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Sources and Uses of Marketing Data Customer Data • All sales, promotion, and service activity relating to a customer. • Best bets for use in predictive statistical models. • Not available in equal measure for every customer • More data available for old customers. • Appropriate measures that use time a customer has been on file hence required. Cohort or Enrollment Group • Groups that contain customers that have been on file for similar lengths of time. • Basis for all forecasting systems. • Used to alert management on changes in lifespan, and lifetime value. Other Sources • Billing status, service interactions, back orders, product shipment, claims history etc. • Marketing department internal operations • Customer classifications • Response scoring models • Expected sales • Marketing Objectives • Projected customer value • Expected promotion costs. Response Data • Recording a purchase in response to a coded promotion. • Example: Multistep lead generation process. Problems in coding response data – Transactions occur across multiple channels – Matching promotions and responses to appropriate customers. – For example, in the case of retail promotions point of sale scanners cannot capture customer identification. – Cost minimization in call centers may not allow promotion and customer codes to be recorded. – Responses may not be matched at the individual customer level but at the zip code level. Response Attribution • What if the customer is sent multiple promotions and he/she responds to one of them? • What if the customer passes along the promotion to someone he knows? Prospect Data • People who have been promoted in the past but have not made a purchase yet. • Prospect Databases – Used when there is relatively large variation in potential customer values. – Primary applications • Track promotion history • Calculate number and type of lists that contain information on a prospect • Combine descriptive statistics from internal sources Prospect Data • Two-Way Customer Dialogues – Focus on developing and managing a relationship with each customer. – Manage communication across all channels • Example: Financial Services – A customer may not be ready to invest currently. – Keep the communication channel open with the customer in order to convert the customer at the appropriate time. Prospect Data • All information is potentially important. • Data gathering is an ongoing process. – Begins before the first purchase is made. – Pay careful attention to • How the customer is contacted? • When the customer is contacted?, and • What data can be captured at each stage? Nontransactional Data Sources • Data provided directly by individuals about themselves. • Third Party vendors. • Directly supplied data: – Obtained from lead generation questionnaires, warranty cards etc. – Very critical for relationship marketing. Nontransactional Data Sources • Directly supplied data consists of three major types • Behavioral Data • Attitudinal Data • Demographic Data • Primarily a forte of marketing researchers until recently. • Marketing research studies have information on only a sample of the customers. • This information is not enough to create customized, individual level campaigns. Macro vs Micro level data • Consider two companies and two customers • Firms have same shares in both figures but their customers have different purchase patterns Firm 1 Customer A 1 Customer B Firm 2 2 1 2 Firm 1 Customer A 0 Customer B 2 Firm 2 4 0 Nontransactional Data Sources • Relationship Marketing – Third party data is so commonly available that it does not provide a competitive advantage. – Leverage investments in customer service to collect individual information during regular business interactions. – Advantages: • Better coverage • Data directly relevant to marketing objectives, and • Faster acquisition cycles. Nontransactional Data Sources • Relationship Marketing-The Advent of internet – Lead generation – Automated brochures provide wealth of product information and enable collection of e-mail, address etc. – Surveys can be posted on the web • Questions in the survey can be tailored to each customer. • Growing evidence that customers are less reluctant to provide information on web sites. – Privacy issues need to accounted for. – If relationships are developed customers are ready to provide sufficient information. Example: Insurance Marketers • Age is the most critical information needed. • Third Party sources provide unreliable information and have poor coverage. • Insert a small survey in initial promotion packets. – Inquire in the surveys about • Date of birth, • Other insurance products customer currently owns, and • Level of Satisfaction. Example: Insurance Marketers • Primary benefits – Better targeting – Better mailing efficiency – Reduced dependence on less accurate data • Auxiliary benefits – Eliminate or reduce