Article
Customer lifetime value and pricing
Some customers are worth much more to a company than others. As a company, how do you take that into account in your pricing? A practical look at using customer lifetime value for pricing strategy.
The case for lifetime value-based pricing
One customer is not the other. Some customers are fun to work for, for others the discount is never enough and you never do it right anyway. You might consider doing something with that in your pricing, such as a fun-discount for fun customers. Less arbitrary is to consider customer value in your pricing strategy: lifetime value.
Lifetime value is one of four perspectives on pricing strategy. The others are:
- Competition
- Assortment
- Product life cycle
Customer lifetime value (CLV or CLTV, see box underneath for method of calculation) is a customer value model for determining the value of a customer, based on the profit contribution that customer makes over the total period they are customers. Ideally, CLV is calculated at the level of individual customers, but when that is too complex, much insight can already be gained through analysis at the level of customer groups.
CLV helps identify the most attractive customer (groups) and better target marketing and sales efforts. Consider procurement of advertising.
The customer value is also input for the pricing strategy. For example by making concrete when discounts can be given, namely only to customers with whom you will earn back the acquisition costs. Or to determine in which cases it pays to – if necessary! – go deeper in discounting, namely to customers with the highest CLV.
CLV action plan: three steps
These are the three steps for those who want to get started with CLV:
- Develop customer segmentation based on understanding customer lifetime value
- Build model to predict CLV based on insight into customer behavior
- Integrate CLV into marketing and pricing strategy.
CLV and the royal house
CLTV is a particularly rich concept with many possible applications. We certainly haven’t touched on all of them yet. For example, in this article we have not yet mentioned anything about loyalty programs, which can play an important role in increasing customer loyalty, prolonging the customer relationship and increasing sales. Nor have we said anything about the possibilities of defining customer value more broadly, such as by including the customer’s social status. After all, recommendations are worth money (that’s what the whole idea of the Net Promoter Score is based on). As a company, you might be willing to go the extra mile to bring in an influencer with a large network. It is not for nothing that some car brands go to great lengths to see the royal family driving their cars. For those who do not have that “problem,” the message is: start simple with the three steps we described above.
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