Arthur Middleton Hughes VP / Solutions Architect Customer Retention: how to measure it, build it and keep it. San Francisco DMA March 16, 2006 3:00 – 5:00.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Our Solution… As the levers of economic growth continue to shift downward, barter merchants large and small need to connect with their communities to drive.
Advertisements

Why Databases Fail Nine deadly mistakes that will ruin your chances for success. Houston Direct Marketing Association Thursday, October 14, 2004 Arthur.
LTV and RFM for Non Profits DMA Non Profit Forum Friday February : :45 The Capitol Hilton Washington, DC Arthur Middleton Hughes Vice President.
UCEA Mini-Workshop on Database Marketing
Why Buy an ATM? This is a brief presentation that illustrates how placing an ATM in a retail location has multiple layers of benefits, not just in terms.
Bank on Traffic Your Internet Business Partner One of the Most Important Asset You Need to Promote and Build Your Own Online Business is Quality Web Traffic.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc
16 MKTG CHAPTER Lamb, Hair, McDaniel
Sales Promotion Chapter Eleven.
Essentials of Marketing 13e
Contact strategy.
Section 26.2 Setting Prices
Key Concepts and Skills
Chapter 11 Customer Relationship Management McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Why Start with a Customer For a company to be successful, it must : Understand the customer – All customers are not alike! Identify their preferences –
Acquire Foundational Knowledge Of Marketing Information Management To Understand Its Nature & Scope.
Customer relationship management.
Customer relationship management.
About Us At PreDealz we put businesses small or large in a position to be successful by designing a marketing and advertising campaign to meet their short.
Building Bridges Reach your customers and keep them coming back Keynote Address to the UCEA Arthur Middleton Hughes Hyatt Fisherman’s Wharf San Francisco.
Database and Direct Response Marketing
Promotion Lesson Objectives:  Define promotion  List promotional mix activities  Explain what can influence the promotional mix.
Overview of Database Marketing. Historical Perspective Mass Production, Mass Media and Mass Mkt now replaced by -a one-to-one economic system The one-to-one.
Customer relationship management (CMR)
Relationship Marketing. Mass Markets Historically large-scale mass production and distribution methods adopted. Cost-efficiencies drove prices lower.
Database Marketing and Direct Response Marketing
Database Marketing and Lifetime Value
THE 6 MARKETING METRICS YOUR BOSS ACTUALLY CARES ABOUT. Prove the ROI of your marketing efforts by presenting these six metrics. CHEAT SHEET.
How to retain customers Arthur Middleton Hughes VP Solutions Architect KnowledgeBase Marketing.
Life Time Value Analysis Definition: LTV is the net present value (NPV) of the profit that you will realize on the average new customer during a given.
LOYALTY PROGRAMS Nov What is a Loyalty Program? Loyalty programs are structured marketing efforts that reward, and therefore encourage, loyal buying.
Customer Loyalty How you can foster it and profit from it Keynote San Francisco DMA March 16, :30 PM Arthur Middleton Hughes VP Solutions Architect.
E Marketing E Newsletter and E-Surveys Are They For You???
How to retain insurance customers November 17, 2009 Arthur Middleton Hughes PIMA Conference.
Class Discussion Notes MKT March 27, 2001.
What is Database Marketing? Arthur Middleton Hughes VP Solutions Architect KnowledgeBase Marketing.
