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Increasing the
Lifetime Value of a Customer



     Alan D. Campbell
  Ph.D., CPA, CMA, CFP®
Learning Objectives
1. Explain how to
   calculate the annual
   profitability of a
   customer
2. Explain why
   customers are
   assets




                               2
Learning Objectives
3. Explain how to
   calculate the lifetime
   value of a customer
4. Explain 11 strategies
   for increasing the
   lifetime value of a
   customer




                                3
Learning Objective 1
Explain how
to calculate
the annual
profitability of
a customer


                           4
Customer Profitability Analysis
• Use an activity-based
  costing (ABC) system
  with the customer as the
  cost object
• Accumulate the costs of
  serving customers in
  activity center cost pools
• Determine the measure
  used to assign costs from
  the activity center cost
  pools to the customers

                                   5
Assigning Costs to Customers
• Calculate the activity center
  cost driver rate
• Multiply the activity center
  cost driver rate by the
  activities used by each
  customer to determine the
  costs from each activity
  center assigned to the
  customer
• Repeat for all activity center
  cost pools

                                   6
Calculate the
           Customer’s Profitability
• Subtract cost of goods
  sold from sales revenue
  to determine gross profit
• Subtract all direct selling
  and administrative costs,
  such as commissions
• Subtract all costs
  assigned to the customer
  from the activity center
  cost pools to determine
  the customer’s
  profitability

                                      7
Compare Profits
          and Sales Revenue
• Compare the customer’s
  profitability to the
  customer’s sales revenue
• Sometimes the
  customers who generate
  large amounts of sales
  revenue may be
  unprofitable because of
  the demands they place
  on the company (Kanthal
  (A) Case)
                              8
Example
• Able Manufacturing Company (a fictitious
  company) sells three products. The three
  products, their selling prices, and their
  cost to purchase are as follows:

                    Price     Cost

• Gadget            $1,000    $480 (48%)
• Gizmo             $1,200    $648 (54%)
• Super gizmo       $1,500    $840 (56%)      9
Other Information
• The company keeps the gadget and the
  gizmo in stock
• The company does not carry super gizmos
  in stock
• Sales commissions are 20% of sales




                                        10
Activity Cost Pools
• Able Manufacturing Company has
  determined that it should divide its cost of
  serving its customers into four cost pools:
  – Order processing—gadgets and gizmos
  – Order processing—super gizmos
  – Delivery
  – Customer service (before and after the sale)


                                                   11
Order Processing
     for Gadgets and Gizmos
• Order processing costs for gadgets and
  gizmos for the year were $500,000
• The company processed 5,000 orders
• The cost to process one order for a gadget or
  gizmo is $100 ($500,000 / 5,000 orders)




                                              12
Order Processing
        for Super Gizmos
• Order processing costs for the super gizmo
  were $100,000 for the year
• The company processed 100 orders for super
  gizmos
• The cost to process one order for a super
  gizmo is $1,000 ($100,000 / 100 orders)




                                           13
Delivery
• The company incurred $300,000 in delivery
  costs for the year
• The company made 1,500 deliveries during
  the year
• The cost per delivery was $200 ($300,000 /
  1,500 deliveries)




                                               14
Customer Service
• The company incurred $480,000 in customer
  service costs during the year
• The company spent 8,000 hours in providing
  customer service
• The cost per customer service hour was $60
  ($480,000 / 8,000 hours)




                                               15
Activities for Customer A
• In a typical year, Customer A purchases
    – 700 gadgets
    – 750 gizmos
    – 50 super gizmos
•   Number of orders of gadgets and gizmos: 12
•   Number of orders for super gizmos: 2
•   Number of deliveries: 14 (12 + 2)
•   Number of customer service hours: 4
                                            16
Sales Revenue and
    Gross Profit for Customer A
• Sales revenue              $1,675,000
• Less: cost of goods sold     (864,000)
• Gross profit               $ 811,000




                                           17
Profit for Customer A
• Gross profit              $811,000
• Less: sales commissions   (335,000)
• Less: order processing
   – Gadgets and gizmos       (1,200)
   – Super gizmos             (2,000)
• Less: delivery              (2,800)
• Less: customer service        (240)
• Profit                    $469,760

                                        18
Activities for Customer B
• In a typical year, Customer B purchases
  – 600 gadgets
  – 700 gizmos
  – 200 super gizmos
  – Number of orders for gadgets and gizmos: 60
  – Number of orders for super gizmos: 30
  – Number of deliveries: 90 (60 + 30)
  – Number of customer service hours: 145

