Many businesses – particularly B2B – emphasise Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) as a critical measurement to plan their marketing strategy in the ever-changing marketing landscape. So what is CLV, and why is it important?
A metric that has been used for many years when planning a marketing strategy and budget is Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) – how much it will typically cost you to gain a new customer.
To calculate this figure:
This then gives a figure which tells you how much you are spending, on average, to gain a customer.
A low CAC means that your marketing is very effective and ultimately adds more to the business's bottom line. The lower your CAC, the better.
If your CAC is too high compared with the money you are making on your products and services in the same period, you will need to find a way to reduce your costs and consider cheaper ways of gaining new customers.
This CAC figure can be used in a budget setting if you work the figures the other way around. Decide how much profit you can spare from each new customer for marketing. Multiply that by the number of new customers you anticipate gaining in a year. This will give you a budget for your marketing. If this doesn't at least cover your essential marketing overheads, you'll be in trouble.
Of course, you may find that it's not enough – in which case you will need to look for cost savings elsewhere to free up more money for marketing. If this isn't possible, you may have to face that you don't have a viable business. (There is no shortage of examples of product launches that have failed due to a lack of a decent marketing budget).
Typically, B2B companies might spend between 10% and 20% of their revenue on marketing. (Current figures have been skewed by the effects of the pandemic, with some companies spending more on marketing and other companies cutting costs.) However, that does vary by industry and type of sales – whether that be products or services – with service companies spending more.
Whilst CAC is a helpful metric, it does not tell the complete story and limits you in several ways.
Most B2B businesses have repeat customers, and many will have loyal customers who buy again and again. The cost of acquiring that customer happens initially, so repeat sales cost less and usually a lot less.
According to the Harvard Business Review: Acquiring a new customer is anywhere from five to 25 times more expensive than retaining an existing one.
It is also far easier to sell to an existing customer. According to the book Marketing Metrics, businesses have a 60 to 70% chance of selling to an existing customer while the probability of selling to a new prospect is only 5% to 20%.
Because CAC only examines revenue from new customers, you are not factoring in the total sales over time, as it ignores the repeat revenue you might gain from your loyal, long-term customers in the future. So based on CAC, you could be spending too little to win those critical, long-term, high revenue customers.
If you are using CAC to plan your marketing budget, you may not be spending enough to acquire customers that could be worth a great deal to your business in the long run. If you were to spend more, you might acquire those high-value customers, and the profits from those loyal customers would outweigh any extra costs over time.
Therefore, the initial extra spending becomes a sound investment to gain future revenue.
This is where Customer Lifetime Value is practical – it takes into account all the likely sales an average customer will make over their lifetime.
Among other benefits, this will allow you to make a better judgment on how much you can afford to spend initially to gain that customer's lifetime business.
Because CLV effectively predicts the future, several different methods are used to calculate it, with no accepted standard definition. And you may also find it referred to as Lifetime Customer Value (LCV). Whatever it is called, the two core components in the formula are 'always purchase frequency' and 'average order value'.
It helps if you are an established business with many years of trading, as you can then look back at your historical data for some accurate figures to base your calculations on.
In a simple form, the formula would be:
Purchase Frequency x Average Order Value x Average Customer Lifespan
For more on calculating CLV, check out this helpful article by HubSpot.
However, this is purely based on revenue and does not factor in acquisition or retention costs. So you might choose to use:
Purchase Frequency x Average Order Value x Average Customer Lifespan – (Acquisition Cost + Retention Cost)
Take a read of this article from ClickZ for more on this version of the calculation.
You could consider additional elements, like the margin on each sale. The version you decide to use depends on what you use CLV for and how you view it.
Comparing CLV to CAC will give you an idea of how long it takes to recoup the initial acquisition costs.
Because Customer Lifetime Value is making predictions about how long your relationships with valued customers might last, it is essential that you retain those customers. If you start losing customers for any reason, then not only do you lose their potential sales, but your CLV calculations for other future customers will be skewed in a way that means you will be spending too much to acquire them.
So it's crucial that you maintain consistent levels of customer support or even improve your customer support to retain customers for as long as possible.
It is also essential to keep an eye on what your competitors are doing – their prices and comparable products or services.
No amount of high-quality customer service will stop a customer from jumping ship if there is a significant disparity between your price and a competitor's or offering something you cannot match.
This brings us to another closely related factor, the Churn Rate – the percentage of customers who end their relationship with a company in a given period. Reducing your churn rate will increase your CLV.
You can find a version of the CLV calculation that incorporates Churn Rate in this article from ChartMogul.
As that calculation formula is quite complex, it may be easier to stick with a more straightforward CLV calculation and try to improve, at the very least, maintain, your churn rate.
You can also look at CLV for different types of customers. You may find that some customers buy from you throughout their business relationship with your company and provide a high CLV. In contrast, others buy just the one time, or rarely after that – giving you a low CLV.
Analysing why this second group doesn't repeat buy may allow you to develop support and sales techniques that result in more repeat sales, a higher CLV, and more significant revenue for the business. But you might also decide to target those groups that generate higher CLV and focus less on those that don't.
If you have distinctly different groups of customers in terms of their pattern of buying, then you should segment them to calculate CLV. Likewise, if some customers receive higher discounts or lower prices for any reason, you would want to create a separate segment for them for CLV calculation purposes.
You may want to segment overseas customers as the delivery cost may be higher. It may be more profitable for you to sell locally.
Knowing your CLV for each segment helps put things in perspective. You may realise you are spending too much of your marketing budget trying to gain large numbers of new customers whose value is widely variable and not enough on retaining those high value, long-term customers.
Whilst CLV is a great way to value your customers, there are several situations in which it might not be a helpful metric.
Using CAC as a key performance indicator may encourage a culture around the quick win, resulting in unhappy customers because they didn't get what they wanted or were oversold. Those customers will not repeat-buy, and their business will be lost forever.
Using CLV, on the other hand, implies an approach that emphasises four stages:
With its emphasis on the long-term relationship, CLV is a metric that encourages a different culture – a different approach. Instead of going for quantity – lots of short-term sales – it promotes a longer-term, potentially more stable and prosperous approach.
There are additional benefits to a long-term relationship with a customer over and above the repeat sales. Today, buyers get their advice and recommendation from peers and other buyers through social media, business forums, blogs and other channels. So new prospects will be asking your customers what they think how they rate the product and the service. If you don't have satisfied customers, you will be losing those potential sales.
If you can go further and turn a loyal customer into an advocate, then you will see some real added value. A customer advocating your business is far more effective than a salesperson – as a customer's advice is considered independent, impartial, and so carries more weight, more authority, with other buyers.
A customer will have experience using your product or service and therefore can give more relevant and helpful advice and recommendations to a potential buyer doing their research.
This potential benefit of a small army of loyal, long-term customers singing your company's praises is hard to measure. So it's not traditionally an explicit part of calculating CLV, but it is a factor and will add more value.
Advocate customers certainly add weight to the validity of using CLV as a key metric and taking an approach with your customers that values their long-term business.
CAC and CLV seem to infer two different approaches – do you pursue new customers, or do you support existing customers? In reality, a balanced approach is always going to work best. Getting that balance between the budget allocated to new customers and supporting existing customers will always be tricky and probably subject to trial and error, but optimising the mix of the two approaches will give you tremendous success and the highest revenue.