What Is a Good Customer Lifetime Value for Consultants?
Imagine you spend months landing a new corporate client. They pay $10,000 for a strategy project. Six months later, they come back for implementation help. Another $15,000. Then they refer you to their sister company. Without tracking customer lifetime value, you’d never know that first $10,000 project was actually worth $40,000+ over time.
Why Customer Lifetime Value Matters for Consultants
Your consulting income depends on more than just landing new projects. Understanding CLV changes how you run your business.
Repeat clients are cheaper to serve. It costs far less to deliver value to someone who already trusts you than to pitch a stranger. When you know a client’s potential lifetime value, you can offer them preferential rates on retainers.
Referrals have hidden value. A client who refers you is giving you their credibility. That referral typically has a higher CLV because they come with built-in trust. Tracking this helps you reward your best referrers.
Project pricing gets clearer. If you know a typical client is worth $50,000 over three years, you can afford to spend more on marketing and sales to acquire them. CLV gives you a ROI number for your business development efforts.
Churn hurts more than you think. Losing one long-term client can mean losing tens of thousands in future revenue. CLV metrics help you spot warning signs early and prioritize client relationships that matter.
How to Check in GA4
Google Analytics 4 can help you understand client behavior if you set up proper tracking.
First, create a custom dimension for client ID or project type. This lets you segment users who return to your site or booking system. Set up conversion events for key actions: proposal sent, contract signed, invoice paid.
In GA4, go to Explore and create a new report. Add “User lifetime” dimension and filter by users who completed a purchase conversion. Look at the revenue per user over 90 and 180 day periods. Compare first-time visitors against returning clients.
For consultants using CRM tools, export client data and calculate CLV manually: take total revenue from each client over 24 months and divide by acquisition cost.
The Easier Way
Manual CLV calculation gets messy fast. Most consultants I talk to give up after trying to reconcile invoicing data with website analytics.
ClawAnalytics makes this automatic. It pulls from your Stripe, QuickBooks, or invoicing system and shows you exactly what each client is worth. You can ask questions like “Which clients have spent the most in the past year?” or “What’s my average revenue per active client?” and get instant answers.
You can also see which marketing channels bring high-value clients. If LinkedIn referrals convert to longer client relationships than conference leads, you’ll know where to spend your time.
Quick Wins
Start tracking CLV this week with these simple steps.
Add a client ID to your invoices. Even a simple numbering system lets you match payments to clients over time. Export your last 12 months of invoices and group by client. Calculate total revenue per client and rank them. Focus your relationship management on the top 20% who likely provide 80% of your revenue. Set up a quarterly review to track CLV trends and spot clients at risk of churning.
A good CLV for consultants typically ranges from $20,000 to $100,000+ depending on your specialty and average project size. The key is knowing your number and building systems that increase it over time.