                                              19
Sales Revenue and
    Gross Profit for Customer B
• Sales revenue              $1,740,000
• Less: cost of goods sold    (909,600)
• Gross profit                $830,400




                                          20
Profit for Customer B
• Gross profit              $830,400
• Less: sales commissions   (348,000)
• Less: order processing
   – Gadgets and gizmos       (6,000)
   – Super gizmos            (30,000)
• Less: delivery             (18,000)
• Less: customer service      (8,700)
• Profit                    $419,700

                                        21
Comparison of
      Customer A and Customer B
                            A                B
•   Sales revenue       $1,675,000   $1,740,000
•   Gross profit           811,000      830,400
•   Commissions            335,000      348,000
•   SG&A expenses            6,240       62,700
•   Profit                469,760       419,700

• Although Customer B generated more sales
  revenue and more gross profit, Customer A is
  more profitable because the cost to serve
  Customer A was less
                                                 22
Learning Objective 2
Explain why
customers are
assets




                          23
Customers Are Assets
• Customers do not
  appear on a balance
  sheet prepared
  according to GAAP
• But customers are the
  most important asset
  of a business
• A customer should
  provide a business
  with positive cash
  flows for years
                              24
Acquiring Customers
• Focus on making a sale
  to acquire a customer
  rather than acquiring a
  customer to make a sale
• Be willing to earn little, if
  any, profit on the initial
  sale
• View customer
  acquisition costs as an
  investment amortized
  over the expected life of
  the customer relationship       25
Use Risk Reversal to
        Acquire More Customers
• Provide a reasonably
  long warranty period
• Offer to pay shipping
  costs both ways for
  dissatisfied customers
• Benefits from risk
  reversal usually exceed
  the costs


                                 26
Businesses Lose Customers
• Yet, businesses
  typically lose about 10
  to 30 percent of their
  customers every year
  (The Loyalty Effect,
  p. 4)
• When a business
  loses a profitable
  customer, it loses a
  valuable asset

                              27
What a Business Loses
     When It Loses a Customer
• Cash flows from the
  customer’s business
• Referrals to other
  customers
• Insight from the
  customer about how
  the business can
  improve its products
  and services

                                28
Customer Retention Correlated
    with Productivity and Profits
• Higher customer
  retention rates are
  correlated with
  – higher productivity
  – higher profits
    (The Loyalty Effect,
    pp. 12-13)
• A customer retention
  program should be an
  integral part of a
  company’s business
  strategy
                                    29
Learning Objective 3
Explain how
to calculate
the lifetime
value of a
customer


                          30
Lifetime Value of a Customer
• Present value of all future
  cash flows expected to
  be received because of
  the customer relationship
• Must include
   –   Acquisition cost
   –   Retention cost
   –   Retention rate
   –   Margin (sales revenue
       minus expenses) each
       year (can change)
                                 31
Lifetime Value of a Customer
Should include future
cash flows received from
other customers the
company would not have
acquired without the
referrals from the
customer




                               32
Lifetime Value of a Customer
• Sum of all net future cash
  flows for each year of
  estimated life of the
  customer relationship
  multiplied by the
  estimated retention rate
• Discounted to present
  value
• Less: acquisition cost

                                 33
Lifetime Value of a Customer
• If the retention rate is
  constant, then LVC =
  Margin x (retention rate /
  1 + discount rate –
  retention rate)
• Lifetime value is
  approximately equal to 1
  to 4.5 times annual
  margin (Managing
  Customers as
  Investments)
                                 34
Learning Objective 4
Explain 11
strategies for
increasing the
lifetime value
of a customer


                          35
11 Strategies for Increasing the
     Lifetime Value of a Customer
1. Increase the
   frequency of
   purchase
2. Increase the sales
   amount per purchase
3. Increase the retention
   rate



                                       36
11 Strategies for Increasing the
   Lifetime Value of a Customer
4. Add more products
   or services to the
   product or service
   line and promote
   them to current
   customers
5. Implement an active
   referral and leads
   program
6. Implement an online
   affiliate program
                                     37
11 Strategies for Increasing the
    Lifetime Value of a Customer
7. Avoid making
   customers unhappy,
   especially over relatively
   small things
8. Show appreciation to
   profitable customers
9. Provide additional items
   to the customer that
   provide value to the
   customer but that cost
   the company little or
   nothing

