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Tuesday, May 26, 2009

CPMC Framework

Customer Profitabilityby Liz Murby

The framework, known as Customer Profitability Management Cycle (CPMC), offers guidance on how to analyse, measure and manage customer value to support the implementation of strategies that increase this value and thereby improve shareholder value. The CPMC is designed to give all companies, from those just starting to measure customer profitability to those with well-developed profitability models, insights that can help them to sustain effective profitability management strategies. Step 1: manage customer segmentationAll customers are not the same.

The first step in the CPMC is to split your business’s customer base into segments and, as the profitability cycle matures, assign a value to each segment. Companies generally use segmentation in order to serve customers’ needs better, categorising customers according to personal characteristics, preferences or behaviours. But, in order to maximise their value as assets to the company, customers should be segmented according to their profitability.

The value they provide arises from a combination of three sources:

Customer margins: income received minus the cost of serving customers.

Customer lifetime value: customer margins multiplied by the duration and strength of their relationship with the company.

Customer impact: the effect of customer referrals and other behaviours that influence stakeholders’ actions.

Customer value can be measured and managed with reference to each source.

Step 2: measuring customer marginsTo enhance customer margins and so boost profits, a simple way might be to increase your prices. In competitive markets, where demand is highly price-inelastic, the reduction of non-product costs eg. those of marketing, order processing, relationship development and so on – allows companies to increase revenues without adjusting prices. Activity-based costing (ABC) systems can help companies to calculate and assign such costs and thereby calculate the profitability of each customer. Alternatively, a managed reduction in customer demand can also result in higher levels of profitability per head. For example, by charging fees for small orders, a firm can divert its resources away from short-term, unprofitable customers who require high levels of service and instead use them to help develop longer-term relationships with high-spending customers who are likely to be more profitable in the long run.

Step 3: managing customer lifetime valueCustomer profitability varies over time. As such, Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) is likely to be a more useful measure than a single-period metric. By calculating CLV, firms can differentiate customers who have made one-off purchases showing profitability in one period from those who have established a relationship with the company and are more likely to generate higher profits in the longer term. Different methods of calculating CLV exist, and all share three essential elements: profits, retention rate and discount rate. CLV can be increased by focusing on customer margins and/or by improving the duration or strength of the relationship between the consumer and the producer. Customer retention is a key part of CLV. It is improved by enhancing the value provided to the customer over time. The costs of acquiring a customer are repaid by retained customers.

Step 4: measuring customer impactCustomers can create or destroy value in ways that fall outside the reach of CLV. They have the capacity to affect corporate profitability by influencing the perceptions and actions of others.

Customers have an impact on other customers, your company’s employees and other groups, through their transactions and communications. Specifically, they can affect others by:
Recommending a product to other consumers – or warning them not to buy it.

Serving as role models to legitimise the use of the product
Using the product in a way that affects brand image. They can share their experience in consumer communities, providing tips for the company and solving problems for other customers.
Company representatives participating in these forums can use the knowledge gained to improve services to non-participating customers.

Step 5: managing customer profitabilitySeveral strategies are available for managing the components of customer profitability. A carefully formulated and clearly articulated strategy can lead to a dramatic improvement. For this to happen, you must also have a logical system for measuring and reporting performance for each customer segment.

A comprehensive system for managing customer profitability will have measures for:
Product and service value
Brand value
Relational value
Customer margins
Lifetime value

1 comment:

TQMI said...

This information is impressive..I am inspired with your post writing style & how continuously you describe this topic.
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