Page - 1 Using Lifetime Value to Determine Your Marketing Strategy Arthur Middleton Hughes, VP Strategic Planning msdbm DMA 84 th Annual.
Current challenges and why The Give Back Campaign is essential to the future of fundraising Fundraising in 2015 – The Challenges and Opportunities.
Using Lifetime Value to Determine Your Marketing Strategy Arthur Middleton Hughes Vice President / Solutions Architect KnowledgeBase Marketing, Inc. ACC.
1 Marketing Research Aaker, Kumar, Day Ninth Edition Instructor’s Presentation Slides.
Building profitable customer loyalty
Bell Ringer  List some reasons why you think that some new businesses have almost immediate success while others fail miserably. The main idea: Successful.
BGS Customer Relationship Management
October 9, 2003 Database Marketing: A New Beginning Houston DMA Arthur Middleton Hughes Director, Database Marketing Strategy Doubleclick Data Management.
1 Customer LifeCycle Management SM Tap into YOUR hidden potential with DPS PerfectCircle Suite of Marketing Capabilities.
Letting Them Come Behind the Counter Arthur Middleton Hughes VP Strategic Planning M\S Database Marketing DMA 83 rd Annual Conference New.
What Works (and what doesn’t work) in Database Marketing Arthur Middleton Hughes Vice President for Business Development CSC Advanced Database Solutions.
How to sell the Next Best Product DMA Financial Services Council Palmer House Chicago Luncheon Speech April 11, 2002 Arthur Middleton Hughes Vice President.
Building Customer Relationship “Service is so great an opportunity for the company that our vision for the next century is that GE is a global service.
Lets talk money: revenue model* Task Code: S303. REVENUE GENERATION.
Business Management.
Title Subtitle Date Using Lifetime Value to Increase Customer Retention and Repeat Sales ACCM Boston Wednesday, May :45 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Arthur.
Using Lifetime Value to Determine Your Marketing Strategy Arthur Middleton Hughes VP Strategic Planning M\S Database Marketing DMA 83 rd.
5.06B Set Marketing Goals and Select Marketing Metrics (ways to measure) Entrepreneurship 1.
Confidential. This presentation is provided for the recipient only and cannot be reproduced or shared without Fair Isaac Corporation's express consent.
Using Lifetime Value to Determine Your Marketing Strategy Arthur Middleton Hughes Vice President / Solutions Architect KnowledgeBase Marketing, Inc. NCDM.
Sule Ozmen-CRM CRM Customer Relationship Management Şule Özmen Week 6 Digital Economy Customers Became Number One They are empowered customers.
Optimal Database Marketing Drozdenko & Drake,
UCEA Mini-Workshop on Database Marketing Arthur Middleton Hughes Hyatt Fisherman’s Wharf San Francisco Feb 14, 2002
CHAPTER 13 MARKETING in TODAY’S WORLD The Basics of Marketing Market A market is a group of customers who share common wants and needs, and who have.
Tactics to Keep Your Existing Customers Coming Back for More Call On: http://
How to create brand loyalty in a digital age Ashley Joyce Account Manager.
 1- Definition  2- CRM  3- Analytics  4- Tools.
Marketing Research Aaker, Kumar, Day and Leone Tenth Edition Instructor’s Presentation Slides 1.
5th Edition.
Total quality management
Chapter 11 Building a Customer-Centric Organization – Customer Relationship Management 11-1.
The secret value of existing customers
Online Marketing: Driving Traffic, Conversion and Sales
University of Washington EMBA Program Regional 20
Presentation transcript:

