What customer lifetime value really means

Customer lifetime value (CLV, sometimes LTV) is the estimated total value a customer brings to your business over the entire relationship. It shifts the question from how much did they spend today? to how much are they likely to spend in total?

That shift matters. A customer who makes one £20 purchase is less attractive than a customer who spends £20 every month for two years. CLV makes that distinction visible.

A simple CLV formula

You do not need advanced maths to get started. A basic formula is:

CLV = average order value × purchase frequency × customer lifespan

Say a customer buys £80 of goods every two months and stays with you for four years:

  • Average order value = £80
  • Purchase frequency = 6 times per year
  • Lifespan = 4 years

CLV = £80 × 6 × 4 = £1,920

To get profit rather than revenue, subtract your costs of goods sold, payment fees, delivery and service. The result is your true customer lifetime value.

Why CLV changes how you spend

Once you know CLV, three decisions become easier:

  1. Marketing spend. If a customer is worth £1,000 in profit, spending £150 to acquire one is sensible. If they are worth £100, it is not.
  2. Retention investment. Improving retention by 5% can grow profits significantly, because keeping an existing customer is usually cheaper than replacing them.
  3. Service levels. Understanding CLV helps you decide how much support, personalisation and follow-up a customer segment deserves.

Practical ways to increase CLV

  • Onboarding that works. Customers who get value quickly tend to stay longer.
  • Regular communication. Useful emails, updates and reminders keep your business top of mind without being pushy.
  • Loyalty or referral schemes. Rewards for repeat purchases and introductions turn good customers into advocates.
  • Upselling and cross-selling. Relevant add-ons increase average order value without feeling salesy.
  • Proactive support. Fixing problems before customers complain protects the relationship.

Common mistakes

  • Ignoring churn. A high CLV projection means little if customers leave sooner than expected.
  • Blending all customers together. Different segments often have very different CLVs. Separate them.
  • Over-optimising for acquisition. It is easy to chase new sign-ups while neglecting the customers you already have.
  • Using revenue instead of profit. A £1,000 sale with £900 costs is not the same as a £500 sale with £300 costs.

The bottom line

Customer lifetime value is one of the most practical numbers a UK business can track. It connects marketing, service and finance into a single idea: how much is this relationship worth, and what should we do to protect and grow it? Start with a simple calculation, split it by customer segment, and use it to decide where your money and attention go.