Transforming marketing data to enable decision management
Here's an interesting presentation by Jamet on using marketing data for decision management. Take a look:
Here's an interesting presentation by Jamet on using marketing data for decision management. Take a look:
Marty Mosely, in her expert opinion in Peppers & Rogers writes about the importance of organizing customer information.
Master Data Management (MDM) software or systems enable organizations to strategically leverage and share those critical data assets. Deployed properly, MDM can provide organizations with complete, accurate, and real-time views of data spread across multiple systems or databases, even outside the firewall. This allows businesses to unlock the value of their data assets for competitive advantages or operational improvements.
Exactly how are businesses using MDM? Here are some quick, real-world examples of how organizations in the hospitality, retail, and technology industries are using MDM solutions to manage their most important data while adding to the company bottom line.
Increasing customer recognition and loyalty
Although an international hotel chain was using multiple systems to track guests, the company was only able to follow those enrolled in its loyalty program—about 10 percent of its customer base. This meant the company was potentially under-servicing 70 percent of frequent guests who did not have a loyalty program number. With mountains of complicated data from multiple systems, representing 5,000 global properties across eight brands, getting a handle on the data was a daunting task.
The company chose an MDM system that aggregated complex customer data without disrupting source systems, and seamlessly integrated with its loyalty program system. Once the MDM system was deployed, it was no longer a problem to identify frequent guests, even if they registered under different identities (variations on names and addresses without a consistent identifier), did not use their loyalty program number, or stayed at a number of the company's brands for a variety of reasons. By accurately matching guest information according to demographic and historical information, the company is now able to recognize guests across all brands in its portfolio in real time at the point of service.
Improving customer experience and top-line growth
Plagued by redundant records and an inability to properly recognize customers at any touchpoint, a massive retailer with a huge online presence and hundreds of brick and mortar stores knew it was essential to get a grip on customer data to help the company interact with customers in a more meaningful way. With its new MDM system in place, the retailer has created an accurate, real-time view of its approximately 40 million customer records from three disparate data sources. It can now recognize individual and household relationships, and has identified more than 11 million redundant records.
The retailer can now provide a complete view of transaction and customer history at the point of interaction, fulfill online orders at physical stores, better reconcile customer preferences, eliminate duplicate and inconsistent marketing campaigns, and remove the need to repeatedly ask customer loyalty program members for their personal information.
Understanding customer relationships and improving revenue and service
One of the world's largest technology companies was losing significant revenue due to incomplete software licensing information and territory assignment issues. The company needed to access composite views of all individual and organization data about customers, partners, and suppliers along with advanced B2B hierarchy management. The company used an MDM system to create a single view of customer and hierarchical data to help the organization address its licensing problems and operational inefficiencies, define the true and total value of every customer, identify the most valuable customers within an organization, and even know when a customer purchased through multiple channels.
The results were enormous. By properly managing organizational-level data, the company has found $139 million in new licensing revenue and recouped $47 million in operational cost savings. The MDM solution also helped improve field productivity since sales reps now can access synchronized data from across the entire organization (CRM, software licensing, and financial accounting applications) and gain a better picture of existing relationships and potential for cross- and upsell opportunities.
At the end of the day, what you sell or service doesn't matter. It is imperative to better understand your customers while improving the bottom line. With an MDM solution in place, it turns out that these two goals do not have to be mutually exclusive. Knowing your customers is the key.
My take: I certainly think organizing customer information is the first step towards building consistent customer experience. This is the basic platform around which the rest of the customer marketing initiatives like segmentation, understanding customer value & profitability, analytics need to be built. Hence, getting this right is an important first step.
The way customers pay and transact is undergoing a huge change. Today, most financial institutions have a trail of the payments, spends or usage in their transactional systems thro' many traditional payment methods. But, as these trends below show, there is a huge new revolution underway. If you are in the business of customer data & insight mining or in marketing to these customers, then get ready for paradigm shift in tracking & influencing their purchases.( Thanks David for this post)
Take a look at the trends:
1. Digital money
According to AC Nielsen, 90% of transactions in
the US will be cashless by the year 2020. PayPal already has 63 million
accounts, which makes it larger than most national banks,while in Korea
during the month of June 2004, 300,000 people purchased cellphones into
which you can insert a memory card containing all your financial data.
So will physical money soon be a thing of the past? Most observers say
yes, but don’t underestimate the power of human nature and tradition.
