This technology is also used to predict outcomes, such as churn rates and the potential revenue a business could earn from a particular segment of customers.
Meet Google Analytics 4: Google’s vision for the future of analytics|George Nguyen|October 14, 2020|Search Engine Land
Zuora, which makes a business out of selling subscription technology to different sectors, released its Subscription Economy Index across 1,000 clients last week and found that the pandemic has not increased churn rates for publishers.
‘A good job of retaining’: Publishers see subscription resilience as evidence of sticky coronavirus-cohorts grows|Lucinda Southern|September 30, 2020|Digiday
It has more than a million subscribers and an impressively low churn rate.
Peloton races to the future, but it’s still no tech company|Adam Lashinsky|September 11, 2020|Fortune
That constant churn can make it difficult to figure out when a new card is really a big jump over what came before it.
Nvidia’s monstrous new graphics cards crank up the power while dropping their prices|Stan Horaczek|September 9, 2020|Popular Science
This way, you can improve anything from increasing viewership on your blog to reducing customer churn.
Guide: How to effectively incorporate customer journey mapping into your marketing strategy|Connie Benton|July 14, 2020|Search Engine Watch
Academics these days operate under enormous pressure to churn out high volumes of these publications.
How Social Scientists, and the Rest of Us, Got Seduced By a Good Story|Megan McArdle|April 30, 2013|DAILY BEAST
The clock is relentless as they churn out dish after dish, being judged on creativity, taste, and presentation.
By the end of the film, you will remember Hushpuppy … and just might churn out a few tears on her behalf.
Oscar Nominations Shockers: Ben Affleck, Leonardo DiCaprio, Kathryn Bigelow & More|Marlow Stern|January 10, 2013|DAILY BEAST
By the time I sat down to fill in the blanks, it was a grind to churn out what I already knew would happen.
Michelle Gagnon’s How I Write Interview: When I Was a Russian Supper-Club Dancer|Noah Charney|September 5, 2012|DAILY BEAST
This year, the U.S. Mint will churn out 4.3 billion of them, more than twice the annual output of all other coins combined.
Pennywise|David Frum|April 3, 2012|DAILY BEAST
I went to sleep and jerked the churn over on top of me, and consequently got a whipping.
Memories of Childhood's Slavery Days|Annie L. Burton
In summer try to churn early in the morning, as fewer flies are swarming then, and the butter can be made much firmer.
Housekeeping in Old Virginia|Marion Cabell Tyree
How welcome a sound was the churn of the engine as it came flying up the road and turned into the driveway!
Cloudy Jewel|Grace Livingston Hill
The landlady's tongue clattering sourly in the halls like a churn dasher dabbing in buttermilk.
The Trimmed Lamp|O. Henry
And if ever you lend your churn or your dishes to your neighbour, she'll be able to wish away your butter after that.
Visions and Beliefs in the West of Ireland, Second Series|Lady Gregory
British Dictionary definitions for churn
churn
/ (tʃɜːn) /
noun
Britisha large container for milk
a vessel or machine in which cream or whole milk is vigorously agitated to produce butter
any similar device
the number of customers who switch from one supplier to another
verb
to stir or agitate (milk or cream) in order to make butter
to make (butter) by this process
(sometimes foll by up)to move or cause to move with agitationideas churned in his head
(of a bank, broker, etc) to encourage an investor or policyholder to change investments, endowment policies, etc, to increase commissions at the client's expense
(of a government) to pay benefits to a wide category of people and claw it back by taxation from the well off
to promote the turnover of existing subscribers leasing, and new subscribers joining, a cable television system or mobile phone company
Derived forms of churn
churner, noun
Word Origin for churn
Old English ciern; related to Old Norse kjarni, Middle Low German kerne churn, German dialect Kern cream