What it does
Selling a lot does not mean making a profit. If the cost of acquiring and serving each customer is higher than the revenue they generate, you are paying to work. This prompt analyzes your business unit economics: how much it costs to bring in each customer, how much each customer generates in revenue over time, and whether margins support growth. Use it when sales are strong but profit is missing, when you are calculating whether it is worth investing more in marketing, or when investors ask about your contribution margin and lifetime value.
When to use
- Selling a lot does not mean making a profit
- If the cost of acquiring and serving each customer is higher than the revenue they generate, you are paying to work
- This prompt analyzes your business unit economics: how much it costs to bring in each customer, how much each customer generates in revenue over time, and whether margins support growth
- Use it when sales are strong but profit is missing, when you are calculating whether it is worth investing more in marketing, or when investors ask about your contribution margin and lifetime value
What you will get
A structured result ready to use, personalized for your context.