DISCOVERY CALL

The Hidden Danger of Cross-Selling

cross-selling existing customer the switzerland structure value builder system May 18, 2022

You've likely heard the adage that it is far easier to cross-sell an existing customer a  new product than it is to find a new customer.  

And if your goal is to grow at all costs, then cross-selling makes sense. 

However, all of that sales growth may not do much for the value of your company. If you cross-sell your existing customers too much stuff, it could make your business far less valuable. 

When you cross-sell a customer so many things that they begin to account for more than 15–30% of your revenue, expect your value to drop. If a single customer represents more than 30% of your sales, expect an even deeper discount.  

Customer concentration is one factor that makes up your score on The Switzerland  Structure — one of eight drivers the folks over at The Value Builder System™ have  discovered drives your business's value in an acquirer's eyes. 

To summarize in simplistic terms, the least valuable companies focus on selling lots of stuff to a few people. The most valuable businesses do precisely the opposite: by selling less stuff to more people. 

How 3D4Medical Made the Switch 

As an example, let's look at the medical technology firm 3D4Medical. Founded in 2004 by John Moore, the company built 3-D models of the human body, photographed them, and sold or licensed their images to textbook publishers. 

By 2010, 3D4Medical was selling images to a handful of large publishers around the  world. Then the recession hit, severely impacting the entire publishing business. 

To make things worse, new generations of students increasingly wanted to learn online, rather than through textbooks. The advent of inexpensive digital  photography, and the resulting increase in competition for the same customers, also didn't help Moore. 

Moore had built a successful company on a handful of customers, but when that segment began to dry up, so did his business. Despite working harder than ever, 

Moore's revenue plateaued for four straight years. Instead of punching through to the next level, Moore had his hands full just keeping his company going. 

But while Moore had relied on too few customers, he still had something no one else had: thousands of 3-D models of the human body. 

Then Moore had an idea. 

He decided to re-purpose his 3-D images into a mobile app that medical students could use on their phones. Moore expanded the idea to include professors and medical professionals, who could use his 3-D images on an individual basis to learn, teach, and share with patients and students. 

By 2019, 3D4Medical had become the biggest producer of medical apps on every app store. The company boasted over 300 of the top universities in the world as clients. Their app served 1.2 million paying customers and had 25 million downloads. 

 

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Thanks to having a diverse set of customers, Moore sold 3D4Medical in 2019 for $50.6 million. 

The takeaway? Customer concentration is seen as a significant risk when a potential  buyer determines the value of your business. That's why the most valuable  companies are the ones that sell less stuff to more people

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