Most businesses focus heavily on acquisition, pricing, and product improvements to grow revenue. But one of the most powerful — and overlooked — levers for increasing customer lifetime value is much simpler:
How you get paid.
Across the Nordics, invoice-based payments are still widely used. Not because they are effective — but because they are familiar.
The problem?
Invoices introduce friction at every step of the customer relationship.
Payments are delayed.
Reminders are needed.
Customers forget, postpone, or drop off entirely.
And over time, that friction quietly reduces retention — and lifetime value.
Invoice-based models create built-in instability:
This isn’t just an operational issue.
It’s a revenue issue.
Because every missed or delayed payment increases the risk of losing the customer — even when the intent to stay is there.
Automated recurring payments — especially direct debit — remove this friction entirely. Instead of asking customers to act every time, the payment simply happens.
The impact is consistent and measurable:
And importantly:
Nordic consumers already trust and prefer direct debit.
The issue isn’t adoption. It’s activation.
Many businesses assume that moving customers from invoices to direct debit is difficult. In reality, the biggest barrier isn’t technical.
It’s experience design.
Long forms, unclear steps, and manual processes reduce conversion and create hesitation.
If the sign-up feels complicated, customers delay — or don’t complete it at all.
The most successful transitions share one common principle:
Make it effortless.
A high-performing direct debit onboarding flow typically looks like this:
Customers understand immediately why they should switch:
fewer missed payments, no manual steps, a smoother experience.
A simple, intuitive flow — completed in seconds, not minutes — removes hesitation and increases activation rates.
Customers know the payment is set up correctly, with full transparency and control.
That’s it.
No complexity. No unnecessary steps.
Just a clean transition from manual to automated payments.
Moving from invoices to direct debit might seem like an operational improvement.
In reality, it’s a growth strategy.
Because when payments become reliable and effortless:
And all of that compounds into higher lifetime value.
If you’re still relying on invoices as your primary payment method, you’re leaving retention — and revenue — on the table.
The companies that win going forward will:
Because growth isn’t just about winning customers.
It’s about keeping them.
Stop chasing payments. Start automating them.
That’s how you increase lifetime value.
That’s how you #killbill.