Cave Bits by Mouseflow: Uncovering Website Analytics

From dropped calls to dropped tabs: how digital friction drives telecom churn, and what fixes actually keep customers

Mouseflow

The real reason customers leave your telecom brand isn’t always price or coverage—it’s the moment your app or website makes a simple task feel hard. We dive into the six drivers of churn and focus on the hidden killer: digital friction that chips away at trust, triggers support calls, and nudges people toward competitors. Along the way, we show how behavior analytics turns vague “drop-off” metrics into clear, fixable causes you can act on fast.

We break down the traditional pain points—network reliability, service quality, pricing pressure, and fresher competing offers—then zero in on two modern forces: the lack of personalization and confusing digital journeys. Expect tangible, field-tested examples. A European operator simplified an upgrade step with plain language and upfront fees and saw a 22% lift in completed upgrades. Another moved billing explanations higher on the page, added tight tooltips, and cut billing-related support calls by 18%. An MVNO flagged users revisiting the cancel page and launched targeted, history-aware offers that saved one in four high-risk customers.

The throughline is simple: retention is a UX strategy. When pages load fast, terms are clear, and options feel relevant, customers don’t need to call—reducing the 30% churn tied to poor service interactions—and they don’t feel the need to shop around. If you’re ready to replace guesswork with evidence, use heat maps, session replays, and friction scoring to watch where users hesitate and fix the source, not just the symptom. Subscribe for more practical deep dives, share this with a teammate who owns your digital journey, and leave a review with one question you want answered next.

Speaker:

Welcome to the deep dive. Today we're zeroing in on a, well, a really persistent headache for telecom companies. Customer churn. We're looking at why customers walk away and crucially, how the answer might not just be about faster networks, but uh really about their digital experience, you know, the website, the app.

Speaker 1:

It's a huge challenge, absolutely. Especially in places like Europe, Germany, the UK, the Nordics. These markets are packed. And churn rates, they're often floating between, say, 15 and 25 percent every year.

Speaker:

15 to 25 percent. That's potentially a quarter of your customers you need to replace constantly.

Speaker 1:

Year after year, it's relentless.

Speaker:

And the cost of doing that replacement is just, well, astronomical. Our sources show acquiring a new subscriber costs something like six to seven times more than just holding on to the ones you've got.

Speaker 1:

Exactly. So churn isn't just lost monthly income. It's this constant, massive drain on marketing, on sales efforts, and you know, it chips away at brand trust over time.

Speaker:

So we need to shift how we think about this.

Speaker 1:

I think so. We have to move past the sort of traditional reasons, oh, the price was wrong, or I had a dropped call. We need to focus on the newer friction points, the digital annoyances that really drive people mad today.

Speaker:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

Because if you can fix those little things in the online journey, you actually prevent the big expensive blow ups later, like calls to support or ultimately them leaving.

Speaker:

Right. Let's lay out the main battlegrounds then. Our sources point to six core reasons why customers churn in telecom. It seems like a mix of the old and the new problems.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. That's a good way to put it. The first few are probably familiar, but they definitely haven't disappeared. Number one is still right at the top. Network or service issues.

Speaker:

The basics.

Speaker 1:

The absolute basics. Slow data, patchy coverage, especially in crowded cities or, you know, rural spots, dropped calls. If the core service isn't reliable, well, nothing else really matters, does it?

Speaker:

No, that's table stakes. But number two, that hits the service interaction itself. And you mentioned that massive cost implication earlier.

Speaker 1:

Yes. Number two, poor customer service. This is a big one. Our sources suggest it's responsible for maybe 30% of all churn.

Speaker:

30%. Wow.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. It's customers just getting fed up with long waits on hold, agents who maybe don't have the answer, or that classic problem of having to explain your issue over and over again every time you talk to someone new or switch channels. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

Speaker:

That's incredibly frustrating.

Speaker 1:

It really is. And the advice here is pretty clear companies need to invest in smarter systems, better software that gives agents the info they need and makes the experience consistent. You know, whether you call, chat, or email, make it quicker, more decisive.

Speaker:

30% just from bad service interactions. That feels like low-hanging fruit almost. Something companies can fix. Okay, what about three and four? Those sound more like market pressures. They are.

Speaker 1:

Number three is non-competitive pricing. The market's always buzzing with discounts, isn't it? You've got constant pressure from the big rivals, but also critically from those smaller, nimbler players, the VNOs.

Speaker:

The mobile virtual network operators.

Speaker 1:

Right. They often run lean, maybe mostly digital operations, lower overheads. So even a small price difference, when it's time to renew your contract, that could be enough to make someone switch.

