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Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy Identify timely, highly qualified leads to optimize direct marketing investment in the Card space Dan Richard Director, Research & Development Analytical Services October 2012 Table of Contents 1 Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy 2 Today’s Direct Mail Marketing Campaigns 3 Why Traditional Prescreen Strategies Often Miss the Target 4 The Benefits of Modeling Propensity to Open 6 Case Study: Using Propensity to Open Scores in Direct Marketing 10Conclusion 11References About Equifax Equifax is a global leader in consumer and commercial information solutions, providing businesses of all sizes and consumers with information they can trust. We organize and assimilate data on more than 500 million consumers and 81 million businesses worldwide, and use advanced analytics and proprietary technology to create and deliver customized insights that enrich both the performance of businesses and the lives of consumers. For more information, please visit Equifax.com. www.equifax.com Equifax Inc. | Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy | ii Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy As the consumer credit market continues to recover, “Safe Growth” acquisition marketing has returned as a strong imperative for card issuers. Lending standards remain fairly high for new originations even while tightening of credit availability has eased [1]. Following a period of sustained growth in 2010 and 2011, industry-wide bankcard origination volumes have leveled off in 2012 [2]. Now most lenders are seeing significant headwind as consumers have “reloaded” with new cards during the recovery. In light of these recent trends, many issuers have pulled back on direct mail marketing [3]. To safely grow card portfolios in this uncertain economic environment, lenders need analytical tools that deliver timely, highly qualified leads in an effort to optimize response and open rates while managing risk more effectively. Potent marketing tools that can be tuned to fit within risk strategy empower lenders to approach card preapproval acquisitions intelligently and confidently. This paper discusses the various preapproval marketing challenges facing card issuers and introduces the concept and value of integrating specialized scores that predict consumers’ propensity to open within existing targeting strategies. Less Competition in the Mailbox "[Credit card] issuers have adopted a more cautious approach due to an uncertain economic environment.… For credit card issuers this is a great time to be in the mail. The mailbox is less cluttered and it is easier to get consumers to notice your message." — Andrew Davidson, SVP Mintel Comperemedia [7] Equifax Inc. | Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy | 1 Direct mail marketing campaign managers face the strategic challenge of targeting consumers that are in-the-market, qualified to pass risk criteria and likely to respond to an offer. Today’s Direct Mail Marketing Campaigns Marketing and Risk Management represent two of the most basic organizational functions that card issuers must skillfully perform to remain competitive. Marketing departments strive to maximize response rates and deliver high volumes of applications through meticulous targeting and messaging efforts. Meanwhile, Risk Management departments maintain strategically determined levels of portfolio risk by decisioning applicants via carefully established risk-based criteria. Too often the goals of these two functions are at odds, as high percentages of applications driven via marketing efforts fail to pass risk criteria and never become booked accounts. Thus, direct mail marketing campaign managers face the strategic challenge of targeting consumers who are in-the-market, qualified to pass risk criteria and likely to respond to an offer. Furthermore, a recent survey of bank and credit union marketers asked respondents to indicate their highest priorities in today’s lending environment. Topping the list was the increase of lending portfolios, mainly by deepening existing relationships through cross- Channel of Choice A 2011 Epsilon study [6] on consumer channel preference revealed valuable insights about direct mail marketing: • 36% of U.S. consumers chose direct mail as the preferred channel among several alternatives to receive financial services information. • Notably, the direct mail preference extends to the 18-34 year old demographic. • 60% of U.S. consumers reported an emotional boost from receiving direct mail, stating they “enjoy checking the mail box for postal mail.” • A rising percentage of U.S. consumers report that they are now receiving more mail that interests them, while a falling percentage report that they are now receiving more mail in general. Fewer cluttered mailboxes and more targeted mail pieces