, Rahul's team could now reach out early with context.
"We noticed there were a few payment issues. Can we help?"
This early awareness made conversations more supportive and less transactional.
Lost Opportunities Report
Not every lost customer is gone forever. The Lost Opportunities Report provides visibility into subscriptions for which the payment failed on the first attempt. For Rahul, this became a list of customers worth revisiting.Some came back months later, Others needed a different plan or pricing model. Having this visibility turned past losses into future conversations.
This report, along with Abandon Cart Tracking, provides businesses offering both self- and sales-driven onboarding with a clear understanding of where and when a customer slips out.
Making It Easy to Come Back with Reactivations
One of the biggest retention wins came from subscription reactivation. In-term reactivation, as explained in our previous post, makes a significant difference in your customer offering. Customers who cancelled earlier often return with:
"Can we restart from where we left off?
With Zoho Billing, Rahul could:
Reactivate subscriptions mid-term
Resume without creating a new invoice.
Keep the original billing cycle intact.
Even better, reactivation could be enabled directly in the Customer Portal, allowing customers to resume services on their own without emails, calls, or delays.
This removed friction at the exact moment when customers were ready to return.
What Retention Strategies Does to Business?
Retention is a process and not a single feature. Over time, Rahul learned that customers don't slip away all at once. They drift away through small, preventable moments.
Zoho Billing addresses those moments by:
Reminding customers before issues arise.
Recovering failed payments automatically.
Offering a flexible fallback instead of a hard stop.
Highlighting risk early through reporting
Making it easy for returning customers.
Each of these features works together to ensure customers don't slip away.
Zoho Billing helps businesses build these safety nets into their billing operations, ensuring minor disruptions don't become permanent losses. By staying proactive, flexible, and customer-friendly, companies can turn potential churn into lasting relationships and revenue.

Up Next: Common Mistakes in Customer Handling