Good luck with all the cases of Chris, Kim, Alex, Andrea, etc, etc, that you'll be hit with. First name is just too weak a determinant of gender, so I suggest you completely rethink your approach!
Edit: what's particularly troublesome is that for many names the gender association is strongly culture-specific. The interesting online service that another answer suggested indicates that "in popular usage" (in what culture...?) Kim is overwhelmingly more likely to be a female name, and Andrea even more so.
I do not doubt that this is true in some cultures, but in Korea Kim is overwhelmingly male, and in Italy Andrea is just about exclusively male (as are several other first names ending in A: Luca, Nicola, Enea, ... -- even though in Italian the A ending is MOSTLY associated with female gender, both in first names and other contexts).
Moreover, customers who live in a culture where their first name (no doubt bestowed on them by parents proud of their different cultural heritage) tends to be perceived as the "other" gender may easily feel touchy about it, exactly because they're used to the confusion and resent the assumption. So, by informed guessing, you might be right more often than not, and STILL make serious enemies... so ask yourself, would that be worth it?