2. Contactless payment
McDonald’s is testing ‘contactless’ payment technologies in the US (and
elsewhere). Just drive-in, grab your goods and drive off. Payment is
made automatically by a wireless device on your windscreen linked to
your bank account. Mobile phones can and will do much the same thing.
3. Pre-pay and stored value cards
10 million households in the US don’t have bank accounts and many of
these use their pay cheques to buy pre-paid credit cards. Around 8.5%
of households without bank accounts own pre-paid credit cards but this
figure is expected to rise to 25% by the end of 2006. This is one
reason why companies like Visa and MasterCard are getting into the act
by signing up Rap moguls and singers like Russell Simmons and Usher to
put their names on prepaid cards.
4. Private currencies
Pre-pay is a type of private currency in that you can restrict where
people spend their money, in some cases to a single brand, outlet or
service. This is good news for loyalty and also good (or bad) news for
privacy depending on your point of view. For example, parents can give
their children pre-paid cards with certain categories or locations
locked off. However, the big news in private currencies is what’s
happening in the air and in cyberspace. According to the Economist
magazine, airmiles are now technically more valuable than the US dollar
while over in cyberspace gamers are exchanging cyber dollars for the
real thing.
5. Debt
The level of credit card debt in Britain has increased by 73% since
1997. The UK now holds 60% of all credit cards issued in Europe and has
75% of all European credit card debt. Spending on credit cards now
represents 11% of GDP and 40% of people say they expect to use their
cards more with the advent of new technology. Meanwhile, the amount
owed to credit card companies in the UK now stands at GBP £53 billion.
Figures for other countries such as the US and Australia are following
a broadly similar trend. So what happens if (when) interest rates
really go up? Trouble, that’s what.
6. Everyone is a bank
If everyone from supermarkets and
search engines to phone companies and airlines offer banking services
where does this leave the banks? The answer could be as back office low
margin sub-contractors or maybe banks will re-frame themselves as
‘wealthcare’ businesses.
7. Micropayments
Once upon a time people used credit cards for big purchases like
holidays. Not any more. Now you can buy a 99cent song on i-Tunes with
your credit card or charge your hamburger at McDonald’s to your
plastic. In 2004 the average credit card transaction in the US was
$67.81. Back in 1999 it was $72.83. Add to this the possibilities
created by contactless payment, stored value cards and pre-pay and you
have a recipe for radical change in the financial services sector.
8. Proof of identity
With cases of identity theft going through the roof in most countries,
there will be a boom for companies and technologies offering electronic
and other forms of identity verification. There will also be an
increase in products and services aimed at helping people get their
identify back after its been stolen.
9. Mobile phones becoming wallets
Have you noticed how fewer people are wearing watches these days? Under
the age of 21 a watch is almost a novelty as people use their mobile
phones to tell the time instead. And so, the theory goes, phones will
replace wallets too as people find it more convenient to carry their
cash digitally inside their phones.
10. The death of cheques
Seriously, who under the age of thirty uses cheques these days?
Suresh Vittal of Forrester released a report on successful implementation of Enterprise Marketing Platform couple of months ago. It had some interesting learnings for any enterprise planning to get this going in their organization. Here are some highlights:
Paul Dervan had a chat with Drayton Bird, one of the legends of the Direct Marketing industry. His answers are incisive and pretty telling. Take a look:
Me: What is the single biggest change you noticed in direct marketing industry in the past 15-20 years?
Drayton: More people are doing it, less well.
Here are some of the things that have had significant effect on the marketing industry over the last four decades:
Me: There seems to be a blur between direct marketing, ATL advertising and digital marketing. Do you find this?
Drayton:
Yes there is. This is a good thing. This is not a difficult business to
master and people should be able to understand and practice all three,
since customers switch happily between them. Customers and their
motivations do not change even if the media do. Actually as I point out
in the new edition of Commonsense Direct and Digital Marketing, the
word “digital” is a misnomer. We have digital TV and radio, but
marketers don’t think of them as digital.
Me: Is the future of direct marketing looking bright?
Drayton: Yes. My former colleague Shelley Lazarus, now CEO of Ogilvy Worldwide said at the DMA conference not long ago that today, all marketing is direct. This is because of the internet, which is accelerated direct marketing.
Me: What are the common mistakes made by marketers?
Drayton: Here are some I listed recently for another interview...