                                      38
11 Strategies for Increasing the
    Lifetime Value of a Customer
10. Convert unprofitable
    customers into
    profitable customers
11. Use activity-based
    management (ABM)
    to reduce non-value-
    added costs of
    serving the customer


                                      39
1. Increase the
        Frequency of Purchase
• Create and maintain a
  customer database
• Sell products and
  services a customer
  will need to buy often
• Use customer
  rewards programs
• Give bounceback
  coupons

                                40
Increase Frequency of Purchase
    by Regular Communications
• Communicate
  regularly with
  customers
  –   Email
  –   Newsletters
  –   Catalogs
  –   Coupons
• Do not communicate
  too often so as not to
  be annoying
                                  41
2. Increase the Sales
          Amount Per Purchase
• Use suggestive
  selling “Do you want
  fries with that?”
• Better “Do you want
  onion rings or fries
  with that?”
  – Alternate of choice
    close
  – Mention the more
    profitable of the two
    last

                                  42
2. Increase the Sales
         Amount Per Purchase
• Accept credit cards
  and PayPal
• Sell on credit




                                 43
3. Increase the Retention Rate
A 5% increase in
customer retention
rates will yield
between a 25% to
100% increase in
profits across a wide
range of industries.
(The Loyalty Effect,
pp. 13, 33)

                                 44
Increase Retention by
     Excellent Customer Service
• Do not hire or retain
  employees who think
  they work for the
  “sales prevention”
  department
• Train customer
  service
  representatives to be
  positive and helpful

                                  45
Increase Retention by
       Regular Communications
• Communicate
  regularly with
  customers
  – Email
  – Newsletters
  – Catalogs
• But not too often
• Ask customers what
  they want

                                46
4. Add More Products or Services
• The easiest customers to
  whom a company can sell
  its products are its
  existing customers
• As a company adds more
  products and services to
  its product line, its
  customers can increase
  how much they purchase
  from the company and
  thereby increase their
  lifetime value
                                    47
Customers: Existing vs. New
According to Chet
Holmes, the cost of
acquiring a new
customer is six times
greater than selling an
additional product or
service to an existing
customer. (The Ultimate
Sales Machine, p. 209)

                              48
5. Implement an Active
     Referral and Leads Program
• Referral – when a
  customer refers a
  potential customer to
  the business
• Lead – when a
  customers refers the
  business to a
  potential customer
• Referrals are usually
  better than leads

                                  49
Referrals: Intentions vs. Results
• When asked, a
  number of customers
  may say that they are
  willing to refer the
  business to other
  customers
• But many of them do
  not actually follow
  through and make a
  referral
                                       50
Actively Encourage More Referrals
• Ask customers to refer the
  business to other potential
  customers
• Give customers
  something tangible to give
  to the potential customer
  such as
   – Magnets
   – Pens
   – Business cards
• Include the company’s
  Web site
                                 51
Increase the Referrals
             and Leads Rate
• Track referrals and
  leads
• Calculate the referrals
  and leads rate
• Reward customers
  who provide referrals
  and leads



                                  52
Increase the Conversion Rate
       of Referrals and Leads
• The company must
  make a strong effort
  to convert the
  potential customer to
  a customer
• Be patient and do not
  alienate the customer
  who made the referral
  or lead

                                  53
Referred Customers
• Calculate the profitability
  of referred customers for
  the first year
• Calculate the lifetime
  value of referred
  customers
• Assess the referrals
  program and make
  changes to increase the
  lifetime value of referred
  customers

                                  54
6. Implement an
           Online Affiliate Program
• Sell products and/or
  services online
• Purchase software that
  will run an affiliate
  program and pay
  commissions to affiliates
• Affiliates place
  advertisements or
  otherwise refer people
  to the company’s Web
  site with a code
                                      55
Customers Become Affiliates
• Customers can become
  affiliates
• A customer can earn a
  commission when the
  customer refers someone
  who makes a purchase
  from the company
• The company’s sales
  increase and the
  customer/affiliate’s lifetime
  value increases
                                      56
7. Avoid Making Customers
  Unhappy, Especially Over Small
              Items
• The customer may not
  always be right but be
  very careful not to anger
  customers unnecessarily
• Unhappy customers may
  not come back for a long
  time, if ever
• Is it worth losing
  potentially large future
  sales over a small
  problem?
                                   57
Unhappy Customers Inform Others
• Unhappy customers can
  tell their friends and
  associates bad things
  about the business
• Unhappy customers can
  inform a large number of
  potential customers
  about the perceived bad
  treatment using online
  social media and bulletin
  boards
                              58
8. Provide Additional Low Cost or
     No Cost Items to the Customer
•    Customers appreciate
     additional valuable
     products that a
     company gives them
•    Receiving free gifts
     helps the customer
     relationship
•    For example, a
     company may be able
     to obtain private label
     rights (PLR) to e-books,
     articles, and reports
     and allow customers to
     download them free of
     charge
                                        59
9. Convert Unprofitable Customers
    into Profitable Customers
• Increase the minimum
  order size
• Make the ordering
  process more efficient
• Convert in-person
  and telephone orders
  to online orders



