Switching triggers: what makes a customer leave an incumbent
Few people switch tools because of a feature chart. A specific event tips them over. Find that trigger and you know not just what to say — but when.
Nobody switches for no reason
Inertia is powerful. People stay with a tool they half-like for years because switching is work — migrating data, learning a new interface, retraining a team. A marginally better competitor almost never overcomes that on its own.
What overcomes it is a trigger: a specific event that breaks the inertia and makes the cost of staying suddenly feel higher than the cost of moving. If you want to win an incumbent’s customers, the trigger matters more than your feature list.
The common trigger events
Triggers cluster into a recognisable set. A price hike that breaks the “worth it” calculation. An outage or data loss that breaks trust. An acquisition that signals decline. A removed or paywalled feature people depended on. A support experience that finally went too far.
Each is a moment, not a gradual dissatisfaction — and people describe these moments vividly in public, because they’re annoyed enough to write about them.
The trigger types to watch for
Sort what you find into the events that actually move people:
- Price hike — “they doubled the price and I was out”
- Reliability break — an outage, a bug, or lost data that ended the trust
- Acquisition or decline — “ever since they got bought, it’s gone downhill”
- Feature removed or paywalled — the thing they relied on, taken away
- Final-straw support — one bad experience after a series of small ones
Why triggers beat features
Knowing the trigger changes what you do, not just what you know. If price hikes are the dominant trigger for a competitor’s churn, your message isn’t “we have more features” — it’s “switching costs less than you think” aimed at the moment their renewal lands.
Read enough switching stories and the triggers rank themselves by frequency. You learn not only why people leave the incumbent, but which moment to be standing in front of them when they do.
Find where the leader is weak
Switching triggers are half the picture — the other half is the standing complaints that prime people to leave.
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