Measuring and Managing Customer Profitability

Attend this event to learn about customer wealth creation, service level differentiation, and transforming sales mindset, gain insights into accounting data, and understand forward-looking customer lifetime value.
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
Time: 10:30 AM PDT | 01:30 PM EDT
Duration: 60 Minutes
IMG Gary Cokins
Id: 9087
Live
Session
$119.00
Single Attendee
$249.00
Group Attendees
Recorded
Session
$159.00
Single Attendee
$359.00
Group Attendees
Combo
Live+Recorded
$249.00
Single Attendee
$549.00
Group Attendees

Overview:

The only value a company will ever create for its shareholders and owners is the value that comes from its customers - current ones and new ones acquired in the future. To remain competitive, companies must determine how to retain customers longer, grow them into bigger customers, make them more profitable, serve them more efficiently, and target acquiring more profitable customers.

Customers increasingly view suppliers’ products and standard service lines as commodities. This means that suppliers must shift their actions toward differentiating their services, offers, discounts, and deals to different types of existing customers to retain and grow them. Further, they should concentrate their marketing and sales efforts on acquiring new customers who have traits comparable to those of their relatively more profitable customers.

As a result of this shift from being product-centric to customer centric there needs to be an increased emphasis on measuring current and future potential profitability of products, standard service-lines, channels, and customers. (For business to consumer (B2C) industries, there is need to also consider applying of “customer lifetime value (CLV)” metrics.)

A mind-shift is needed from pursuing increased sales volume at any cost  to profitable sales volume. Cost accounting leveraging business analytics is essential to achieve this result. Organizations realize it is substantially more expensive to acquire new customers than to retain existing ones. This focus on customer retention combined with the recognition that spray-and-pray mass marketing of products and service-lines is being eclipsed by direct one-to-one to marketing with customers and prospects is causing the need for the marketing function to require financial data on customer profits and future value. Why? Because given any company’s scarce resources, it should attract its relatively more profitable customers rather 

Why you should Attend:

Learn:

  • Why customers are the source of shareholder wealth creation
  • Why as differentiation from product advantages is reduced or neutralized due to commoditization, then service level differentiation matters and the customer relationship grows in importance as a competitive advantage
  • How to shift the mindset from growing sales to growing profitable sales and to view customers as investments like in a stock portfolio to seek higher ROIs - return on customers (ROC)
  • Why the marketing and sales functions need accounting data to better formulate customer account strategies including compensation incentives
  • How to measure and manage product, channel, and customer profitability
  • (This objective is optional to add to the presentation.) How measuring forward-looking customer lifetime value (CLV) differs from calculating historical customer / consumer profitability for B2C industries

Areas Covered in the Session:

  • The six eras of management accounting including the shift from product and service-lines to a customer-centric one
  • The continuum of direct costing from project accounting to standard costing to activity-based costing (ABC)
  • Basic concepts about activity-based costing (ABC)
  • Why “cost-to-serve” expenses (e.g., distribution, marketing, selling, customer service) expenses are more important than product and service-line expenses
  • How to quickly design and implement a customer profitability measurement system in weeks, not months, using rapid prototyping
  • Actions taken with the information to make customers more profitable 

Who Will Benefit:

  • CxO's
  • CFO's
  • Financial Officers and Controllers
  • Managerial and Cost Accountants
  • Financial and Business Analysts
  • Budget Managers
  • Strategic Planners
  • Marketing and Sales Managers
  • Supply Chain Analysts
  • Risk Managers
  • CIO and Information Technology Staff
  • Board of Directors

Speaker Profile

Gary Cokins Gary Cokins is an internationally recognized expert, speaker, and author in enterprise and corporate performance management improvement methods and business analytics. He is the founder of Analytics-Based Performance Management, an advisory firm located in Cary, North Carolina at www.garycokins.com . Gary received a BS degree with honors in Industrial Engineering/Operations Research from Cornell University in 1971. He received his MBA with honors from Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management in 1974.

Gary began his career as a strategic planner with FMC’s Link-Belt Division and then served as Financial Controller and Operations Manager. In 1981 Gary began his management consulting career first with Deloitte consulting, and then in 1988 with KPMG consulting. In 1992 Gary headed the National Cost Management Consulting Services for Electronic Data Systems (EDS) now part of HP. From 1997until 2013 Gary was a Principal Consultant with SAS, a leading provider of business analytics software.

His two most recent books are Performance Management: Integrating Strategy Execution, Methodologies, Risk, and Analytics, and Predictive Business Analytics. His books are published by John Wiley & Sons. Gary regularly presents at conferences for the AICPA and state CPA societies. He is certified CPIM with The Association of Supply Chain Management (ASCM/ APICS). He served as the part time Executive in Residence for the Institute for Management Accountants (IMA).