You can create a Configuration like the current "Debug" configuration in Visual Studio which will be associated with your solution. You can then have any web applications create a Web.Config transformation for each of those configurations:
Web.Config
--Debug.Web.Config
--Customer1.Web.Config
--Customer2.Web.Config
--Customer3.Web.Config
--Customer4.Web.Config
You can then edit the Build Definition and instead of just building the default configuration for the solution during the build you can tell it to build all 5 configurations.
Figure: Add multiple configurations to your TF Build Definition
It does not matter if the item (i.e. "Customer1") is not in the drop down, as long as it matches Visual Studio it will work.
This will result in:
\\DropFolder\[BuildDefenition]\[BuildDefenition]_[BuildNumber]\[configuration]\*
So if you want to get Customer 1's instance you pull from:
...[BuildDefenition]_[BuildNumber]\Customer1\_PublishSites\*
You can find how to create configurations on MSDN: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/kwybya3w.aspx