Arthur Middleton Hughes VP / Solutions Architect Customer Retention: how to measure it, build it and keep it. San Francisco DMA March 16, :00 – 5:00

Marketing Database Analytic & Campaign Software Customer Transactions Marketing Staff - Access By Web Inputs from retail, phone, web How a Modern Database Works Appended Data Modeling & Analytics Marketing Campaigns Data Cleaning Standardization Website

Why retention is important: long term loyal customers Buy more per year Buy higher priced options Buy more often Are less price sensitive Are less costly to serve Are more loyal Have a higher lifetime value

How to retain them Recruit the right customers to begin with Once you have them, segment them by lifetime value Communicate with them to build loyalty

Manufacturer of indoor lighting products Catalog sent to 45,000 contractors Previous policy: wait for the orders Test: pick 1,200 customers, split into test of 600 and control of 600 Two person pilot program build relationship with test customers to see the results What proves that communications work?

Change in the number of orders

Change in the Average Order Size

Total revenue gain: $2.6 million dollars

Communications work! Building a relationship with customers can be highly profitable Using a database to recreate the old family grocer is a winning strategy Relationship marketing is the way to go

But, with millions of customers… Which ones should you spend resources on? If you communicate with everyone, you will not have enough resources to retain the very best. To select the best, you need to compute customer lifetime value

Lifetime Value

Why we need Lifetime Value Analysis We need to know the value of our customers, so as to properly target our sales and retention efforts We need to discriminate among our customers to acquire and retain the best

Lifetime Value Analysis Goal: Determine... where to put your retention dollars the value of each retention strategy where to put your acquisition dollars how much to spend on acquisition

What is lifetime value? Net present value of the profit to be realized on the average new customer during a given number of years. To compute it, you must be able to track customers from year to year. Main use: To evaluate strategy.

Examples of Profitable Strategies User Groups Newsletters Surveys and Responses Loyalty Programs Customer and Technical Services Membership cards and status levels Event Driven Communications

Event driven communication: Dear Mr. Hughes: I would like to remind you that your wife Helenas birthday is coming up in two weeks on November 5th. We have the perfect gift for her in stock. As you know, she loves Liz Claiborne clothing. We have an absolutely beautiful new suit in blue, her favorite color, in a fourteen, her size, priced at $ If you like, I can gift wrap the suit at no extra charge and deliver it to you next week, so that you will have it in plenty of time for her birthday. Or, I can put it aside so you can come in to pick it up. Please call me at (703) to let me know which youd prefer. Sincerely yours, Robin Baumgartner Robin Baumgartner, Store Manager Ridgeway Fashions Leesburg, VA 22069

Lets look at a retail operation Before and after a loyalty program

LTV Before New Strategies

Discount Rate Basic Formula Market Rate of Interest...5% Assume Risk (Double rate)...10% Years = n Interest = i Formula: D = (1 + i) n Calculation of rate after 2 years: D = (1 +.10) 2 = (1.10) 2 = 1.21

Provide all customers with a card or register their credit cards Birthday Club Communicate with them Give them premiums if they shop a lot Lets see what could happen New Retention Strategies

With New Strategies

Effect of adoption of new strategies

What is the proper computation period? Which is the correct lifetime value? 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or more years? They are all correct. Which you use depends on your product or service. Long lifetimes: banks, insurance, utilities. Short lifetimes: discount houses, package goods, catalogers.

Increase the retention rate Increase the referral rate Increase the spending rate Decrease the direct costs Decrease the marketing costs Five Ways to Boost LTV with Database Strategies

How to use lifetime value Compute a base lifetime value Dream up a new strategy. Estimate the benefits and costs Determine whether your new lifetime value goes up or goes down Dont undertake any new strategy until you can prove it will be successful

Using lifetime value to get budget approval Database marketing budgets are usually carved from somewhere else You have to prove that you will make better use of the funds than the others Lifetime value can supply testable numbers that CFOs can understand Base your budget on solid numbers backed up by valid tests

What your new budget will buy

How you got there

Using lifetime value to get budget approval Database marketing budgets are usually carved from somewhere else You have to prove that you will make better use of the funds than the others Lifetime value can supply testable numbers that CFOs can understand Base your budget on solid numbers backed up by valid tests

Who is going to defect? Besides LTV, you can develop a model that predicts which customers are most likely to leave. Putting that model with LTV you can refocus your entire retention strategy You create a Risk Revenue Matrix

Focus on A and B: 44% of your customers.

Who uses LTV in marketing?* DMA survey shows 52% of Consumer Only marketers use LTV. 25% of B to B use LTV. 49% Larger companies ($100 million or more) use LTV. 32% smaller companies use LTV 65% plan to use LTV more extensively in % use LTV to decide when to reactivate a lapsed customer. 68% determine promotions by LTV *DMA Survey 2005

Conclusion: you can do this Create a lifetime value table for your customers. Put LTV into each customer record Use LTV to determine your marketing strategy Use it to improve retention, cross sales, and profits

Break

Why you need customer segments Customers are usually very different College students, senior citizens, families with children, empty nesters… The same message to all may not work so well. Solution: create segments, and design a program for each segment.

How one retail store created 9 customer segments.

