Why does this concept matter?
There are several reasons that companies perform this calculation.
1. To ensure their long-term survival through recessionary times.
Author Michael Gerber (The eMyth Revisited) uses a cautionary statistic: He
asserts that 80% of all new businesses fail within the first 5 years due to a
lack of a balanced, systematic philosophy towards growing their business. This
"client value calculation system" may be one the best insurance policies against
a young, struggling business becoming part of that casualty list.
2. To know how much to pay to acquire a customer.
Most growth-oriented companies have a client acquisition/marketing budget.
Do you? How is it constructed? Is it currently built as a fraction of one
transaction, or many?
3. To know how much time/effort to put into retaining a customer.
Most banks, for example, have customers who cost more to serve than they
generate in positive revenue. These banks would often really like to drop the
customer, but can't. Banks manage the discrepancies by raising fees to such
"problem" clients, or putting them on endless loops of touch-tone voice-mail
support.
4. To keep them focused on increasing the lifetime consumption of products
and services.
The first sale takes most of the time, energy, and investment and costs four
times as much as selling to an existing client. Cross-selling and upselling
drive innovation and open the door to deeper, collaborative client
relationships, which are a good thing.
I've personally witnessed two polarized viewpoints when it comes to lifetime
client value. The first is the "field of dreams" perspective. People with this
perspective think, "If you do good work, your clients will buy more from you and
send you referrals." This is a great model for lifestyle companies and for small
business owners who want to work part-time.
The second perspective is what I call the "seasoned business builders" view.
This point of view assumes that investing in marketing, branding, web sites, and
professional development will design client relationship and business growth
that can be franchised, replicated, and sold.
Which best describes your approach?
If you want to be a business builder, the secret is to figure out exactly what
you're willing to pay to find/acquire a new client.
Typically, a realistic acquisition cost ranges from 5% to 25% of your fees
for the lifetime of that client. This may seem expensive, but it's simply a good
business decision to budget a part of your revenue to building your business.
Ten Steps to Living According To Lifetime Client Value in 2003
1. Identify and document your ideal customer. Get very specific. What
are their job functions, key frustrations, buying behavior, lifestyle, age,
willingness to advise you on new offerings, and typical spending habits with
your firm? Do they value expertise and are they willing to pay a premium for
good service, or are they transactional buyers who only care about price (a la
WalMart?) Write down the percentage of firms in your portfolio fit each
description.
2. Keep a journal for one week detailing how much time you're spending
with your ideal customer. The next week, track how much time you are
spending with your "less than ideal" customer. The third week, list three ways
you can streamline the way you work with your "less than ideal"
customer--beginning one month from the day you make the list. This may include
everything from referring them to another firm, to delegating them to a more
junior associate, to asking them to pay you in a more efficient way (paypal.com),
etc.
3. Guesstimate how much your ideal customer will buy from you during the
entire buyer/seller relationship. For example, if you are a consultant, and
a typical client stays with you for 2 years, and they are paying you $10,000 a
month, then the current lifetime direct transaction value of a client is $10,000
x 24 months = $240,000. But wait--there's more.
4. Guesstimate how much business each client will refer to you over the
next 2 years. Let's say the typical client sends you 1 new client every 2
years at $10,000 a month. That's $240,000 in referral value.
5. If you have an advisory team of customers helping you design or launch new
products or services, estimate the value of 1 successful sale for that new
offering based on your customer's input. (For this illustration only, assume
that 1 new sales equals $20,000.)
6. Add all 3 figures. The true lifetime customer value, including
referrals and advisory support, is $500,000.
7. Provide your ideal clients with one free service, trial offer, or
referral, just to show them how much you value the relationship. No
expectations, period. Make 2003 your season for giving unconditionally.
8. Create and regularly administer a low-cost survey to find out how your
ideal clients define, receive, and measure value. Ask several representative
current clients to tell you new ways they would be willing to extend their
relationship with your company.
9. Create a Tandem Flying (MasterMind) group of professionals
dedicated exclusively to defining, attracting, and creating lifelong clients.
10. Create a referral network of companies, clients, and individuals.
Share this with your clients and update often.
Lisa Nirell, President of Nirell & Associates, is a business
mentor who works with high-tech entrepreneurs and executives who want to
accelerate growth. With more than 20 years in software, consulting, and sales,
Lisa has served on 3 Boards of Directors and has published in ComputerWorld and
Software Strategies. For more information, visit
www.nirell.com.