                                60
Regular Orders Can
   Increase Customer Profitability
• Encourage customers
  to order regularly
• Consider continuity
  programs where an
  order is generated
  automatically every
  month and charged to
  a credit card


                                     61
An Unprofitable Customer
       Can Be a Loss Leader
• An unprofitable
  customer can be a
  loss leader if the
  unprofitable customer
  refers profitable
  customers to the
  business
• Fire unprofitable
  customers only as a
  last resort
                                 62
10. Use ABM to Reduce the Cost of
      Serving the Customer
•   Use activity-based
    management (ABM) to
    determine the activities used
    to serve the customer and
    the cost of each activity
•   Classify the activities as
    value-added activities or
    non-value-added activities
•   Seek to change the
    processes to reduce or
    eliminate the non-value-
    added activities and thereby
    reduce the non-value-added
    costs                           63
Summary
• Use activity-based costing to
  calculate the annual
  profitability of customers
• View customers as assets
  and customer acquisition
  costs as an investment
• Implement programs to retain
  customers
• Use the 11 strategies to
  increase the lifetime value of
  a customer

                                   64
Conclusion
• Customers are assets
• When the value of assets
  increase and liabilities
  remain constant, then the
  value of stockholders’
  equity necessarily
  increases
• Therefore, increasing the
  lifetime value of every
  customer leads to greater
  shareholder value
                              65
Appendix

Additional Resources
  for Further Study
Books
1. Raving Fans: A Revolutionary Approach
   to Customer Service by Kenneth
   Blanchard and Sheldon M. Bowles. New
   York: William Morrow and Company,
   1993.
2. Return on Customer: Creating Maximum
   Value from Your Scarcest Resource by
   Don Peppers and Martha Rogers, New
   York: Currency Doubleday, 2005.

                                       67
Books
3. Managing Customers as Investments: The
   Strategic Value of Customers in the Long Run
   by Sunil Gupta and Donald R. Lehmann,
   Upper Saddle River, NJ: Wharton School
   Publishing, 2005.
4. Managing Customers for Profit: Strategies to
   Increase Profits and Build Loyalty by V.
   Kumar, Upper Saddle River, NJ: Wharton
   School Publishing, 2008.

                                                  68
Books
5. The Loyalty Effect: The Hidden Force
   Behind Growth, Profits, and Lasting
   Value by Frederick F. Reichheld, Boston:
   Harvard Business School Press, 1996.
6. The Ultimate Sales Machine:
   Turbocharge Your Business with
   Relentless Focus on 12 Key Strategies
   by Chet Holmes, New York: Portfolio,
   2007.

                                          69
Books
7. How to Win Customers and Keep Them
   for Life by Michael LeBoueuf, New York:
   Berkley Books, 1987.
8. Customers for Life: How to Turn That
   Onetime Buyer into a Lifetime Customer
   by Carl Sewell and Paul B. Brown, New
   York: Pocket Books, 1998.


                                         70
Articles
1. “Generational Revenue Analysis,” by
   Alan D. Campbell, The CPA Journal,
   February 2001.
2. “Managing Customer Profitability,” by
   Marc J. Epstein, Michael Friedl, and
   Kristi Yuthas, Journal of Accountancy,
   December 2008.


                                            71
Articles
3. “Getting the Most Out of All Your
   Customers,” by Jacquelyn S. Thomas,
   Werner Reinartz, and V. Kumar, Harvard
   Business Review, July 1, 2004.
4. “Managing Customers for Profits (Not
   Just Sales),” by Benson P. Shapiro, V.
   Kasturi Rangan, Rowland T. Moriarity,
   Jr., and Elliott B. Ross, Harvard
   Business Review, September 1, 1987.