contribute to consumers’ preference for traditional mail. Equifax Inc. | Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy | 2 selling loan products like credit cards and mortgages [4]. This priority appears to align with current trends in consumer spending habits, which have largely shifted out of prerecession impulsiveness and into longer-term management of spending, saving and debt. Financial institutions are wise to adopt a relationship-management approach that drives lifetimecustomer value. [5] In light of major marketing challenges and priorities, direct mail as a marketing channel plays a key role in deepening relationships with existing customers and pursuing long-term banking relationships with new customers. A recent Epsilon study revealed that direct mail continues to be consumers’ most trusted channel of choice for receipt of financial services information [6]. The findings indicate that lenders should continue to pursue direct mail as a core channel in marketing campaign strategy. A recent Epsilon study revealed that direct mail continues to be consumers’ most trusted channel of choice for receipt of financial services information [6] Designing direct mail marketing campaigns with these challenges, priorities and channels in mind is essential to card issuers’ successful expansion in an uncertain economy. Having the right analytical strategies and tools will ensure that the right consumers are targeted. Why Traditional Prescreen Strategies Often Miss the Target When designing direct mail marketing campaigns, most lenders today use prescreen strategies designed to train their marketing crosshairs on the segments of the consumer population that are most likely to respond to an offer while overlaying policy- and risk-related standards. Response-based targeting strategies indeed tend to demonstrate predictive value in generating higher application volumes. However, a firm’s true return on investment from a direct mail acquisition campaign will be based on revenues generated from newly booked accounts, not on application volume alone. If lenders focus solely on response rates as the measure of marketing success, their targeting efforts may not be aligned to this true ROI. Various factors can contribute to the misalignment, including: • Mailing to higher-risk consumers who can’t be booked due to unacceptable risk level • Mailing to consumers who are not interested in opening new credit • Not mailing to consumers who are interested in opening new credit The case of mailing to high-risk consumers results from adverse selection often inherent in many response-driven analytical solutions. The same consumers that are most likely to respond to an offer for credit tend to also be the consumers with the riskiest characteristics. This response-risk contrast can often create dissonance between the marketing and risk sides of the same lending operation. Equifax Inc. | Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy | 3 The same consumers that are most likely to respond to an offer for credit tend to also be the consumers with the riskiest characteristics This response-risk contrast can often create dissonance between the marketing and risk sides of the same lending operation Propensity-to-open is a metric that frames consumer desirability in terms of likelihood of being in-the-market and approvable Secondly, lenders may mail to consumers that share similar profile elements with likely responders, though in reality these consumers have no interest in opening a new card with any lender regardless of what offers are made. With lenders’ risk criteria still fairly tight, many of the consumers that do pass risk criteria are not as likely to respond. A similar miscalculation occurs when lenders overlook consumers who are indeed highly likely to open new credit, though they don’t exhibit many of the same characteristics as likely responders and thus are not mailed. The key to identifying each of these cohorts of consumers lies in tempering any response-driven assessment with an assessment of likelihood to actually open new credit. The Benefits of Modeling Propensity to Open Even in the absence of existing response-based analytical strategies, lenders that rank prospects by propensity-to-open can guide targeting efforts toward consumers who contribute most to maximizing return on marketing investment When a new bankcard account appears on a borrower’s credit file, usually two inferences can be made: the borrower was in the market for a new bankcard and was able to be approved. Simultaneously the borrower’s demand and a lender’s assent are captured by the fact that there exists a newly opened account. Using the Equifax National Credit Database, bankcard-opening behavior can be studied across millions of consumers and thousands of lending institutions. Through an analysis of the most common characteristics of in-the-market and approvable consumers, Equifax