Me: What advice would you give anybody starting off in marketing?
Drayton:
Independent has a nice article about Clive Dunbumby, a pioneer in data-led marketing. His involvement in the success of Tesco's loyalty program is legendary.Here's a chance to learn from his experience on how to use data:
If knowledge is power then Dunhumby founder Clive Humby is a very powerful man indeed. Every year, the Londoner's data mining firm peers into a mind-boggling 100 million shopping baskets. The contents of those baskets are sorted by codes, fed seamlessly into powerful spreadsheets and analysed by a team of dedicated number crunchers.By the end, Dunhumby has an eerily complete picture of individual shoppers.
My take: When you have data, you should first know what does it have as information & how to use it.Don't collect data that you don't know where you are going to use. You should also know what works & does not work - measure & understand everything that you do. Lastly, you should know it is not a magic wand for you to get customers to come back or buy more. You have to get your product right.
I was reading an article in DM Review, on the emerging applications of business intelligence tools and the transformation expected in the future as 'information inventory' in enterprises gather pace over the next decade. While there are interesting trends on how BI applications will grow( which I have put together as a presentation), I would likely to slightly digress a bit and pick-out some thought-provoking points that has been made in the article:
I found a particularly interesting point that can have a profund impact on many business models which many business managers tend to dismiss or miss many a times:
"This is the trend that Nicholas Carr identifies in his book “The Big Switch: Rewiring the World, from Edison to Google” (W.W. Norton & Co., 2008).
This refers to the trend of businesses switching from the internal
deployment of software to the outsourcing of large-scale information
processing systems, also known as software as a service (SaaS).SaaS is normally
thought of as a simplification and economization of the installation,
management and maintenance of software.
Carr’s argument is simple:
during the industrial revolution, every factory had its own power plant
– initially, water wheels and subsequently steam engines. As electrical
service became widely available, a big switch took place, and as we
know, few factories today have their own power plants because it became
more economical for them to use electrical power supplied by utility
companies. Carr’s point is that in a similar fashion today, most
industries operate their own computer systems but soon will switch to
having them managed by outside parties because it is more economical."
How's the BIG switch going to affect your business?
Is it possible for you to envision the big switch in your business that can become a game changer? I personally think this is happening to the so called analytical and marketing applications that I work with everyday. It's increasingly all about finding common business issues across business verticals, developing a common methodology to develop insights, identifying a platform to capture trends that the enterprise business users can access and getting them together quickly to create business impact. We need to have the ability to combine mass customization with scalability in our analytical marketing business.Am sure it's applicable to your business too!
THE BIG switch in BI applications
Coming back to the topic where I started,the article goes on to mention that Diagonal BI applications will substantially extend the benefits of SaaS and will accelerate the outsourcing trend in BI.
I recently read a very thought provoking article by Alec - " Hankering for a world without identity or federation". Also, a lovely follow-up article on the same topic by Andriana. Also, there's a nice comment by Christopher Carfi on the same topic.
These articles raised serious questions in my mind about how marketers, in the future, will have to build conversations with customers without identity. The key issue raised in my head was - increasingly as more and more get customers get online or mobile( in developing markets like India, China and the like) they would like to control their identity & conversations with brands. I presume things like DNPC( Do Not Place Cookies), DNL( Do not link ads(without permission)), DNT(Do Not tag along - SMSs )etc. will increasingly gain importance.
At the same time , these mediums are also being used for transactions and purchases more and more. Many of these articles talk about protecting identity but when you combine identity with transactional information, interests in various social networks,memberships in certain sites etc.- it provides a new dimension in building conversations with customers.Marketers will need to use data from multiple sources -in real time- to understand customers, get into their inner circle by really being valuable to their lives not just providing or sending a marketing messages. Also, identities need to be confirmed from multiple sources of paths from where customers come. There is a nice diagram from Adriana that I have picked-up which brings this point alive:
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The key challenges and the winners of tomorrow will be the ones who are able to build conversations without identities.
As many channels start to converge, the chatter among customers about products, benefits, uses, problems, referrals is increasingly gaining a lot of attention. It's so easy today to get on to the web and know what customers think about your products. The ability to fuse this data along with your transactional & attitudinal data that lies within your organization and doing analytics on this information is going to be the next inflection point for marketers.
Here's a presentation by Paul Isackson that brings out the power of this chatter and influence on customer behaviour.