promotions to those who are not responding. – Use survey information to offer additional products. Using Questionnaires • Internal customer data does not include information on willingness to purchase. • Use a two-step communication strategy. • First Step: – Simple, inexpensive attitude and behavior survey • Second Step: – Expensive brochures that contain product information and special offers. • People who respond in the first step but not the second provide information for relationship marketing. Survey Data: Assigning Customers to Segments • Segments: Small relatively similar pockets of customers. • Customers within a segment are similar to each other and differ from customers in other segments. • Issues: – Confirm that segments exist – Determine attitudes and characteristics of each segment. – Design cost-effective ways to assign individuals to appropriate segments. Survey Data: Assigning Customers to Segments • Use survey responses to identify characteristics of segments. • Characteristics useful in designing customized campaigns. • Responses may be available only from a sample of customers. • Very expensive to send surveys to all the customers in the database. Survey Data: Assigning Customers to Segments • Relate survey data to internal customer data. • Use statistical models to infer segments membership based on – Internal data, and – Relation between internal data and survey responses. • Response rate depends on the relation between an organization and its customers. Profiling: Assigning Customers to Segments • Ways to create customer profiles - RFM Based on behavior -Product affinity - Demographics - Cluster or lifestyle coding Based on attitudes, demographics, lifestyle Profiling: Assigning Customers to Segments • Classification by product affinity - Affinity starts from customer’s perspective - Use Cross-Buying rates. -This is done by cross-tabulating purchasers of one product against purchasers of another product Profiling:Cross-Buying rates between A and B A No row Yes row Total row B-No B-Yes Total 268431 96.99% 27023 68.47% 295456 93.43% 8328 3.01% 12444 31.53% 20772 6.57% 276759 100% 39467 100% 316228 100% Profiling:Affinity Matrix showing likelihoods of purchase Prod A Prod B Prod C ProdD Prod A eq 10.5 2.4 4.5 Prod B 10.5 eq 9 1.1 Prod C 2.4 9 eq 3 Prod D 4.5 1.1 3 eq Third Party Sources • Primarily demographic, attitudinal, lifestyle and financial data. • Available at the zip code and census tract level. • Census tract (or block) level is a finer classification but is more expensive and requires additional statistical techniques. Third Party Sources • Zip code used when number of customers or prospects is large (> 100,000). • Zip code data can be overlaid with purchase data for profiling purposes. • Major Products: • • • • ClusterPlus (First Data Solutions) PRIZM (Claritas) MicroVision (National Decision Systems) Mosaic (Experian). Third Party Sources • Data is primarily averaged at the zip code level. • Based on the premise that – “ Birds of the same feather….” • Issues: – Possibility of outdated information. – Results in promoting to the wrong people. – Useful only when any form of prospect or customer information is unavailable. National Databases: File Enhancement • Nearly total coverage of US households. • Attitudinal Data – Contains information on general opinions, and perceptions of the people. – Useful when launching new products/services. • Lifestyle Data – Provides information on personal interests, and leisure time activities. – Result of combining geo-demographic and market research data. – Example: Claritas (geo demographic) + Simmons (Market Research) National Databases: File Enhancement • Lifestyle Data (Continued) – Improves the reach of print and electronic media. – Representative strategies for use: • List profiling. • Use the lifestyle characteristics for only customers with the highest priority. • Apply profiles to prospect files. • Used as a guideline for obtaining other lists. National Databases: File Enhancement • Financial Data – Largest providers – Experian, and Transunion. – Data on credit card purchases, installment loans, applications for credit, and payment history. – Marketers can send their house lists to financial data providers. – The financial data providers then provide a profile of their best customers. – Information at segment level not individual level. – Then prospect list can be used to send promotions to prospects that match profiles of best customers. National Databases: File Enhancement • Demographic Data – Available at the household or individual level. – When certain data (e.g., age) is unavailable – A reasonable inference can be made for a majority of the individuals. – Multiple sources: • Motor Vehicle Registrations (Polk) • Telephone and City Directory (First Data Solutions and Metromail) – Values that are available are accurate and are not summaries at the Zip Code Level.