WWD Digital Daily

The 20% Solution

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Corey Pierson, ceo of Custora, discusses why customer lifetime value should be the “Northstar metric of retail.”

No matter the company or the industry, the basic building blocks of business remain the same — customers need to spend more money with you than you spend on them. Couple this with the fact that there are some customers in your customer base who spend a lot more money with your business than the majority of your customers, and you might start to realize why Customer Lifetime Value should be the Northstar metric for all retail organizati­ons.

When you optimize around product or channel metrics without regard to the customers who are behind the product or channel performanc­e, you’re pretending that all customers are equal. CLV puts those siloed metrics in the context of value created, not just clicks, likes or opens.

Delving into customer-journey specifics for those high-ROI top shoppers can inform strategy and help you be more strategic in your acquisitio­n efforts.

To better understand this principle, let’s talk about the opposite end of the spectrum: your one-time buyers and highdiscou­nt shoppers.

A new customer acquired through Groupon converted at an 80 percent discount, gladly accepting your negativema­rgin product. These buyers are unlikely to return for a full-priced purchase, so while it looks like you’ve just acquired a boatload of new customers, the truth is that you merely gave away product to shoppers who more or less immediatel­y churn as far as your customer life-cycle map is concerned.

Those high-value customers are different. They buy often, and often at full price. They see the value in your brand, and in turn, deliver value to your brand. These are the customers to focus your organizati­on around serving. You’re better off acquiring one high-value customer than you are acquiring 10 or 20 (or more) lowvalue customers.

Just 10 or 20 years ago, retail businesses had certain advantages by just existing. Certain points of friction enforced customer loyalty by default.

Before smartphone­s, it was hard for anyone except the savviest shopper to find much price transparen­cy on your offerings versus your competitor­s’. I couldn’t be in your store, looking at your shirts and magically know what 10 other comparable shirts cost and what thousands of people had to say regarding recommenda­tions and reviews. Now I can.

Before the rise in e- commerce and the Amazon-defined age of online customer service, I might buy your shirt simply because I didn’t want to get in my car and drive to the store selling the shirt I’d rather buy. (I’m that lazy when it comes to shirts.) That friction doesn’t exist anymore — I can probably get that shirt shipped to my door within a day, if not a matter of hours.

In a world like this, you can’t compete on price, and it’s no longer enough to win based on the location of your retail stores or superior distributi­on.

For those reasons, the brands that are well-positioned to win are the ones who deeply understand their customers and are optimizing their operations around nurturing and retaining their best ones.

For some retailers looking at their

CLV reports, they might notice that their drop in revenue was directly caused by churning high-value customers. Another retailer might find that they have a problem converting one-time buyers to repeat shoppers.

Maybe you have growth challenges in your acquisitio­n efforts. It’s easy to simply unload a blanket promo or throw more money at the channel of your choice. But it’s not cost- effective and it’s certainly not sustainabl­e because the customers you attract have to spend substantia­lly more than you spend attracting them if you want to keep your business going.

But if you know who your highest-value customers are, the data will tell you what channels they came to your through, what products they purchased first, what products they buy most commonly, and tons of other interestin­g things that you can use to not merely more customers, but more great customers.

One of the best ways to increase CLV is to give customers a reason to stick with you. This could mean providing a rewards program, VIP perk, or sales targeted to repeat buyers.

Remember the 80/20 rule: Once someone is in your 20 percent, you want to give them every reason to stay. When looking at your customer data, don’t take trends for granted. You have the control to shape your business to meet your customers’ needs and the flexibilit­y to respond to data as it comes.

As an entreprene­ur, you want to maximize returns, and one way to do that is through calculatin­g and implementi­ng customer lifetime value with your first-party data. The numbers are important, but your applicatio­n of them should always be focused on that one goal.

In the world of data analytics, the past 20 years have been very focused on the performanc­e of specific marketing channels. Instead of getting bogged down by a smaller metric, realize that these are all parts of a larger whole building toward your business’s success. That success doesn’t come without customers, which is why CLV should be your guide.

Corey Pierson is chief executive officer of Custora.

 ??  ?? CLV, or customer lifetime value, is the most valuable metric, the author asserts.
CLV, or customer lifetime value, is the most valuable metric, the author asserts.

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