A recent study from the Sales Lead Management Association (SLMA) shows that many companies are ignoring their sales lead management.
Their 2nd annual Sales Lead Management Study, conducted with 144 businesses in Southern California, revealed the following results:
My View: The gap between sales & marketing departments has only grown over the years.Sales has had a siloed process in enterprises and in my experience getting sales to see & appreciate good quality leads is always big problem. On the other hand, I have always found, lack of understanding what a good lead is the problem of most lead generation programs. Often there is a mix of science, logic and an intuitive feeling in the salesperson's mind which a software or a process cannot replicate. But, my belief is that right at the inception of a lead generation program, you need to have the buy-in of the sales team. The lead generation team must be 'considered' a part of the sales team and may be that's the reason there's a term coined as 'inside sales'! Nevertheless, the lead generation team, the software and the process must be seamlessly integrated to succeed. It has to start before the program is implemented and announced. That's the key to its success.
Only 50 percent of global marketers report having a strategy for further penetrating or monetizing key account relationships, reports the Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) Council in a new research study, Business Gain From How You Retain . In addition, a surprising 45 percent rate the effectiveness of customer relationship management (CRM) systems as deficient or needing more work, with only 15 percent of companies rating themselves extremely good or effective at integrating disparate customer data sources and repositories.
Conducted in late 2007 and early 2008, the CMO Council's Business Gain from How You Retain study undertook a wide-ranging evaluation of where and how marketers are "operationalizing" customer intelligence and insight to reduce customer churn, increase lifetime value, improve the customer experience, and increase the effectiveness and targeting of marketing spend.
More importantly, marketers are struggling to gain a true and timely view of the customer due to inadequate or incompatible IT systems and databases, siloed data in functional areas, and a limited strategic focus or management mandate on Customer Data Integration (CDI). Compounding the issue is a lack of formalized data-sharing policies and practices in the organization, combined with internal political or cultural barriers and IT obstacles and objections to data integration.
"We are seeing a fundamental need for marketers to be more effective at tapping the valuable vein of customer data that runs deep inside all organizations," notes Donovan Neale-May, Executive Director of the CMO Council. "Investing in integrated systems that harvest customer insight is critical to driving both marketing and business performance," he adds.
- Up-selling and cross-selling
- Segmenting and targeting
- Driving retention, loyalty and promotional programs
- Identifying new opportunities and unmet needs
- Improving customer service
- Shaping personalized and customized communications
I read an interesting post about how the rules of mass marketing, direct marketing & social media are so different in approach, content, analysis and results. Therefore, for marketers, the challenge of applying & measuring each of them is conflicting, different & downright confusing. The truth though is that data(at an individual customer level) is becoming the DNA for marketing and incremental byte-sized data from each of them come at different points of time - controlled to near-real to real.The key, therefore, is knowing how to use it, apply it basis the method of marketing marketers are executing or seeking solutions for, not making the mistake of transposing one type of marketing hypothesis to the other etc. are key factors of being a successful marketer tomorrow.
Take a look:



Mass advertising is like Classical Physics; large-scale, mostly intuitive and somewhat predictable.
Direct Marketing is like Atomic Physics; small/medium-scale, mostly logical, but the segmentation aspects start to show some bumps and troughs on what appeared to be smooth and simple.
Social Media is more like Quantum Physics; small-scale, counter-intuitive and usually unpredictable.
...many marketers in the classical camp are not very happy with what they see, because it doesn’t confirm what they thought they knew. Decisions which appear obvious when looking at large sample sizes becomes more nuanced and contradictory when you see everyone as an individual.
MarketingNPV provides an in-depth point of view on measuring engagement. This is a complex and evolving subject in marketing. The key however is to start small, keep defining & redefining it, see the results and keep improving it all the time. I think customer engagement must include all touchpoints beyond just net, blogs. It should include store visits, branch visits, call centre, product usage, cross-product holding, depth of features & benefits used by the customer etc.
Take a look at how they see it:

Forrester, has come-up with some research around emerging trends in marketing ( ahead of their Marketing Forum 2008) - Engagement is becoming an important metric. Key highlights include:
Marketing leaders steer based on hard data. Measuring engagement will take the guesswork out of budget allocation. Engagement can drive awareness, transactions, brand preference, and loyalty. But each of these objectives requires a different approach and investment in people, processes, and technology.Marketing leaders from firms like CompUSA and BMW prioritized one goal, chose a very specific set of tools and vendors, and successfully moved the needle on transactions and loyalty, respectively.
