Identify your best customers to increase profits
If your business is like most, you put a lot of effort into attracting new
customers. After all, that's an essential part of growing the business.
But sometimes it's more productive to step back and review your existing customers,
and perhaps even get rid of a few.
You might be surprised at what you find if you take the time to analyze your
customers. Start by listing customers in order of sales. Then make your
best estimate about the cost of those sales. For example, you might give volume
price breaks to your biggest customers that make them less profitable than smaller
customers. But don't just look at the cost of sales. Ask your sales staff,
your customer service staff, and your accounting staff to assign a simple grade to
your customers (e.g., A, B, C, D, or F). This will give you a relative measure of
how much time and effort each customer requires.
Once you have profitability and customer care information, you can begin to rank
your customers in groups from best to worst. The "best" are easy. They're
the customers you should make a special effort to appreciate and retain.
You have several options for the "worst" group. With some customers, you might
want to change your pricing structure to charge them for the excessive costs and
attention they require. With others, you might want to sit down and address
specific problem areas. Sometimes just making customers aware of problems can
produce positive joint solutions.
In some cases, the only solution is to part ways. Do this gracefully, without
creating unnecessary ill will that can come back to haunt you. If possible, find
a plausible business reason to support your action. But if necessary, be blunt
and tell the customer that you're cutting back to provide better service to your top
customers. Suggest alternative suppliers they might contact to fill their
needs.
Eliminating customers may be counter-intuitive, but it can work wonders for your
bottom line.
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