has the ability to model consumers’ propensity to open new bankcards. Propensity-to-open is a metric that frames consumer desirability in terms of likelihood of being in-the-market and approvable. By contrast, propensity-to-respond frames consumer desirability in terms of likelihood to take action when presented with an offer. Insight into both dimensions enhances marketing competencies, allowing lenders to focus direct mail toward consumers that are most likely to respond and open and perform. Lenders also are empowered to reach out with customized messaging / offers to consumers who are less likely to respond to offers but who nevertheless are in-the-market and approvable. Even in the absence of existing response-based analytical strategies, lenders that rank prospects by propensity-to-open can guide targeting efforts toward consumers who contribute most to maximizing return on marketing investment. Consumers’ demand for bankcard credit and their general credit risk level combine in a complex manner to describe a consumer’s propensity to open a new bankcard account. Bankcard openers are found throughout the credit risk spectrum, with open rates tending to vary across risk bands. As demonstrated in Figure 1, propensity-to-open tends to decline among consumers with the worst general credit risk. Experience with response scores suggests that this decline is not due to lack of demand for credit. Rather, these consumers commonly experience greater difficulty getting approved, and so open rates in these risk bands are diminished by the influence of lenders’ underwriting standards. Lenders that Equifax Inc. | Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy | 4 grant bankcard credit in this risk range will generally be meeting the needs of their clientele by offering credit that may otherwise be difficult to come by. Interestingly, consumers on the opposite end of the risk spectrum with the best general credit risk can also exhibit a leveling-off or slight reduction in propensity-to-open, depending on the risk score being studied. Gradually leveling or decreasing demand for bankcard credit, not difficulty in approvability, is most likely the driving force behind these circumstances. Lenders that grant bankcard credit in this risk range will generally be meeting the wants of their clientele by offering special perks or rewards to encourage initial adoption and continued usage. The peak in open rate tends to occur near the upper-middle of the risk spectrum, where consumers exhibit strong demand for bankcard credit while enjoying fewer underwriting obstacles. Bankcard Open Rates by Generic Risk Score Deciles Beacon 5.0 Beacon 09 Equifax Risk Score 3.0 Vantage 1.0 Bankcard Open Rate (2-4 Months After Scoring) 6% • Lenders meeting borrowers’ credit needs • Open rates dampened by lower approvability 5% 4% 3% • Lenders meeting borrowers’ credit wants • Open rates level off or decline based on demand 2% 1% 0% 1 2 3 4 Worst Risk 5 6 7 Generic Risk Score Decile Figure 1: Bankcard Open Rates by Generic Risk Score Deciles. As Figure 1 indicates, a soft risk element is embedded within the measure of a consumer’s propensity-to-open. The collective impact of lenders’ underwriting policies shapes the propensity to open new credit among consumers with worsening levels of credit risk. Thus, a subtle dimension of likelihood to default exists within a consumer’s likelihood to open new credit. A propensity-to-open model cannot replace a credit risk model in underwriting practices, nor should one be used in isolation without a baseline measure of credit risk. However, a propensity-to-open model can help an organization better align targeting efforts with risk management policies. Since individuals with the worst credit risk will by nature tend to have less success at opening new credit, such individuals will not score in the highest ranges of a propensity-to-open model as often as they might in a response model. Equifax Inc. | Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy | 5 8 9 10 Best Risk Propensity to open marries consumer demand with consumer credit risk in such a manner that different demand-related consumer characteristics emerge throughout the risk spectrum Along with the impact of lender underwriting standards, consumer demand is the other major influencer of whether a consumer will open a new bankcard. Propensity-to-open marries consumer demand with consumer credit risk in such a manner that different demand-related consumer characteristics emerge throughout the risk spectrum. Many of these characteristics describe demand in ways that are not directly risk-related in nature. Thus, risk-related elements of a prescreen strategy would fail to deliver maximum open rates in the absence of a propensity-to-open score due to leaving out this crucial consumer demand element. Case Study: Using Propensity to Open Scores in Direct Marketing The True-in-Market