Speaker:

And number four ties into that, I guess. Keeping up with the Joneses.

Speaker 1:

Kind of, yeah. Number four is better offers from competitors. If your own plans and packages start to feel a bit stale if you aren't evolving, maybe bundling things people want now, like streaming services or better roaming deals, or even smart home tech, your offer starts to look old news compared to the competition.

Speaker:

Makes sense. Okay, so those are the more traditional areas. Maybe what about five and six? You said these are more the focus for today.

Speaker 1:

Exactly. These are the, let's call them the modern behavioral drivers. They're often harder to see on a spreadsheet until, well, until it's too late.

Speaker:

So number five touches on personalization. What's the expectation there?

Speaker 1:

Five is the lack of personalization. I mean, think about using Netflix or Amazon or Spotify. You expect it to know you, right? To give you relevant suggestions.

Speaker:

Yeah, absolutely.

Speaker 1:

Telecom users are starting to expect the same. Generic ads, offers that feel completely random, upgrade suggestions that don't match how you actually use your phone.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

It just doesn't land well. It feels, frankly, a bit lazy, like the company doesn't really know or care about you.

Speaker:

And that feeling, that sense of being ignored, if that's the emotional spark, then number six is maybe the practical thing that pushes them out the door.

Speaker 1:

Precisely. Number six is what I'd call the hidden killer. Confusing or frustrating digital experience. This is all about friction. Imagine it's late, you're on your phone trying to check your bill on some clunky portal. The navigation's a mess. Maybe a form keeps airing out, or the bill itself uses all this jargon you don't understand. When doing something simple like changing your payment details or figuring out a new charge becomes a struggle, that little annoyance, it shatters trust almost instantly.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker 1:

And that frustration, it directly increases the chance they'll start looking elsewhere.

Speaker:

And what's really important here from the sources is this idea that telecom isn't just seen as a utility anymore, like water or electricity. It's judged as a consumer experience, like any other app or website.

Speaker 1:

Exactly. The game has changed. People's expectations have been set by, you know, the best digital experiences out there. So when a customer interacts with your telecom brand online, maybe to manage their plan, add roaming, check usage, they expect it to be smooth, fast, easy.

Speaker:

They shouldn't have to call support for simple things.

Speaker 1:

They really shouldn't. If they hit a confusing menu or a page takes forever to load, that little seed of doubt gets planted. Hmm. If they can't even get their website right, how good is the actual network?

Speaker:

So every little digital snag, a button that's hard to find, slow loading, a weird error message, it's actually nudging that customer closer to leaving. Telcos aren't just competing on signal strength anymore.

Speaker 1:

Not at all. They're competing on the entire experience. And this is why, you know, traditional ways of measuring things often miss the real problem.

Speaker:

How so?

Speaker 1:

Well, traditional analytics might tell you what happened. For example, it might say 40% of users dropped off the checkout page. Or the bounce rate on this page is high. Okay, fine. But that's just a symptom.

Speaker:

It doesn't tell you why they dropped off.

Speaker 1:

Exactly. You need to know the why. And that's where behavior analytics comes in. We're talking about tools like uh heat maps, session replays, friction scoring, things that let you actually see the user's journey.

Speaker:

Like watching a recording of their screen.

Speaker 1:

Pretty much, yeah. You can see them hesitate, you can see where their mouse hovers, where they click, where they get stuck trying to find a link, or maybe scroll right past important info or keep failing to submit a form because of some bug. It shines a light on the cause of the problem.

Speaker:

Got it.

Speaker 1:

Which means you can fix it before that struggle turns into an angry call, or worse, a canceled subscription.

Speaker:

Okay, this makes it really strategic. Let's shift from understanding the friction to seeing how fixing it actually works. Can you give us some concrete examples, real use cases where optimizing that digital experience led to better retention?

Speaker 1:

Sure. Let's start with something pretty common. The process for upgrading your planner service. That's a moment you want to go smoothly, right?

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

High value for the company, but potentially high stress for the customer.

Speaker:

Definitely. So what was the issue for this European operator you mentioned?

Speaker 1:

Well, they noticed customers were starting the upgrade process, but then just abandoning it, dropping out right at step two, quite consistently.

Speaker:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

So they used behavior analytics to figure out why. And it wasn't the price, interestingly. It was uh confusing jargon on the page and a lack of clarity about extra fees or contract terms. Basically hidden friction was causing uncertainty. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

Speaker:

They could actually see people pausing, getting confused, and leaving. What did they do?

Speaker 1:

The fix was all about the user experience. They did a redesign of that specific part of the flow, simplified the language, made sure all the costs and conditions were right there up front, easy to understand, no surprises.