                                        72
Articles
5. “The Right Way to Manage Unprofitable
   Customers,” by Vikas Mittal, Matthew
   Sarkees, and Feisal Murshed, Harvard
   Business Review, April 1, 2008.
6. “Realize Your Customers’ Full Profit
   Potential,” by Alan W.H. Grant and
   Leonard A. Schlesinger, Harvard
   Business Review, September 1, 1995.

                                           73
Cases
1. Kanthal (A) by Robert S. Kaplan, Harvard
   Business Publishing, 1989.
2. Kanthal (B) by Robert S. Kaplan, Harvard
   Business Publishing, 1989.
3. Dakota Office Products by Robert S. Kaplan,
   Harvard Business Publishing, 2001.
4. Great Dakota Bank: Online Banking, by
   Frances X. Frei, Youngme Moon, and Hanna
   Rodriguez Farrar, Harvard Business
   Publishing, 2002.

                                                 74
Web Site Tool
The following Web site from the Harvard
Business School has a calculator for
estimating customer lifetime value:

http://hbsp.harvard.edu/multimedia/flashtools/c




                                          75

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Increasing the Lifetime Value of a Customer

  • 1. Increasing the Lifetime Value of a Customer Alan D. Campbell Ph.D., CPA, CMA, CFP®
  • 2. Learning Objectives 1. Explain how to calculate the annual profitability of a customer 2. Explain why customers are assets 2
  • 3. Learning Objectives 3. Explain how to calculate the lifetime value of a customer 4. Explain 11 strategies for increasing the lifetime value of a customer 3
  • 4. Learning Objective 1 Explain how to calculate the annual profitability of a customer 4
  • 5. Customer Profitability Analysis • Use an activity-based costing (ABC) system with the customer as the cost object • Accumulate the costs of serving customers in activity center cost pools • Determine the measure used to assign costs from the activity center cost pools to the customers 5
  • 6. Assigning Costs to Customers • Calculate the activity center cost driver rate • Multiply the activity center cost driver rate by the activities used by each customer to determine the costs from each activity center assigned to the customer • Repeat for all activity center cost pools 6
  • 7. Calculate the Customer’s Profitability • Subtract cost of goods sold from sales revenue to determine gross profit • Subtract all direct selling and administrative costs, such as commissions • Subtract all costs assigned to the customer from the activity center cost pools to determine the customer’s profitability 7
  • 8. Compare Profits and Sales Revenue • Compare the customer’s profitability to the customer’s sales revenue • Sometimes the customers who generate large amounts of sales revenue may be unprofitable because of the demands they place on the company (Kanthal (A) Case) 8
  • 9. Example • Able Manufacturing Company (a fictitious company) sells three products. The three products, their selling prices, and their cost to purchase are as follows: Price Cost • Gadget $1,000 $480 (48%) • Gizmo $1,200 $648 (54%) • Super gizmo $1,500 $840 (56%) 9
  • 10. Other Information • The company keeps the gadget and the gizmo in stock • The company does not carry super gizmos in stock • Sales commissions are 20% of sales 10
  • 11. Activity Cost Pools • Able Manufacturing Company has determined that it should divide its cost of serving its customers into four cost pools: – Order processing—gadgets and gizmos – Order processing—super gizmos – Delivery – Customer service (before and after the sale) 11
  • 12. Order Processing for Gadgets and Gizmos • Order processing costs for gadgets and gizmos for the year were $500,000 • The company processed 5,000 orders • The cost to process one order for a gadget or gizmo is $100 ($500,000 / 5,000 orders) 12
  • 13. Order Processing for Super Gizmos • Order processing costs for the super gizmo were $100,000 for the year • The company processed 100 orders for super gizmos • The cost to process one order for a super gizmo is $1,000 ($100,000 / 100 orders) 13
  • 14. Delivery • The company incurred $300,000 in delivery costs for the year • The company made 1,500 deliveries during the year • The cost per delivery was $200 ($300,000 / 1,500 deliveries) 14
  • 15. Customer Service • The company incurred $480,000 in customer service costs during the year • The company spent 8,000 hours in providing customer service • The cost per customer service hour was $60 ($480,000 / 8,000 hours) 15
  • 16. Activities for Customer A • In a typical year, Customer A purchases – 700 gadgets – 750 gizmos – 50 super gizmos • Number of orders of gadgets and gizmos: 12 • Number of orders for super gizmos: 2 • Number of deliveries: 14 (12 + 2) • Number of customer service hours: 4 16