Direct marketers and market researchers unearth deep client needs. Leading direct marketers already combine Web clicks with purchase and loyalty data to unearth a consumer's interaction with the brand. But BrandIntel went a step further and recorded the content that users generated and other consumers read.
eCommerce professionals drive online sales with personalization. More than a third of Web visitors will make a purchase after seeing a personalized recommendation. eCommerce professionals can boost online sales with one-to-one personalization.
Customer experience professionals innovate the brand. Whirlpool observed people at home and used the results to develop a new sub-brand -- Gladiator -- with fridges for men in their garages.To meet these uncovered needs, customer experience professionals will develop a disruptive strategy, simplifying the interaction, amplifying the service elements, and repositioning the brand overall.
My view: Involvement, Interaction, Intimacy & Influence - 4Is as Forrester calls it, needs to be measured by marketers on a regular basis. This will increasingly make marketing more data-led. They need to be building programs around the 4Is using data. It is important that they start fusing transactional data with web data - clicks, blogs, social networks etc. along with customer service data. This will increasingly give marketers a peek preview into how customers feel, think and talk about their products and personalize their marketing efforts basis the degree of engagement they have identified with these set of customers.
I was just going thro' some reports on the Gartner CRM 2008 summit. There are some highlights which I saw was not new or earth-shattering but definitely makes a lot of sense to reinforce once more:
My View: The key question really though, is how do we enable all of this in organizations - to me it is about execution-employee focus. I think there is only a small mention on how do we reward, appraise and evaluate employees who should make this happen. This is really where the pieces begin to fall. There are conflicting KRAs in different departments and hence there are no compelling reasons to deliver a consistent customer experience. To put it bluntly, "if it does not hurt, it does not matter!" This is where it needs to begin and end as the puzzles in the middle are put together!

The CMO council in its new global survey, "The Power of Personalization" has some interesting pointers on potential opportunities that enterprises have in exploting this approach and strategy.
According to the survey:
My View: I personally believe that many marketing departments in companies are struggling with this new order of availability of customer information, left-brain marketing techniques(viz. analytics) and competency to leverage technology tools. Earlier they had to just "inform", now they need to use customer information to "interact". The traditional job roles and responsibilities need changes, as marketing departments need to have people who understand data, technology and interpret individual customer behaviour.I think marketers must learn to use simple tools, extract whatever data is available and show quick-wins rather than wait for technology infrastructure to be perfect to adopt this approach as they scale-up this kind of marketing. Also, product managers must also have under them customer information managers/ executives who could effectively lead this process. It is also important that the silos in organizations have to be brought together by the CEO to ensure information is used effectively for the enterprise rather than a particular line of business. May be new accounting methods of attributing income, because information of a line of business is used for the other, should be designed for wide adoption of such practices in enterprises.In my opinion, personalized marketing is more than just the 'intent', it is the 'intensity' that can make the needle move!
I am not always excited if somebody tells me I have acquired a new customer. I always look at what is in the plan of the marketing & product teams to make these customers use all the features and benefits of the product, so that these customers can be with them for life. Not too many companies pay attention to onboarding customers. They acquire and forget. Or they pay a lot of attention to how to acquire customers but not do enough review of what is done to keep and grow these customers. Kevin Zimmerman, Sr. Editor, at Peppers & Rogers writes:
Consumer electronics companies and retailers are finding out the hard way what happens when you don't educate customers. Take, for example, the recent situation involving the purchase of popular high-definition televisions (HDTVs). According to Forrester Research Analyst James McQuivey, 20 percent of the sets sold have been returned in some U.S. regions, in large part by consumers who didn't realize what they were buying. Per an ESPN/Knowledge Networks/Statistical Research Inc. study, only 64 percent of homes with an HDTV have HD programming via broadcast or cable, and 13 percent of people who own an HD set do not know if they receive an HD signal. McQuivey forecasts the 20 percent figure will drop moving forward, as more retailers see the need to educate customers about the format if they want to avoid such massive returns.
Who's responsible for customer education?
Henry Choy, senior analyst at Jon Peddie Research says ""The store should do a better job of educating customers, the documentation inside the box must be better, cable companies can get more involved,"..