Propensity Score (TIP Score) for Bankcard Openers is an Equifax solution that helps marketers model consumers’ propensity to open so they can quickly recognize and connect with consumers who are likely to open bankcard credit products in the near future. In numerous validations on generic samples and on customer portfolios this score delivers strong ranking of consumers by open rate while simultaneously ranking lower bad rates. True-in-Market Propensity Scores (TIP Scores) for Bankcard Openers, an Equifax solution that models a consumer's propensity to open, delivers strong ranking of consumers by open rate while simultaneously ranking lower bad rates A recent validation of TIP Scores was performed on a random sample from the Equifax National Credit Database. Within that sample, Equifax created a simulated customer portfolio at observation by combining the portfolios of a select group of several leading card issuers. Observation status was defined as follows: Market: All consumers in the sample In Portfolio: Subset of Market in which the consumer currently holds a bankcard with a lender in the select group Not in Portfolio: Subset of Market that represents the mutually exclusive counterpart to “In Portfolio” The outcome performance statuses were defined as follows: Open: Consumer opens new bankcard 2 to 4 months1 after observation Open “On-Us”: Subset of Open in which the consumer opens a new bankcard with one of the select group of card issuers Open “Off-Us”: Subset of Open that represents the mutually exclusive counterpart to Open “On-Us” Consumers that opened a new bankcard within the first month after observation were not classified as desirable “Openers”. In a live campaign, a direct mail marketer is often too late in getting an offer to a consumer that opens new credit within a few weeks after scoring. Such consumers have often already opened a new account elsewhere. 1 Equifax Inc. | Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy | 6 Bad: Subset of Open in which the newly opened bankcard becomes sixty or more days past due or the consumer declares bankruptcy within twelve months after the open date Additionally, a handful of common policy rules and risk prescreen criteria elements were applied in an effort to simulate a generalized prescreen waterfall. Criteria elements were intentionally kept simple to ensure that the validation results would be applicable to a wide range of audiences with various targeting strategies. The prescreen elements were as follows: A sign that consumer spending is returning: US Bankcard originations are increasing, and write-offs are decreasing. —Equifax National Consumer Credit Trends Report May 2012 Fail prescreen criteria if: • Consumer is deceased • Consumer is under age 21 • Consumer has “Do Not Solicit” flag on credit file • Consumer has Beacon (FICO) score less than 640 In the results that follow, “prescreen fail rate” indicates the rate at which consumers failed to pass these minimum prescreen criteria. Achieve Agreement with Prescreen Policy Rules and Risk Criteria While consumers who do not pass prescreen criteria would not actually be mailed in a direct marketing campaign, Equifax studied the relationship between TIP Scores and prescreen fail rates to assess how in sync a score that predicts consumers’ propensity to open is with common prescreen strategies. Figure 2 below demonstrates that as TIP scores increase, not only do open rates increase dramatically, but prescreen fail rates also decrease dramatically. The trends result from the way TIP Scores are designed to favor in-the-market and approvable consumers. The one exception to the trends appears in the third decile which captures a cohort of relatively lower-risk consumers with a low propensity to open. The good risk quality of this group resulted in a dip in prescreen fail rate, but these consumers are nevertheless unlikely to open new credit due to low demand. With its blend of demand- and risk-related attributes, the TIP Score ranked them among the lower deciles. Equifax Inc. | Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy | 7 Open Rate and Prescreen Fail Rate by TIP Score Decile Open Rate Prescreen Fail Rate 13% 80% 12% 70% Declining risk and increasing demand 11% 10% 50% Open Rate 8% 7% 40% 6% Even with a relatively good risk profile, this low-demand cohort demonstrates small open rates, and hence low TIP Scores 5% 4% 30% 20% 3% 2% 10% 1% 0% Prescreen Fail Rate 60% 9% 1 2 3 Lowest Propensity to Open 4 5 6 TIP Score Decile 7 8 9 10 0% Highest Propensity to Open Figure 2: Open Rate and Prescreen Fail Rate by TIP Score Decile. Powerfully and Safely Rank Open Rates The prescreen criteria were applied to the sample, and consumers who failed the criteria were excluded from the simulated mailed population. With the remaining consumers who were eligible to mail, Equifax studied On-Us and Off-Us open rates, as well as bad rates, in the months