  • 17. Sales Revenue and Gross Profit for Customer A • Sales revenue $1,675,000 • Less: cost of goods sold (864,000) • Gross profit $ 811,000 17
  • 18. Profit for Customer A • Gross profit $811,000 • Less: sales commissions (335,000) • Less: order processing – Gadgets and gizmos (1,200) – Super gizmos (2,000) • Less: delivery (2,800) • Less: customer service (240) • Profit $469,760 18
  • 19. Activities for Customer B • In a typical year, Customer B purchases – 600 gadgets – 700 gizmos – 200 super gizmos – Number of orders for gadgets and gizmos: 60 – Number of orders for super gizmos: 30 – Number of deliveries: 90 (60 + 30) – Number of customer service hours: 145 19
  • 20. Sales Revenue and Gross Profit for Customer B • Sales revenue $1,740,000 • Less: cost of goods sold (909,600) • Gross profit $830,400 20
  • 21. Profit for Customer B • Gross profit $830,400 • Less: sales commissions (348,000) • Less: order processing – Gadgets and gizmos (6,000) – Super gizmos (30,000) • Less: delivery (18,000) • Less: customer service (8,700) • Profit $419,700 21
  • 22. Comparison of Customer A and Customer B A B • Sales revenue $1,675,000 $1,740,000 • Gross profit 811,000 830,400 • Commissions 335,000 348,000 • SG&A expenses 6,240 62,700 • Profit 469,760 419,700 • Although Customer B generated more sales revenue and more gross profit, Customer A is more profitable because the cost to serve Customer A was less 22
  • 23. Learning Objective 2 Explain why customers are assets 23
  • 24. Customers Are Assets • Customers do not appear on a balance sheet prepared according to GAAP • But customers are the most important asset of a business • A customer should provide a business with positive cash flows for years 24
  • 25. Acquiring Customers • Focus on making a sale to acquire a customer rather than acquiring a customer to make a sale • Be willing to earn little, if any, profit on the initial sale • View customer acquisition costs as an investment amortized over the expected life of the customer relationship 25
  • 26. Use Risk Reversal to Acquire More Customers • Provide a reasonably long warranty period • Offer to pay shipping costs both ways for dissatisfied customers • Benefits from risk reversal usually exceed the costs 26
  • 27. Businesses Lose Customers • Yet, businesses typically lose about 10 to 30 percent of their customers every year (The Loyalty Effect, p. 4) • When a business loses a profitable customer, it loses a valuable asset 27
  • 28. What a Business Loses When It Loses a Customer • Cash flows from the customer’s business • Referrals to other customers • Insight from the customer about how the business can improve its products and services 28
  • 29. Customer Retention Correlated with Productivity and Profits • Higher customer retention rates are correlated with – higher productivity – higher profits (The Loyalty Effect, pp. 12-13) • A customer retention program should be an integral part of a company’s business strategy 29
  • 30. Learning Objective 3 Explain how to calculate the lifetime value of a customer 30
  • 31. Lifetime Value of a Customer • Present value of all future cash flows expected to be received because of the customer relationship • Must include – Acquisition cost – Retention cost – Retention rate – Margin (sales revenue minus expenses) each year (can change) 31
  • 32. Lifetime Value of a Customer Should include future cash flows received from other customers the company would not have acquired without the referrals from the customer 32
  • 33. Lifetime Value of a Customer • Sum of all net future cash flows for each year of estimated life of the customer relationship multiplied by the estimated retention rate • Discounted to present value • Less: acquisition cost 33
  • 34. Lifetime Value of a Customer • If the retention rate is constant, then LVC = Margin x (retention rate / 1 + discount rate – retention rate) • Lifetime value is approximately equal to 1 to 4.5 times annual margin (Managing Customers as Investments) 34
  • 35. Learning Objective 4 Explain 11 strategies for increasing the lifetime value of a customer 35
  • 36. 11 Strategies for Increasing the Lifetime Value of a Customer 1. Increase the frequency of purchase 2. Increase the sales amount per purchase 3. Increase the retention rate 36
  • 37. 11 Strategies for Increasing the Lifetime Value of a Customer 4. Add more products or services to the product or service line and promote them to current customers 5. Implement an active referral and leads program 6. Implement an online affiliate program 37
  • 38. 11 Strategies for Increasing the Lifetime Value of a Customer 7. Avoid making customers unhappy, especially over relatively small things 8. Show appreciation to profitable customers 9. Provide additional items to the customer that provide value to the customer but that cost the company little or nothing 38