For a moment, if we as marketers think like customers, then count the number of times we would have read an operating manual, the number times we would have used the features that we primarily bought the product for, the number of times a company that we bought the product from, called to tell you if you have understood the features and used them. In my case, it is close to zero. That's the opportunity waiting to be tapped - Onboard your customers and you will realize there's profits to be made for life.
Peter Kim of Forrester has written a thought-provoking article on the future of the advertising agency. The report argues that consumers now rely less and less on marketing messages when in buying mode. Instead they seek guidance from family, friends and others in their respective communities to guide them toward purchase decisions.
Peter’s views via AdWeek
(Agencies are) “in “a world of hurt” because consumers are tuning out the messages the industry is predicated on producing. Instead, it believes shops need to be organized around communities, not disciplines. What it is calling “the connected agency” would not only know certain communities but also be active members of these groups. Pushing messages would give way to encouraging voluntary engagement, and ongoing conversations would replace time-based campaigns”.
My View:
As communities & conversations become more and more important, there is a need to understand how to build analytical models around huge "conversational databases" that will emerge. The ability to mine data and conversations together, will become a huge competitive advantage for service providers. The ones who will succeed are the ones who will be able to overlay the traditional transactional data with conversational data. This is a skill that needs to be built and nurtured if brands and service providers have to succeed in the future.
Ron got my attention with a lovely post on this topic. He has some very thought-provoking points on various facets of building customer relationships. He picks-up a quote from John Gottman who says:
“Good relationships aren’t about clear communication — they’re about small moments of attachment and intimacy.”. He gives an example of a 'small moment' that built a relationship with a customer -
An IT executive traces his loyalty to USAA back to a single phone call. He called the firm to cancel a credit card and insurance policy. The rep said “I hope I’m not overstepping my boundaries, but we’ve found that many customer often cancel products because of events that aren’t related to USAA like a divorce or other family matter. We’ve set up a special department to help customers with these kinds of matters, is this something we might be able to help you with?” Since he was in the middle of the divorce, he took USAA up on that offer and has been a loyal customer since.
He further writes, Gottman also says that:
“Successful couples look for ways to accentuate the positive. They try to say ‘yes’ as often as possible.”
He writes - Gottman’s comment echoes my sentiment that building a relationship isn’t simply about saying “trust us” but saying (and demonstrating) “we trust you.”
How can one institutionalize this process? - My view:
Companies don't necessarily disagree with this philosophy but the truth is getting it working in the trenches(in the marketplace across channels) - that's always the challenge. Companies need to build a robust Customer Interaction Architecture (CIA) that can capture this "pain point' and 'enable' it with tools and triggers to make a difference. I certainly believe every transaction or complaint or query is an opportunity to build a "Small Moment Customer Interaction Architecture (SMCIA)'.
To make this happen, there is a need to increasingly integrate technology with every marketing processes.
According to a research released by Royal Mail, an estimated 90 per cent of companies fail to exploit data they already hold on their customers!
It was really disturbing to me as I went thro' some highlights of the report as to how companies value data. In my opinion, in the coming decade, data is going to be every enterprise's only competitive advantage and companies can't take this data casually given the value it can derive, as this research shows.
Take a look at the topline findings:
By addressing the data problem, enterprises could potentially increase their value by up to 30 per cent. It is imperative that enterprises look at ways and means to design a customer data strategy road map and extract value from it.
I was reflecting over the weekend about Forrester's Social Technographics Ladder of Participation. While it was focussed on emerging social technologies, I felt there were some trends, learnings and practices that can be applied from here to refresh marketing thinking, practices, evolving needs to embrace technologies that can make some changes happen and thereby make marketing more relevant to enterprises and CEOs. Let's take a look at this Ladder of Participation first:
I see the marketing eco-system too, taking a very similar shape(with either customers or prospects) in the years to come. The need to 'engage' and run marketing campaigns across a similar ladder is bound to become increasingly important. Marketing will need to 'bucket' its segments of customers or prospects across the spectrum of Inactives to Creators. The 'old world marketing' practice would have stopped with collecters - who I would define as repeat purchasers. Normally, marketing practices would have stopped there.
But, in the 'new world of marketing', customers will be more involved, participative and conversational. Thereby, customers will leave a 'trail of information' behind, in enterprises. For an enterprise, the creators will be the most loyal and demanding. They need to be recognized, valued and encouraged to converse. The ones who do it, will become identifiable and the most important. Also, products/brands will have to become 'information platforms' in such a world. This will also lead to customized design of products and services for them.