Speaker:

And the impact of fixing that one confusing step.

Speaker 1:

It was significant. They saw a 22% increase in people successfully completing the upgrade.

Speaker:

22%? That's huge.

Speaker 1:

It is. And it proves that customers will use digital channels for complex stuff if the experience is clear and trustworthy. That's direct revenue and retention, purely from making things less confusing.

Speaker:

That's really powerful. Okay, let's circle back to that massive 30% chunk of churn you said comes from poor customer service. If we can improve the digital side so people don't even need to call.

Speaker 1:

Exactly. That's the goal. You cut that risk right down. The second use case tackles billing pages, probably the biggest single reason people call support, right? Confusion over charges.

Speaker:

Oh, yeah, definitely.

Speaker 1:

So this operator saw lots of people looking at their bills online and then immediately clicking the help button or link. But when they used behavior analytics, they saw something interesting. Users weren't actually scrolling down far enough on the page.

Speaker:

So the answers were there, but hidden.

Speaker 1:

Basically, yes.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

The explanations for the charges were lower down. The people were giving up before they saw them. The design itself was creating a barrier.

Speaker:

So what was the fix? Sounds like it might be simple.

Speaker 1:

It was relatively simple, but strategically important. They moved the key charge breakdowns higher up on the page, made them more prominent. And they added little tooltips, you know, those little uh in info icons you hover over for instant explanations of specific line items.

Speaker:

Right. And the result of that design tweak.

Speaker 1:

Support calls specifically about billing confusion dropped by 18%.

Speaker:

18% fewer calls just from rearranging the page and adding tooltips. Correct.

Speaker 1:

And that's not just good for retention. Fewer frustrated customers. It's a huge efficiency gain, too. Fewer calls mean lower support costs, and the agents you do have can focus on more complex problems, not just explaining the bill. You've basically eliminated unnecessary calls by making the digital info make sense.

Speaker:

That's a brilliant example of being proactive, fixing the friction before it even becomes a support issue. Do we have an example of touching people right as they're about to leave?

Speaker 1:

We do. The third case involves an MVNO, one of those digital first operators. They used behavior analytics in a more predictive way. They looked for a specific pattern. Users who visited the cancel service page multiple times, but didn't actually go through with it, they hesitated.

Speaker:

Ah, so that hesitation, that repeat visit is a really strong signal they're seriously thinking about turning, right? High intent.

Speaker 1:

Extremely high intent.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

So the MVNO flagged these users automatically. And instead of just waiting, they triggered proactive retention, offers tailored discounts or plan adjustments based on that specific customer's history sent directly to those individuals.

Speaker:

They jumped in before the final click. Smart. Did it work?

Speaker 1:

It really did.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

They managed to save one out of every four of those high-risk customers from actually leaving.

Speaker:

One in four. Wow.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. And when you remember that getting a new customer costs six or seven times more than keeping one, well, the return on that targeted proactive effort is massive.

Speaker:

That just underscores the value of really mapping out that whole customer journey, doesn't it? Using tools like heat maps, session replays, actually seeing where people get stuck. The aim is to spot that confusion, that frustration, not as abstract data, but as, you know, a real person struggling online and fix it before it leads to cancellation.

Speaker 1:

Absolutely. That's the core idea. Churn often starts when people feel frustrated, confused, maybe ignored, and those feelings. They very often begin with a bad online experience trying to do something simple. Fixing the digital side isn't just nice to have, it's strategically vital for keeping customers happy and loyal.

Speaker:

So wrapping up this deep dive, it seems crystal clear. Keeping telecom customers isn't just about having the best network or shaving a bit off the price anymore. It's about aggressively hunting down and eliminating those small, everyday digital frustrations. The confusion, the feeling of being ignored, it often starts right there on that awkward website or confusing app screen. Digital clarity seems to be the key.

Speaker 1:

And that point brings us perfectly to a final thought for you, the listener. We heard earlier that a huge chunk, maybe 30%, of churn comes directly from bad customer service calls. So the question is if you make the digital experience really good, if you clarify those bills, simplify those upgrade forms, fix those login issues so good that customers don't need to call support in the first place, how much of that 30% churn risk could you potentially wipe out just through smart, intuitive digital design?

Speaker:

It really makes you think about the true cost, doesn't it? The cost of digital friction versus the cost of constantly handling preventable support calls. Fixing the journey saves the customer relationship and potentially saves a lot on operational costs. Definitely something worth exploring further behavior analytics, customer journey mapping. That's all we have time for on this deep dive.