  • 39. 11 Strategies for Increasing the Lifetime Value of a Customer 10. Convert unprofitable customers into profitable customers 11. Use activity-based management (ABM) to reduce non-value- added costs of serving the customer 39
  • 40. 1. Increase the Frequency of Purchase • Create and maintain a customer database • Sell products and services a customer will need to buy often • Use customer rewards programs • Give bounceback coupons 40
  • 41. Increase Frequency of Purchase by Regular Communications • Communicate regularly with customers – Email – Newsletters – Catalogs – Coupons • Do not communicate too often so as not to be annoying 41
  • 42. 2. Increase the Sales Amount Per Purchase • Use suggestive selling “Do you want fries with that?” • Better “Do you want onion rings or fries with that?” – Alternate of choice close – Mention the more profitable of the two last 42
  • 43. 2. Increase the Sales Amount Per Purchase • Accept credit cards and PayPal • Sell on credit 43
  • 44. 3. Increase the Retention Rate A 5% increase in customer retention rates will yield between a 25% to 100% increase in profits across a wide range of industries. (The Loyalty Effect, pp. 13, 33) 44
  • 45. Increase Retention by Excellent Customer Service • Do not hire or retain employees who think they work for the “sales prevention” department • Train customer service representatives to be positive and helpful 45
  • 46. Increase Retention by Regular Communications • Communicate regularly with customers – Email – Newsletters – Catalogs • But not too often • Ask customers what they want 46
  • 47. 4. Add More Products or Services • The easiest customers to whom a company can sell its products are its existing customers • As a company adds more products and services to its product line, its customers can increase how much they purchase from the company and thereby increase their lifetime value 47
  • 48. Customers: Existing vs. New According to Chet Holmes, the cost of acquiring a new customer is six times greater than selling an additional product or service to an existing customer. (The Ultimate Sales Machine, p. 209) 48
  • 49. 5. Implement an Active Referral and Leads Program • Referral – when a customer refers a potential customer to the business • Lead – when a customers refers the business to a potential customer • Referrals are usually better than leads 49
  • 50. Referrals: Intentions vs. Results • When asked, a number of customers may say that they are willing to refer the business to other customers • But many of them do not actually follow through and make a referral 50
  • 51. Actively Encourage More Referrals • Ask customers to refer the business to other potential customers • Give customers something tangible to give to the potential customer such as – Magnets – Pens – Business cards • Include the company’s Web site 51
  • 52. Increase the Referrals and Leads Rate • Track referrals and leads • Calculate the referrals and leads rate • Reward customers who provide referrals and leads 52
  • 53. Increase the Conversion Rate of Referrals and Leads • The company must make a strong effort to convert the potential customer to a customer • Be patient and do not alienate the customer who made the referral or lead 53
  • 54. Referred Customers • Calculate the profitability of referred customers for the first year • Calculate the lifetime value of referred customers • Assess the referrals program and make changes to increase the lifetime value of referred customers 54
  • 55. 6. Implement an Online Affiliate Program • Sell products and/or services online • Purchase software that will run an affiliate program and pay commissions to affiliates • Affiliates place advertisements or otherwise refer people to the company’s Web site with a code 55
  • 56. Customers Become Affiliates • Customers can become affiliates • A customer can earn a commission when the customer refers someone who makes a purchase from the company • The company’s sales increase and the customer/affiliate’s lifetime value increases 56
  • 57. 7. Avoid Making Customers Unhappy, Especially Over Small Items • The customer may not always be right but be very careful not to anger customers unnecessarily • Unhappy customers may not come back for a long time, if ever • Is it worth losing potentially large future sales over a small problem? 57
  • 58. Unhappy Customers Inform Others • Unhappy customers can tell their friends and associates bad things about the business • Unhappy customers can inform a large number of potential customers about the perceived bad treatment using online social media and bulletin boards 58
