wiki/knowledge/client-management/ahs-retention-strategy.md Layer 2 article 641 words Updated: 2026-02-20
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AHS Retention Strategy — Service Recovery & Proactive Communication

Overview

Advanced Health & Safety (AHS) is a $3,000/mo client at elevated churn risk following a cluster of service failures in February 2026. The retention strategy centers on proactive, transparent communication — sending a comprehensive status email to demonstrate active work and re-establish confidence before the client disengages.

This situation also carries competitive urgency: AHS is a former Egan client, and Egan is actively poaching accounts.


The Problem

Service Failures

Two visible failures triggered a client complaint in February 2026:

  1. Delayed video delivery — A testimonial video shot in October 2025 was not delivered to the client until February 2026 (4+ months).
  2. Wrong-day event email — A promotional email was sent on the day of the event, with copy stating the event was "tomorrow."

Perceived Inactivity

Beyond the acute failures, a review of account activity revealed a broader gap:

Competitive Risk

AHS is a former Egan client. With Egan actively attempting to reclaim accounts, any period of perceived inactivity or dissatisfaction is a direct opening for a competitor pitch.


Retention Strategy

Core Principle

The client doesn't know what they don't know. Bill's frustration stems largely from a communication gap, not necessarily a delivery gap. The immediate fix is to make all active work visible.

Action: Proactive Status Email to Bill

Send a comprehensive project status email from Asymmetric (Karly, cc: Mark and Sebastian) covering all active work:

Project Status
Video testimonial Completed; sent to client for review
Thank you cards (Google review campaign) Designed; currently at printer
Social content Ongoing
FAQ / service page copy In progress
Google Ads Running; ~$42 cost per conversion

The email should acknowledge the event email error directly (brief, no over-explanation) and pivot to demonstrating forward momentum.

Owner: Karly
CC: Mark, Sebastian

Secondary Action: Mark's Follow-Up Email

Mark to send a separate email to Bill covering:
- Team review of all active work
- Update on the app project (paused; Mark to re-engage)

Owner: Mark


Root Cause & Process Lessons

Account Handoff Risk

AHS was transitioned from Karly to Sebastian during Karly's leave. The transition created a visibility gap — work continued but client communication cadence degraded. This is a known risk with single-AM account ownership.

Mitigation: The [1] (two account managers per client) directly addresses this failure mode by ensuring continuity of client relationship even when one AM is unavailable.

GHL Form Reliability

A related operational issue: a GHL form tied to a Reynolds client broke silently, causing lead loss that went undetected. AHS's landing page experience was also flagged as low-quality. Forms and landing pages built in GoHighLevel are difficult to monitor and debug.

Decision: All forms to use Gravity Forms on the website; all landing pages to be built on the website. GHL restricted to email marketing only. See [2].


Account Context