Grossman, Cohen, & Diamond
  • Home
  • About GCD
  • Services
    • Financial Decisions Team
    • Services For Individuals / Families
      • Financial Planning
        • GCD Financial Life PlannerTM
        • Free First Consultation
        • Personal Financial Specialist (PFS)
      • Investing
        • Investments Offered
      • Insurance
      • Stock Option Planning
        • Abbott & Hospira Specific Information
      • Estate Planning
        • Estate Settlement & Probate
    • Tax
      • Tax Planning
      • Tax Preparation
      • Required for Preparation
      • Tax Problems
        • IRS Audit Representation
        • Non-Filed Tax Returns
        • Back Taxes Owed
        • Payroll Tax Problems
        • IRS Liens
        • IRS Levies
        • IRS Wage Garnishment
        • IRS Seizures
        • Offer In Compromise
        • IRS Payment Plan
        • Bankruptcy
        • Innocent Spouse Relief
        • Get Your IRS File
    • Business Services
      • Retirement Plans
      • Internal Controls
      • Non-Profit Organizations
      • New Business Formation
      • Succession Planning
      • Strategic Business Planning
      • Business Valuation
      • Bank Financing
      • Cash Flow Management
      • Audits - Reviews - Compilations
      • Part-Time CFO Services
      • Payroll
      • Small Business Accounting
    • QuickBooks
      • Why Quickbooks
      • QuickBooks Setup
      • QuickBooks Training
      • QuickAnswers
      • QuickBooks Tips
  • Tax Center
    • Required for Preparation
    • Current Tax Issues
    • Track Your Refund
    • Record Retention Guide
    • Tax Due Dates
    • Federal Tax Forms
    • State Tax Forms
    • Self Tax Preparation Software
    • Tax Rates
  • Resources
    • Internet Links
    • Forms Throughout Our Website
    • Alliance Partners
    • Secure Client Portal (SCP)
  • Newsletter
    • This Month's Newsletter
    • Previous Newsletters
    • News & Weather
  • Guides
    • Life Events
    • Business Strategies
    • Tax Strategies for Business Owners
    • Tax Strategies for Individuals
    • Investment Strategies
    • QuickBooks Tips
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Contact Us
    • Meet Our Staff
    • Appointments/Scheduling
    • Upload Files to Us
    • Remote Connection
Subscribe Subscribe to our Emailed Newsletter
Subscribe Click to Register or Retrieve Login Info
Subscribe Secure Client Portal Login

Uncover Your Business's Most Valuable Hidden Asset


Quick! What is your most valuable business asset?

If you are like most business people, your mind might quickly fly over your balance sheet. Is it your equipment? Is it your location? Is it your accounts receivable?

For most businesses, the most valuable business asset isn't on the balance sheet.

It's their customer list. And those businesses for whom this isn't the most valuable business asset should change their orientation to make it so.

The hardest, most expensive sale we ever make to a customer is the first one.

In that first, critical, transaction we earn or lose the trust of the customer. Once we have the trust of the customer, we open the door to many more sales and to referrals, which most of us agree are the very best new customers to get.

Many businesses frantically work at bringing in new businesses while they neglect developing the "acre of diamonds" at their doorstep represented by their customer list.

 
Why would you want to know the lifetime value of a customer?

The lifetime value of a customer is a measure of the value of the customer to your business. It is the potential contribution of the customer to your business over a period of time. When you know the lifetime value of a customer, you have a benchmark for how much you would or should be willing to invest to acquire a customer.

When you evaluate the effectiveness of your marketing, instead of focusing on the response ratio (how many responded compared to messages delivered), you should focus on the return received (number of customers times lifetime value) for the investment made (campaign cost). Suddenly you find you can justify a much greater promotion investment when you look at your returns in this way, and this provides the engine for significant business growth.

Chances are your competitors are too cheap to make the necessary investment, and this can give you a competitive advantage.

How can you quantify the "lifetime value of a customer"?

Estimate the profit for the transactions you expect to have with the customer over the period you expect to do business with him or her. If this is an unknown long term, use five years. You should collect statistics of the transactions done with customers and how long you keep customers. Also, factor in the benefit for referrals from your customers.

Here's an example:

At a computer software store, customers make average purchases each year of $500. The average gross profit is 30%. Most customers do business with the store for five years. One out of three customers refer a new customer.

Average purchases $ 500

Years X 5

Total purchases $2,500

Gross profit % X .30

Total gross profit $750

Add 1/3 gross profit for referrals $250

Total lifetime value $1,000

If this business invested $1,000 to get a new customer, it would "break even."

Obviously the business wants to make a profit, but now it has a benchmark to work on based on its own situation. Also, advertising and promotion now represent an investment on which a return can be measured, instead of just an expense"thrown against the wall."

Try applying this lifetime value approach in your business as a growth strategy.

Fill out the form below to e-mail us.

Name
Email
Phone
Best Time To Call
Comments


SCP Login   Site Map   Privacy Policy   Disclaimer