  • 59. 8. Provide Additional Low Cost or No Cost Items to the Customer • Customers appreciate additional valuable products that a company gives them • Receiving free gifts helps the customer relationship • For example, a company may be able to obtain private label rights (PLR) to e-books, articles, and reports and allow customers to download them free of charge 59
  • 60. 9. Convert Unprofitable Customers into Profitable Customers • Increase the minimum order size • Make the ordering process more efficient • Convert in-person and telephone orders to online orders 60
  • 61. Regular Orders Can Increase Customer Profitability • Encourage customers to order regularly • Consider continuity programs where an order is generated automatically every month and charged to a credit card 61
  • 62. An Unprofitable Customer Can Be a Loss Leader • An unprofitable customer can be a loss leader if the unprofitable customer refers profitable customers to the business • Fire unprofitable customers only as a last resort 62
  • 63. 10. Use ABM to Reduce the Cost of Serving the Customer • Use activity-based management (ABM) to determine the activities used to serve the customer and the cost of each activity • Classify the activities as value-added activities or non-value-added activities • Seek to change the processes to reduce or eliminate the non-value- added activities and thereby reduce the non-value-added costs 63
  • 64. Summary • Use activity-based costing to calculate the annual profitability of customers • View customers as assets and customer acquisition costs as an investment • Implement programs to retain customers • Use the 11 strategies to increase the lifetime value of a customer 64
  • 65. Conclusion • Customers are assets • When the value of assets increase and liabilities remain constant, then the value of stockholders’ equity necessarily increases • Therefore, increasing the lifetime value of every customer leads to greater shareholder value 65
  • 66. Appendix Additional Resources for Further Study
  • 67. Books 1. Raving Fans: A Revolutionary Approach to Customer Service by Kenneth Blanchard and Sheldon M. Bowles. New York: William Morrow and Company, 1993. 2. Return on Customer: Creating Maximum Value from Your Scarcest Resource by Don Peppers and Martha Rogers, New York: Currency Doubleday, 2005. 67
  • 68. Books 3. Managing Customers as Investments: The Strategic Value of Customers in the Long Run by Sunil Gupta and Donald R. Lehmann, Upper Saddle River, NJ: Wharton School Publishing, 2005. 4. Managing Customers for Profit: Strategies to Increase Profits and Build Loyalty by V. Kumar, Upper Saddle River, NJ: Wharton School Publishing, 2008. 68
  • 69. Books 5. The Loyalty Effect: The Hidden Force Behind Growth, Profits, and Lasting Value by Frederick F. Reichheld, Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 1996. 6. The Ultimate Sales Machine: Turbocharge Your Business with Relentless Focus on 12 Key Strategies by Chet Holmes, New York: Portfolio, 2007. 69
  • 70. Books 7. How to Win Customers and Keep Them for Life by Michael LeBoueuf, New York: Berkley Books, 1987. 8. Customers for Life: How to Turn That Onetime Buyer into a Lifetime Customer by Carl Sewell and Paul B. Brown, New York: Pocket Books, 1998. 70
  • 71. Articles 1. “Generational Revenue Analysis,” by Alan D. Campbell, The CPA Journal, February 2001. 2. “Managing Customer Profitability,” by Marc J. Epstein, Michael Friedl, and Kristi Yuthas, Journal of Accountancy, December 2008. 71
  • 72. Articles 3. “Getting the Most Out of All Your Customers,” by Jacquelyn S. Thomas, Werner Reinartz, and V. Kumar, Harvard Business Review, July 1, 2004. 4. “Managing Customers for Profits (Not Just Sales),” by Benson P. Shapiro, V. Kasturi Rangan, Rowland T. Moriarity, Jr., and Elliott B. Ross, Harvard Business Review, September 1, 1987. 72
  • 73. Articles 5. “The Right Way to Manage Unprofitable Customers,” by Vikas Mittal, Matthew Sarkees, and Feisal Murshed, Harvard Business Review, April 1, 2008. 6. “Realize Your Customers’ Full Profit Potential,” by Alan W.H. Grant and Leonard A. Schlesinger, Harvard Business Review, September 1, 1995. 73
  • 74. Cases 1. Kanthal (A) by Robert S. Kaplan, Harvard Business Publishing, 1989. 2. Kanthal (B) by Robert S. Kaplan, Harvard Business Publishing, 1989. 3. Dakota Office Products by Robert S. Kaplan, Harvard Business Publishing, 2001. 4. Great Dakota Bank: Online Banking, by Frances X. Frei, Youngme Moon, and Hanna Rodriguez Farrar, Harvard Business Publishing, 2002. 74
  • 75. Web Site Tool The following Web site from the Harvard Business School has a calculator for estimating customer lifetime value: http://hbsp.harvard.edu/multimedia/flashtools/c 75