8th June 2016
Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) is one of the most important and least widely used metrics in customer service.
It helps to quantify the total value of a customer to the organisation.
By using the Customer Lifetime Value, you can start to get beyond the obsession with efficiency which plagues the customer service industry and look at how you can add value by extending customer lifetime.
It helps you move from looking at cost per call and helps you to see the financial benefit of reducing customer churn.
The simplest way to express Customer Lifetime Value is the total revenue (or profit) generated by a customer over the total period that they are a customer of your organisation.
Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) is about maximising customer profitability over the longest possible period – in other words, keeping customers longer and reducing overall churn.
This will help streamline the business in every department – from reducing the cost of customer acquisition, to improving processes and increasing customer satisfaction scores.
The formula is calculated as:
Customer Lifetime Value = Annual Value per Customer x Number of Years the customer stays with the organisation
There are two ways to express Customer Lifetime Value: Customer Lifetime Value (Revenue) and Customer Lifetime Value (Profit).
Both are equally valid, but which one you use depends on the metric your organisation finds more valuable. For many organisations it will be profit, but for a range of other organisations it will be revenue.
At a high level, it is reasonably easy to make a rough estimate of the annual revenue per customer. You simply take the total revenue and divide it by the number of customers to get the average (arithmetic mean) figure.
However, this can be overly simplistic, in that it ignores two significant factors:
An alternative approach would be to use the average (median) rather than the average (mean) figures. For the difference, see this article.
At a high level, it is reasonably easy to make a rough estimate of the annual profit per customer.
Simply divide the total profits of the company by the number of customers.
But once you go beyond the high-level view, it gets much more difficult to derive the profit figures.
It depends upon what costs you decide to allocate to which items. First there is the difference between gross profit and net profit, and then there are the differences between cost of sale, fixed and variable costs.
You then have to factor in the different profits from different product lines and also different customer groups.
It is at this stage that you will probably want to visit your Finance Department to get them to help you in this task. Since they will have to sign off on any numbers in any business case, you would need to get their involvement sooner rather than later.
There are two ways to work out how long an average customer stays with your organisation.
You can take a look at your customer records and record the difference in time from their first order and their last order with you.
You then take the difference between the two – this gives a lifetime for an individual customer.
You then take an average across your whole customer base to determine your average Customer Lifetime Duration.
One metric that many businesses measure is the annual customer churn rate. Customer Lifetime Duration is effectively the inverse of the customer churn rate.
So Customer Lifetime Duration = 1 / Annual Customer Churn Rate
[Annual Customer Churn Rate needs to be expressed in terms of per unit rather than percent.]
For example, if you have an Annual Customer Churn Rate of 25%, the Average Customer Lifetime Duration is 1 / 25% or 1 / 0.25 = 4 years.
Now with all measurements you need to be careful with averages, as this approach tends to average down your most loyal customers.
For example, if you have 4 customers as follows:
Average customer lifetime = (12 + 7 + 2 + 1 ) / 4 = 3 years
Churn rate = 25%
Annual customer lifetime = 1 / 0.25 = 4 years
Obviously, Method 1 (Examining customer records) returns better results, but if you have a reasonably large number of customers then method 2 (Using churn rate) will give a good approximation.
While you could probably work out the lifetime value yourself, if you are looking to use it in an internal business case, then at some point you will need to get it signed off by the Finance Department. The Finance Department will be able to help you get a breakdown of all the figures that you need.
For some companies, it is fairly easy to get a rough idea of customer lifetime value, particularly if they publish their customer churn rate.
This article in the Guardian has provided some key metrics on Sky TV.
So the annual revenue per user per year = £47 x 12 months = £564 per year
The customer lifetime = 1 / Churn rate = 1 / (0.105) = 9.52 years
[Note that customer churn rate needs to be expressed as a per unit 0.105 rather than as a percentage. i.e. 10.5 divided by 100]
So the Customer Lifetime Revenue = £564 x 9.52 = £5,371
This is a big number!
In spring 2016 Call Centre Helper carried out a survey of 351 contact centre professionals. The findings revealed that the average customer lifetime value in the contact centre industry is £1,000.
However, roughly 48% of contact centres claimed that their customer lifetime value is less than £1,000 – with 25% stating their value is below £99.
Meanwhile, approximately 13% of survey participants stated an average customer lifetime value of above £50,000.
It is interesting to see that a range of figures have been put forward in these findings – from pounds to thousands of pounds – suggesting that no matter what size the business, there is perceived value in calculating a customer’s lifetime value.
Yet only 54 of the 351 people who took part in the survey submitted a valid answer to this question.
This suggests that the industry has yet to embrace the power of taking the customer’s lifetime value into the boardroom as a support for a business case – and could explain why many contact centres are still failing to deliver an exceptional customer experience.
A good example of how to use the Customer Lifetime Value came from Damian Hall, Head of Customer Service at VisionDirect.co.uk, who formerly worked at Dunelm Mill.
They were faced with a number of furniture deliveries that were being returned after being delivered.
So how much does a damaged furniture item cost? Well, there’s the cost of the calls, the cost of the infrastructure that supports the call, the cost of the re-delivery, the cost of somebody processing the re-delivery, etc.
Damian Hall
“All of a sudden, you realise the business is paying £200 for every returned furniture item and you just say ‘last week, I had 175 of them’ – all of a sudden, a bit of twitching goes on in the commercial and finance teams,” said Damian Hall.
But there is also the cost of customer churn if an unhappy customer decides to do no more business with the company.
This is where Customer Lifetime Value can be very useful.
“It took the business 3 years to agree on a Customer Lifetime Value which everyone broadly signed up to. We agreed that £6,000 is the average spend, so nobody argues with it,” continued Damian. “Whether this is absolute is less important than the fact that the business is talking about lifetime value with a consistent number attached to it.”
You’ve got to be talking the same language as the rest of the business – operational parameters mean nothing to anyone outside of the contact centre.
“Once you can play back lifetime value, you can start to get some footing. If we turn around a customer and they have spent £1,000 with us, and I know they’ll likely spend another £5,000 with us, it gets to a very big number very quickly. It also helps the colleagues handling the service recovery have a longer-term view of the customer value.
“We may not in the service world be able to physically affect the external factors, but what we can do is make sufficient noise with evidence, patterns and history that the business can’t ignore that.”
As a result, Customer Services were able to work with the rest of the business to design better packaging that would protect the furniture. Although this resulted in a higher per-unit cost, by using a combination of the cost of return and Customer Lifetime Value, the overall cost to the business was much lower.
Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) is a highly effective business metric.
Neil Boxer
It helps you puts into perspective the cost of customer service. This will help the business by focusing on the opportunities generated by good customer service (i.e. extending the lifetime of the customer rather than the endless focus on efficiency by trying to save 5% off the cost of a call).
Customers who have used it frequently find it is much easier to demonstrate the importance of good customer service and find it much easier to write compelling business cases.
With thanks to Damian Hall, Head of Customer Service at VisionDirect.co.uk, and Neil Boxer at IP Integration for providing background information on this topic.
Reviewed by: Megan Jones