Segments differ from status levels

Segment Strategy

An ideal segment… Has definable characteristics in terms of behavior and demographics: for example, Retired Couples Is large enough in terms of potential sales to justify a custom marketing strategy with appropriate rewards and budget Has members who can be motivated by cost effective rewards to modify their behavior in ways that are profitable for your company Makes efficient use of available data to support segment definition and marketing efforts Can be measured in performance, with control groups Justifies an organization devoted to it: can be a single person, or part of a persons time, but there should be someone who owns each segment.

A valid segment strategy involves: Communications to the segment (direct mail, , on-location personal attention) Rewards designed to modify behavior Controls to measure the success of the strategy A budget for implementation of the strategy Specific goals and metrics for engagement: for behavior modification An organization that accepts responsibility for the segment

Segment action plan: A roadmap showing what will happen when. Send each policyholder a birthday card and a policy review 45 days before their policy renewal date. A budget for the infrastructure and for the segment marketing plans An organization chart that shows who is responsible for each segment Specific goals to be achieved with milestones for measurement of success

Using Clusters as segments

How one non profit measured success by cluster- Their best

Their worst – in terms of response and contributions

Success from mailing only to the best, and not mailing the worst $5 Million more in net gross revenue.

Multi-channel users are more loyal Illustrative numbers from several case studies

Why the web is important to retention Web customers are more affluent Their average order size is 12% higher than phone orders. The cost of the web order is 16% lower than phone orders. Typical incentive offered is 5% off on any order over $50. Result: 11% of non web customers shift to the web every year.

Creating a club on the internet A company selling sporting goods created an internet member club. When DB was built they learned that: –Club members bought 11 times more than non club members. –In two years, 81% of club members became multi- buyers. –The club boosted retention

Club Members Retention

Cataloger Customer Retention Miles Kimball sent 20,000 s with three different catalogs, and 20,000 with the three catalogs alone. Those who got the s bought 18% more than those who got the catalogs alone. More sales = Higher overall retention levels

Retailer Customer Retention Video retailer sent newsletters to 170,000 customers for 6 months. Control group of 14,000 got no s Retail sales to test group was 28% more than to those without s. More sales = Higher overall retention levels

One Click Ordering With the web we use cookies to say, Welcome back Susan. We keep her credit card on file if she wants so she can do one click ordering Result, compared to controls, is higher retention and annual revenue from those who have one click ordering available.

Tests and controls Essential to measuring the effectiveness of retention programs

Why controls are essential The sales force acquires new customers Database marketers create higher retention rates How do you prove this? Retention program effectiveness can only be measured using control groups

Every marketing promotion should always be a test Test those who get the promotion against the performance of those who do not get the promotion If you are sending birthday cards or a newsletter, select 50,000 who do not get birthday cards or the newsletter. Look at the controls spending rate, and retention rate. If there is no difference, your cards or newsletters are a waste of money.

What to measure Attrition and retention of both groups Migration upward and downward Incremental sales per program and per season Frequency of purchases Dollars spent per trip and per season Number of departments shopped Number of items purchased Share of customers wallet

Illustration: Birthday Gift Get customers to record their birthdays with their s. On their birthday, send them a birthday Pizza Coupon One fast food restaurant offered a $10 birthday coupon to 215,000 customers. Of the coupons sent out, 86,612 were redeemed ($866,120) producing overall sales of $2,900,000 – a sales increase of $2 million.

Live Agent 74% of shopping carts abandoned at checkout. Reason: customers have some question. They are unsure about the product, service, color, delivery, etc. Solution: put a live chat button at checkout time. Have live agents available to answer questions. Result: increased retention and sales

Caller ID Use Caller ID to bring customers complete purchasing history on the screen before the agent begins talking. Result, she can talk to the customer as if she knew her. Result: Increased retention. Greater opportunity for cross sales.

What should you do to keep your customers? Select loyal customers to begin with. Reward agents for customer loyalty. Set up a customer communications plan Calculate LTV of each customer Use modeling to predict churn and to determine the Next Best Product Combine LTV and NBP to run a proactive retention program Optimize your inducements

Books by Arthur Hughes From McGraw Hill. Order at Contact Arthur: