We often talk about retention as something we strive for — in business, in relationships, in habits. We want people to stick around. We want to stay consistent. We want lasting impact.
But here’s the truth: Retention isn’t just about keeping attention — it’s about honoring it.
That distinction is everything.
It’s one I’ve come to realize more deeply while writing The Productivity Diet, where I define productiveness as the active partnership between intention and attention. In other words:
- Intention is what you plan to do.
- Attention is what you actually give yourself to.
- Retention is what naturally follows when those two stay in sync — consistently.
It’s not a flashy formula. It’s a rhythm.
Retention Is Not a Performance. It’s a Practice.
Retention is often treated like a performance — something to be optimized, tracked, hacked. But that approach tends to reduce people to data points and gratitude to a strategy.
The truth is, people stay — whether they’re clients, community members, or even collaborators — when they feel seen, appreciated, and genuinely valued. And the only way to create that feeling reliably is through consistent, intentional attention.
This is where appreciation marketing comes in — not as a gimmick, but as a grounding practice.
And yes, appreciation can be strategic — but it must also be sincere, specific, and sustainable.
Three Simple Practices for Sustainable Retention
If you want to turn appreciation into a rhythm — one that leads to real retention — here are three tactics that don’t require a massive time investment or a flashy CRM system:
1. Create Micro-Moments of Gratitude
These are small, unprompted gestures — a quick voice memo, a comment on someone’s latest post that goes beyond “great job,” a handwritten note that shows you actually noticed something meaningful.
They don’t scale easily. But they land powerfully. Because retention doesn’t scale — it roots.
2. Use Attention Anchors
Just like I recommend in The Productivity Diet, build repeatable structures that keep you grounded. One example? A Friday “Thank You Flow” — a short weekly ritual where you reach out to 2–3 people with no agenda other than to show appreciation.
You can even tie this to your existing time theming or daily rhythm — make “Friday Follow-Up” a thing.
3. Make Appreciation a Filter, Not Just a Follow-Up
Too often, we treat appreciation as something we remember to do after the fact — when a deal is done or a milestone is hit. What if we flipped that?
What if appreciation was the lens we used to approach every conversation, collaboration, or campaign — even down to how we price our work? I shared more on that in this post about why I price my stuff the way I do, which is rooted in value… not just valuation.
Retention then becomes not a reactive effort, but a natural outcome of how we show up from the beginning.
Retention Lives Where Intention and Attention Align
The most powerful marketing isn’t loud — it’s lasting.
And it lasts when we align our attention with our intention and back it with appreciation that doesn’t ask for anything in return.
That’s the kind of productiveness I’m interested in — not just what gets done, but what endures.
And if you’re reading this thinking, “Okay, but how do I make it stick?” — that’s where structure helps. Not rigid systems, but rhythmic ones. The kind that leave room for humanity, not just habit.
Remember: Retention isn’t a tactic. It’s a trust signal. It’s what happens when we choose to care — consistently, quietly, and on purpose.