The Evil Marketer
What is the cost of acquiring a new customer?

You’re in business to make a profit. Profit = revenue - costs. We’ve already discussed how to find the lifetime value of a customer. The other half of the story is finding out how much it costs to acquire that customer. Here’s the formula…

Add up your direct marketing and advertising dollars and divide by the number of new customers you acquired as a result.

This will give you a price per customer. If you’re price per customer is more than the lifetime value of a customer, then you’re in trouble. Even if the lifetime value is higher than the cost of acquiring the customer, you still may be in trouble (you do have other expenses afterall). But this at least shows you a ballpark way of figuring out if you are spending your marketing dollars wisely. Once you have your numbers, you can start to look at ways to tweak things to make your business more profitable.

Do you know of any other tangible ways to find out if you are making the most of your marketing budget? Share the knowledge my friends and email me at edwardviator@evil-marketer.com

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Pricing mistake #4: You don’t spend enough time and effort managing pricing practices

If you’re in business, then you want to make a profit. Let’s break this down, there are basically three variables that control profit… costs, sales, and price. Profit, by definition, is revenue (sales x price) - costs. While most companies spend a ton of time and effort cutting costs, and improving advertising / marketing / sales activities, most do not spend this same time and effort on pricing practices. Personally I don’t really understand this. Pricing is just as important as the other variables, and can also affect your sales volume (a more effective price will naturally result in an increase in sales).

Lately companies have been focusing more and more on cutting costs in order to improve their “bottom line”. Cost cutting has been refined down to an exact science (though many cost cutting efforts in fact have a negative effect on profit, but that’s a whole other story). Likewise, most companies are constantly working on new marketing efforts, some more effective than others. However, when it comes to pricing many companies wing it; they base prices on the wrong things, or even worse, they don’t have a person that decides on pricing strategy.

Most companies have a chief financial officer,a director of sales, and a director of marketing. Why not have someone in charge of pricing. Every company should have someone who’s sole purpose in life is to define the pricing strategies for each product. Make sure they use actual methods, and aren’t just pulling prices out of the air.

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