that followed observation. Additionally, Equifax studied the aforementioned segmentation of “In Portfolio” versus “Not in Portfolio” as of observation. Figures 3, 4 and 5 below demonstrate that the TIP Score powerfully ranks open rates within the “In Portfolio”, “Not in Portfolio” and “Market” populations, which illustrates that the scores are useful in both cross-sell and new acquisition scenarios. After applying the prescreen criteria, the resulting bad rates are mostly flat across the TIP Score distribution. Even with prescreen risk criteria applied, a response score would typically demonstrate higher bad rates in the top score ranges. Thus, the risk-mitigating nature of TIP Scores helps lenders more safely target in-the-market consumers. Equifax Inc. | Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy | 8 Open and Bad Rates by TIP Score for the Market (combined) Populations Open Rate (On-Us) Open Rate (Off-Us) Open Rate (Overall) Bad Rate 16% Open Rates and Bad Rate 14% 12% 10% 8% 6% 4% 2% 0% 1 2 3 4 Lowest Propensity to Open 5 6 7 TIP Score Decile (After Applying Prescreen Criteria) 8 9 10 Highest Propensity to Open Figure 3: Open and Bad Rates by TIP Score for the Market (combined) Populations. Open and Bad Rates by TIP Score Decile for “In Portfolio” Population Open Rate (On-Us) Open Rate (Off-Us) Open Rate (Overall) Bad Rate 16% Open Rates and Bad Rate 14% 12% 10% 8% 6% 4% 2% 0% 1 2 3 Lowest Propensity to Open 4 5 6 7 TIP Score Decile (After Applying Prescreen Criteria) Figure 4: Open and Bad Rates by TIP Score Decile for “In Portfolio” Population. Equifax Inc. | Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy | 9 8 9 Highest Propensity to Open 10 Open and Bad Rates by TIP Score Decile for “Not in Portfolio” Population Open Rate (On-Us) Open Rate (Off-Us) Open Rate (Overall) Bad Rate 16% Open Rates and Bad Rate 14% 12% 10% 8% 6% 4% 2% 0% 1 2 3 Lowest Propensity to Open 4 5 6 7 TIP Score Decile (After Applying Prescreen Criteria) 8 9 10 Highest Propensity to Open Figure 5: Open and Bad Rates by TIP Score Decile for “Not in Portfolio” Population. Conclusion In this uncertain economic environment, lenders seeking to safely grow portfolios need marketing analytics tools that can be easily tuned to fit within existing risk strategies. Using analytical tools that target the propensity to open for in-the-market and approvable consumers improves ROI of direct mail campaigns by delivering leads that are likely to actually open new credit—not just respond to an offer. As the Equifax case study demonstrates, integrating specialized scores that predict propensity to open within an existing prescreen strategy can empower card issuers to focus cross-sell and new acquisition marketing efforts toward consumers that are most likely to open a new bankcard account in the near future. Equifax Inc. | Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy | 10 References [1] A. R. Johnson, "Loan Write-Offs Edge Up For Some Card Issuers But Outlook Remains Strong," 16 April 2012. [Online]. Available: www.dowjones.com/djnewswires.asp. [Accessed 5 August 2012]. [2] Equifax. [3] M. Rice, "Credit Card Mail Volume Summary: July 2012," Mintel International Group Ltd., 2012. [4] TheFinancialBrand.com, "State of Bank & Credit Union Marketing in 2012," 17 January 2012. [Online]. Available: http://thefinancialbrand.com/21384/2012-bank-creditunion-marketing-study-results/. [Accessed 29 August 2012]. [5] P. Iyer, "Smarter Spending and Saving: Evolution in U.S. Consumer Behavior," June 2012. [Online]. Available: http://insights.mastercard.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/ MCW_Smarter_Spending_Saving-SINGLE-final.pdf. [Accessed 30 August 2012]. [6] Epsilon Targeting, "The Formula for Success: Preference and Trust. Consumer Channel Preference Study," December 2011. [Online]. Available: http://www.marketingpower. com/ResourceLibrar y/Documents/Content%20Partner%20Documents/ Epsilon/2011/1112_eps_channelprefstudy2011.pdf. [Accessed 29 August 2012]. [7] PR Newswire, "April credit card direct mail volume hits 25-month low, reports Mintel Comperemedia," 12 June 2012. [Online]. Available: http://www.prnewswire.com/ news-releases/april-credit-card-direct-mail-volume-hits-25-month-low-reportsmintel-comperemedia-158589225.html?utm_expid=43414375-18. [Accessed 29 August 2012]. Contact Us Today For more information, please contact: 888.202.4025 www.equifax.com/grow There are references throughout this publication/website to various trademarks or service marks and these, whether registered or not, are the property of their respective owners. Equifax is a registered trademark of Equifax Inc. Inform > Enrich > Empower is a trademark of Equifax Inc. Insert all other trademark, registration, text here. Copyright © 2011. Equifax Inc., Atlanta, Georgia. All rights reserved. Equifax Inc. | Driving Safe Growth in a Fluid Economy | 11 www.equifax.com EFX-00100-12/12