Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies. More information

Difference between revisions of "The Whale Curve of Customer Profitability"

From ControllingWiki

Jump to: navigation, search
Achtung. Sie nutzen eine nicht mehr unterstützte Version des Internet Explorer. Es kann zu Darstellungsfehlern kommen. Bitte ziehen Sie einen Wechsel zu einer neueren Version des Internet Explorer in Erwägung oder wechseln Sie zu einer freien Alternative wie Firefox.
[unchecked revision][unchecked revision]
(b1LEfy This article is for professionals..!!)
(Undo revision 1036 by 193.105.210.170 (talk))
Line 1: Line 1:
 
The Whale Curve of Customer Profitability - depicts the profit contribution profile of a customer base and highlights that 20% of customers can actually contribute 140% of overall customer base profitability, and that another 20% of customers can erode 40% of the bottom line. The horizontal axis of the Whale Curve graph represents the percentage of total customers ranked from the most profitable to the least profitable. The vertical axis represents cumulative profit contribution.  
 
The Whale Curve of Customer Profitability - depicts the profit contribution profile of a customer base and highlights that 20% of customers can actually contribute 140% of overall customer base profitability, and that another 20% of customers can erode 40% of the bottom line. The horizontal axis of the Whale Curve graph represents the percentage of total customers ranked from the most profitable to the least profitable. The vertical axis represents cumulative profit contribution.  
  
b1LEfy This article is for professionals..!!
+
== Literature ==
 +
Grey P., Gold mining your customer portfolio: Customer Profitability, loyalyty & lifetime value (http://issuu.com/vaasaett/docs/goldmining-customer-portfolio)
  
 
== Author ==
 
== Author ==
 
Zieliński Tomasz
 
Zieliński Tomasz

Revision as of 15:28, 11 April 2012

The Whale Curve of Customer Profitability - depicts the profit contribution profile of a customer base and highlights that 20% of customers can actually contribute 140% of overall customer base profitability, and that another 20% of customers can erode 40% of the bottom line. The horizontal axis of the Whale Curve graph represents the percentage of total customers ranked from the most profitable to the least profitable. The vertical axis represents cumulative profit contribution.

Literature

Grey P., Gold mining your customer portfolio: Customer Profitability, loyalyty & lifetime value (http://issuu.com/vaasaett/docs/goldmining-customer-portfolio)

Author

Zieliński Tomasz

Personal tools