www.1001TopWords.com |
Profitable Marketing Programs Part 2: Figuring Break Even Point
In Part 1 -- http://www.websitemarketingplan.com/online/profit.htm -- I discussed how to consider both long term and short term profitability in your marketing programs and assumptions that go into conducting a break even analysis. Here in part 2, I will look at three different break even formulas. Figuring Break Even Point To figure the break even point, you should know the program's expected response rate, the program's expected conversion rate, and the lifetime value of a new customer. In the formulas below, the response rate and conversion rates should be expressed as a decimal (Examples: 1%=.01. One-half percent=.005). The lifetime value should be expressed in dollars. For more details, please read Part 1 of this article. Figuring Break Even Point Based on Lifetime Value The lifetime value formula requires you to make assumptions about how many times a customer will purchase from you over a period of time (usually around 18 months to two years) and the average profit on each sale. For average profit, start with your total sales dollars and subtract cost of goods; distribution costs; advertising and marketing expenses; and any other variable expenses related to making product and filling orders. You may also want to figure income taxes into the equation. Divide the average profit number by your total number of transactions. You can then figure the lifetime value using this formula: Lifetime Value = (Average # of purchases over lifetime) X (Average $ profit from each sale) If you are paying for the program based on customer acquisition (i.e. you only pay if a lead generated by the program converts into a customer), you generally want to pay less than the lifetime value per customer in order to make a profit. As an example, say on average you make $20.00 profit from each sale. Also, on average, a customer will buy from you 1.5 times over the course of two years (here, the "lifetime" is considered two years). Multiplying the two figures, that means each new customer will generate $30.00 in profit for your business. So, you break even on the program at a cost of $30.00 for each new customer. Pay Per Click (PPC) Break Even Point But what if you are paying on a pay per click (PPC) or pay per action (PPA) basis, a certain amount for each lead the program generates? In this case, you are paying for all of the leads (or visitors) who do not purchase as well as those who do. You therefore have to factor in the conversion rate to find your break even point: Pay Per Click Break Even = (Expected conversion rate) X (Lifetime value) Continuing the example above, the lifetime value of each new customer is $30.00. Also, on average, 1 out of every 200 leads (clicks or actions) generated from the PPC or PPA program convert into customers for you. $30.00 times .005 is .15, or 15 cents. In other words, each click or action is going to be worth no more than 15 cents to you. If you have a two-step process to help improve conversions, you multiply in the conversion rate of the intermediary page (if you are generating leads or action for more than one program on your intermediary page, don't forget to factor all of them into your conversion rate). For example, if your PPC ad lands on a lead-generating page that sends 13% of visitors to the sales page described above, and the sales page turns 5% of those leads into customers, then you multiply the lifetime value by both conversion rates: $30.00 times .13 times .05 = .195, or 19.5 cents per click or action. In that case, you would want to pay no more than 19.5 cents for each click or action. CPM Break Even Point What happens if you are paying per thousand exposures (in other words, CPM - a flat rate for each 1,000 subscribers, visitors, or email addresses exposed to your message)? Now you should consider response rate as well as conversion rate and lifetime value. To figure out your break even CPM: CPM Break Even = 1,000 X [(Response Rate) X (Conversion Rate) X (Lifetime Value)] To profit from new customers gained through the program, you must pay less than your break even amount. Before making final decisions, however, consider other factors the break even analysis does not address. Any additional internal resources required to implement the program, for example, are additional costs. Remember, too, that profit impact goes beyond the purchases your new customers make. New customers gained by word of mouth (originating from but not a direct result of the program), increased awareness due to the promotion, and increases in off-line sales are indirect benefits of the program. In the long run, these all result in additional sales. Opportunity costs may come into play as well; consider if you could better use your time and money to implement more profitable programs. With each marketing program you implement, if you are aware of your break even point -- the point at which the program becomes profitable to you -- and make decisions based on those profits, your business will grow. Publication Guidelines: When publishing this article on the Internet, please make at least one URL in the "About the Author" resource box clickable. Also, please notify Bobette Kyle of publication (articles @ websitemarketingplan.com). Copyright Bobette Kyle. All rights reserved. Bobette Kyle draws upon 12+ years of Marketing/Executive experience, Marketing MBA, and online marketing research in her writing. Bobette is proprietor of the Web Site Marketing Plan Network, http://www.WebSiteMarketingPlan.com, and author of the marketing plan and Web promotion book "How Much For Just the Spider? Strategic Website Marketing For Small Budget Business: http://www.HowMuchForSpider.com/TOC.htm
|
RELATED ARTICLES
Simple Marketing Strategies Versus an SEO Line of Attack! Each and every day those of us on the Internet are bombarded with information about Search Engine Optimization and all that goes along with it. For the majority of folks who are promoting a business online, this can often lead to confusion especially when it comes to understanding key words, meta tags and title tags. But the real issue is not necessarily in how many people are finding your site, but in how many visitors develop into clients or customers. Has the Free Report Had Its Day? For years now we have been inundated with offers of Free Reports. Most promise to tell you how, in a few hours per week, you can make incredibly huge sums of money or achieve some other benefit. And it's not only on the web you find these offers. I subscribe to an informative, inexpensive Non-Profit Success Requires Ongoing Marketing In a crowded marketplace of ideas, it is important for non-profit organizations to establish a well-defined niche. While most non-profits are not selling products, they are selling their organization's mission, their ideas, their programs, and their services. In a world where everyone is inundated with information, a strong image is the key to community awareness. Developing and maintaining a visible and credible identity through marketing will increase local support for your organization. How To Go From Under Dog to Top Dog by Unleashing The Power Of a Postcard The Tale of Two Dentists... Prepare Your Communications For Growth As the American economy emerges from recession, many businesses are now reexamining their marketing materials and realizing that their communications are outdated, ill-prepared for the return of a robust, competitive, growing economic environment. Strategies developed to survive hard times are often the wrong ones for profiting in good times. Marketing the Government for Profit Steps and tips on marketing your business to the government. Marketers VS Consumers Predators VS Prey The distance between marketing consultants and the real world can truly be mind boggling. When a marketing consultant tells someone to send out 10,000 postcards in order to get a 3% response rate and that the actual sales will be something less than that ...and then asks the client to pay him for that golden nugget... there has to be a problem! Increase Sales With Travel Incentives Today's business environment has changed dramatically over the past 10 years, it can be a tough task to make a sale. Just being aggressive doesn't cut it any longer. Sales skills alone aren't enough to compete when so many new products and services become everyday commodities. Consumers nowadays are being smart. You've got to distinctively separate your business from the competition and lead each of your prospects and customers to think, 'I would have to be a complete idiot to do business with anyone else... regardless of the price.' They are shopping for the best bargains and they all seem to want more than what they paid for. Every industry both online or offline needs a cutting-edge cost-effective powerful marketing tool that appeals to every kind of consumer. The Importance of a Marketing Plan There aren't many things in life that you would get into with out a plan. Marketing is no different. Your overall marketing plan should cover about a six month period, and should be made up of weekly and monthly marketing schedules. Calling All Carbon-Based Lifeforms Many businesses want to market to all carbon-based life forms. They won't take the time to really understand their audiences from geographic, demographic and psychographic perspectives. The Path To Your Prospects Wallet Begins At His Heart You want your prospect to make the decision to buy your product or service. So you show him what you have to offer in your sales letter, web page, ad or commercial. You lay out the facts, and he comes to a rational decision based on them. Right? Maximize Your Lead Generation Efforts by Recycling Your Leads The basic lead generation process is pretty much the same from company to company. Inquiries come in?they're qualified?and then sent to the sales team. Some turn into customers. Some don't. Why Direct Mail Advertising Works And How To Lower Your Costs I met a lady who said she received a notice in the mail from a company offering plaques of various animals. She knew her daughter would love them as a gift and ordered them. This lady said, "I don't know how they got my name but I sure am pleased to have found out about those beautiful plaques, my daughter just loves them." How to Handle Jargon at Your Web Site - and Why If you sell a technical product or service, you probably know you have jargon at your web site - specialized terminology that the average person doesn't understand. While jargon does help you communicate precisely withpeers, it seriously gets in the way if potential and actualcustomers aren't as conversant with it as you are. Self Promotion Brings Business Success Your business success depends on your ability to promote your services, your products, and yourself. Fortunately, promotion is simple. I know...you hate selling. "But, I'm not a born salesperson," you say. "I don't want to hustle people." And, images of high-pressure, arm-twisting solicitors come to mind. But, that doesn't have to be you. You're not pushing your services/products onto others; people will buy them because they need them and because they have a relationship with you. It's the personal connection you make with your prospects that will help them remember you, and like you. Time for A Marketing Tune-up If you have been in business any length of time, I can assure you that habits, not conscious thought, are guiding your marketing actions. Many business people are great optimists, or they probably wouldn't have gotten into the game to begin with. They keep doing everything they've ever done in the hope that one day it will produce results. STOP! It's time to get the brain back in the game! Create Your Own Rumors A consultant new in the city asked me how I managed to get business so fast. Working for that marketing company definitely gave me a jump start. That's because I already knew about press releases. Only in business a few months and I already had been in two of the local papers. However, it was my male mentors who introduced me to telemarketing. How Well Do You Know Your Prospects? Find Out With This 10-Point Quiz It's crucial to know your prospects if you want to market effectively to them. Take this quick 10-point quiz to see how well you know and understand your prospects. Target Marketing - What Are You Aiming For? Is Advertising Viable? What Are People Buying Online? Benefits, that's what! |
© Athifea Distribution LLC - 2013 |