Are You Short-Sighted? Or Long-Sighted?
When you are calculating the ROI of your print,
email, or multichannel marketing campaign, how long a view do you take? Do you
stop tracking revenue after a month? One year? What about the lifetime of the
customer?
Lifetime customer value (LCV) is an overlooked
metric that should be part of how marketers measure success. Customers gained
through personalized printing campaigns, in particular, tend not just to
purchase more, but to be more loyal than customers acquired through traditional
methods. Thus, real ROI should include recurring revenue as well as the
immediate revenue generated.
How do you determine LCV? There are a variety of
factors to consider:
• Churn
rate: How often do customers leave your customer base?
•
Retention cost: How much does it cost you to support, bill, and
incentivize your customers?
• Periodic
revenue: Do you have recurring revenue streams? How much do customers spend
during an average period?
You do not have to calculate out LCV indefinitely.
Many companies estimate their LCV out for three to seven years.
Even if it is an estimate, LCV gives you a much
better idea of what value your marketing campaigns are creating. For example,
one small lawn care company sent out 300 personalized mailers, and based on the
initial campaign revenue, found that the mailing barely broke even. However,
the company’s customers tended to be loyal over time. For every new customer it
gained, the company knew that it would have several years of recurring revenue.
As a result, the owner estimated the campaign ROI at 8000% on an LCV basis.
That is an entirely different equation!
How do you view your customers, on a one-off basis
or over the long term?
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