The critics are the ones who will have to be 'listened' to. With emerging channels or touch points, the enterprises must open a channel of communication to hear and rectify their problems. They are the ones who can potentially move-up the ladder of participation.
The collectors need to be 'prodded' to talk rather just buy again and again, get them to share their experience and frustrations with the product. And the joiners will have to be moved to become collecters.
This kind of marketing will combine a lot of information, analytical insights, real-time marketing automation to talk to customers in different behavioural states and stages in the ladder. And when enterprises talk of millions and millions of such identified customers or prospects, the need for marketing to deliver scalable, real-time, right-time marketing will only become sacrosanct. The ones who will practice it, will have the ear of CEOs/CFOs and the rest will be left behind.
David Baker provides some interesting insights on customer lifecycle. I quite like the idea of identifying "switch points" when a customer is likely to switch to another product/brand or is ready to move to a product in the higher tier. The key question to me though is the ability of companies to identify such "customer states" or "behaviour states". Marketing needs to quickly start learning that art of using customer information, drill down and observe these changes in customer patterns and take appropriate action.
He writes:
If you are like most people, you have stages of life and all things around you; people and environments change dramatically over time. We have an early life stage where we learn the primary elements of surviving in this mixed world, the basics, as we could call it. This is where we form our basic judgments, values and shape who we are and the paths we'll lead. This is where we learn to develop our community of generations, or simply break out and build our own communities. We have many milestones that we go through: high school graduation, college for some, young adult life in the working force, family development and planting roots into a community. We then drift into the middle stages of our life, where many foster these communities and evolve the next stage of life till we get to the celebrated later stages of our life and bask in our wealth and watch our families grow up.
A customer lifecycle is just that. It is the foundation of consumer involvement with your brand over time. A customer lifecycle can shift over time, as consumers come in and out of different lifestages.
The key to marketing exactness in developing a lifecycle program is to identify "switch points" when a customer is likely to shift away from your brand, consider new alternatives and potentially develop some brand affinity with your competitor. Many in the marketing space trigger off of key income milestones. We graduate from college, we get married and have dual incomes, we start a family, we invest in our first home, we buy our first automobile, we consider life insurance as a means of protecting our family, we look more closely at investment options. All are viable triggers.
Don't purge that consumer from your database or program if they don't respond; don't purge them if they don't buy. Look deeper and see if a lifestage is influencing their involvement with your brand. That's the essence of marketing!
Frank Capek drew my attention to a recent report on how customers & devoting signifcant executive time on managing customers will be central focus of CEOs during 2008 (Report)
From the executive summary:
”The first theme is that this may be a year in which there is renewed vigor around the customer - 2008 may be a year where many CEOs put the customer at the top of the long list of issues on which they must focus. Why? Simply stated - customers are at the core of growth. Here are a few points from this year’s study that are the foundation of this theme:
CEOs are planning greater investment, both budget and time-wise, on customer relationship management. The importance of sales growth as a performance measure has increased since the prior study. Customers are the engine of sales growth. Brand, reputation, and investments in corporate social responsibility are more important this year - all efforts that are focused on the winning the hearts and minds of the customer. While many CEOs say it is easier to attract customers than it used to be, many, particularly outside the United States, say it is getting harder to retain customers. CEOs recognize that losing customers can be costly.”Key take-out: It's heartening for me to note that managing customers will be on top of CEOs' agenda. To make it a reality,I think they will have to spend significant time in driving it down the organization - amongst their business heads and their ranks. This has always been a key challenge as there are a lot of issues regarding channel conflicts, change management, marketing budget allocation, linking performance incentives wrt customer management goals, technology investments, profit & cost allocation etc. that will need their focus, to drive this kind of a culture in an organization. Also, they will have to invest significantly in identifying metrics and measurement dashboards around how customers are being managed real time in an enterprise and drive this relentlessly across lifecycle of their customers over the next couple of years once they make a start in 2008.
While there has been lot of discussions around the need for single view of customers across an enterprise over the last few years, 2008 seems to be a year when this trend could gain a lot of momentum.
Aberdeen Group surveyed over 250 companies to identify the strategies, capabilities and enablers that Best in Class (BIC) companies are using to improve sales and marketing alignment.
Some highlights from the report: