“We love our customers!” Every business owner says it. But all
customers aren’t created equal, and it’s in your strategic interest to know
which customers are really strengthening your bottom line and by how much.
Sorting out the data
If your business systems track individual customer purchases,
and your accounting system has good cost accounting or decision support
capabilities, determining individual customer profitability will be simple. If
you have cost data for individual products, but not at the customer level, you
can manually “marry” product-specific purchase history with the cost data to
determine individual customer value.
For example, if a customer purchased 10 units of Product 1
and five units of Product 2 last year, and Product 1 had a margin of
$100 and Product 2 had a margin of $500, the total margin generated by the
customer would be $3,500. Be sure to include data from enough years to even out
normal fluctuations in purchases.
Don’t maintain cost data? No worries; you can sort the good from
the bad by reviewing customer purchase volume and average sale price. Often, such
data can be supplemented by general knowledge of the relative profitability of
different products. Be sure that sales are net of any returns.
Incorporating indirect costs
High marketing, handling, service or billing costs for
individual customers or segments of customers can have a significant effect on
their profitability even if they purchase high-margin products. If you use
activity-based costing, your company will already have this information
allocated accurately.
If you don’t track individual customers, you can still
generalize this analysis to customer segments or products. For instance, if a
group of customers is served by the same distributor, you can estimate the
resources used to support that channel and their associated costs. Or, you can
have individual departments track employees’ time by customer or product for a
specific period.
Knowing their value
There’s nothing wrong with loving your customers. But it’s even
more important to know them and how much value they’re contributing to your profitability
from operating period to operating period. Contact us for help breaking down
the numbers.
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