Why Databases Fail - Database marketing Institute
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Transcript Why Databases Fail - Database marketing Institute
Why Databases Fail
Nine deadly mistakes that will ruin your
chances for success.
Houston Direct Marketing Association
Thursday, October 14, 2004
Arthur Middleton Hughes
Vice President / Solutions Architect
KnowledgeBase Marketing, Inc.
What KnowledgeBase Marketing Does
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Mistake: Lack of a Marketing Strategy
Building a database is
easy
Making money with a
database is hard
Most people don’t
know that
3
How to develop a strategy
Collect data on your customer’s
purchases, demographics and lifestyle
Build a database that permits ad-hoc
analysis
Construct a lifetime value table
Figure out what motivates your customers
4
Two Kinds of Database People
Constructors
People who build databases
Merge/Purge, Hardware, Software
Creators
People who understand strategy
Build loyalty and repeat sales
You need both kinds!
5
Examples of Profitable Strategies
User Groups
Newsletters
Surveys and Responses
Loyalty Programs
Customer and Technical Services
Membership cards and status levels
Event Driven Communications
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Event driven communication:
Dear Mr. Hughes:
Ridgeway Fashions
Leesburg, VA 22069
I would like to remind you that your wife Helena’s
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 $232.00.
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) 754-4470 to let me know which
you’d prefer.
Sincerely yours,
Robin Baumgartner
Robin Baumgartner, Store Manager
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Basic Strategy Rule:
Put yourself in customer shoes
Say: “What would I want to be on
this database? What’s in it for me?”
If you can’t come up with a good
answer, the database will fail
8
Mistake: Focus on Price instead of
Service
Database marketing builds loyalty.
Discounts do not build loyalty.
Do not use the database to provide
discounts.
Use the database to provide dialog,
recognition and service.
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Customers today seek more than low
prices
Recognition
Service
Information
Convenience
Helpfulness
10
Example:
Quaker Direct
Budget: $18 Million. Coupons to 20 million
“targeted households.”
Quaker goal: “real one-to-one bonding
with consumers”.
Cost: four times as much as FSI’s.
Why failed: Coupons do not build
relationships.
11
Example:
Kraft Crystal Light
Million club members receive quarterly
newsletter.
Catalog: Watches, mugs, jogging suits,
with Crystal Light emblem.
Theme: fitness, exercise, weight loss,
diet.
Why succeeded: Club based on valid
idea, not just on discounting product.
12
Mistake: Failure to use tests and
controls
Database marketing is accountable
Everything you do can be measured
You must set up control groups that do not
get your new communications
Key measurements: response rates,
return on investment, profits, lifetime
value.
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Example: Western Union
Preferred customer card sent to everyone who
had used WU 3+ times
Worked well, but after 2 years, WU asked, “How
has this boosted profits?”
Agency did not have a control group.
Profits could not be verified.
Agency lost the account.
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Example: Citicorp Reward America
Frequent shopper program for
supermarkets
Goal: sign up 40% of all chains fast
Profit idea: sell data to
manufacturers
Budget: $200 million -- 174
employees
15
Failure: Citicorp Reward America
Program cancelled. Employees fired.
Why?
Manufacturers didn’t buy the names.
Computers choked on the data.
Failure to test on small scale first.
16
Mistake: Too big and slow
Database should be built in six
months or less.
DB Marketing builds loyalty and
sales -- but only when it is up
and running.
If your plan requires more than a
year, maybe your plan is too
complicated.
Start small. Build Small. Learn
as you go. Add to it later.
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How a database builds
relationships
Hold information on customers
Add new data every day:
Surveys, Promotion history, Points
Transaction history, Lifetime value, RFM
Create a relational database that you can
build inexpensively
Update it as often as required – several
times a day if needed.
Use it to create communications
18
Mistake: Failure to use
the Web
Your database contains customer information:
purchases, preferences, contact names, etc.
Customer service has to have this info when
they talk on the phone.
Your web site must have this info when you
receive customers as visitors.
19
Using a database to personalize
20
Provide recognition!
Welcome Back, Arthur!
21
Immediate Feedback!
22
30 seconds later: Email
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Retail Email Success
Video chain sent email newsletters to
170,000 customers about movies
16,000 asked for but got no emails
Test group total sales over 6 months were
28% higher than the control group
Emails can be a powerful sales boost
24
Catalog Email Success
Cataloger selected 40,000 who had
bought on the web.
20,000 got emails saying “watch mailbox
for our new catalog”
20,000 got only the catalog.
Sales to the test group were 18% higher
than the control group.
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Mistake: building in-house
Marketing databases are unlike any other
IT function.
DB requires special skills and software
There are scores of vendors with
experience in building marketing DBs
In-house will take far longer and cost far
more.
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What to do?
Send an RFP to find a vendor that
understands you and has experience
Get it going fast and at lower cost.
Once it is up and running, you can
migrate it inside.
But even then, you should not do it.
Why? Because you should concentrate on
marketing: building profits from it.
27
Mistake: Treating all
customers alike
Loyal customers are more profitable than new
or disloyal customers
Loyalty can be built and maintained
$1 million retention budget spread over 1
million customers is $1 per year. You can’t
build much loyalty for $1
$1 million spread over 100,000 is $10 per
year. You can build loyalty with that
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Segment by profitability &
focus your attention
Profitability Segment
79.67%
Profitability
80.00%
60.00%
24.82%
40.00%
15.83%
1.52%
20.00%
0.00%
-20.00%
-21.83%
-40.00%
5%
11%
28%
28%
28%
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Marketing to Customer Segments
Your Best Customers 80% of Revenue
Your Best Hope for
New Gold Customers
1% of Total
Revenue
GOLD
Move Up
These may be losers
Spend Service
Dollars Here
Spend Marketing
Dollars Here
Reactivate or
Archive
30
Mistake: Failure to develop a retention
program
Most companies are set up for acquisition
Few have a specific retention program.
$1 spent to retain customers returns more
profit than $1 of acquisition
Annual Profit
$48
$60
$40
$20
$0
($20)
($40)
($60)
($80)
($62)
New Customer
3rd Year
Customer
31
Retention = Communications
People like to hear from you.
Personalize your communications.
Use email, direct mail, phone calls
Set aside control groups so you know that
your communications are working
32
Key retention strategy: cross selling
90%
80%
70%
60%
Retention 50%
Rate
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%
1
2
3
4
Number of Products Owned
5
33
Concentrate retention $$ on where you need
help
Probability of Leaving Soon
LTV
High
Medium Low
High
Priority A Priority B Priority C
Medium Priority B Priority B Priority C
Low
Priority C Priority C Priority C
34
What proves that
database marketing
works?
• Manufacturer of 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
35
Change in the number of orders after 6
months
112%
120%
82%
100%
Change in
number of
orders
80%
60%
40%
20%
0%
1
2
Control vs Test Groups
36
Change in the Average Order Size
114%
120%
86%
100%
80%
Change in
average 60%
order size
40%
20%
0%
1
2
Control vs Test Group
37
Total revenue gain: $2.6 million over
six months
127%
140%
120%
100%
Change in
total
revenue
70%
80%
60%
40%
20%
0%
1
2
Control vs Test Group
38
This stuff works!
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
39
Mistake: Lack of a forceful leader
Success requires directing the activities of
many internal and external units
The Web, MIS, Customer Service, Tech
Support, Telemarketers, Service Bureau,
Direct Agency, Fulfillment, Market Research
Database Marketers must be leaders
40
Summary: The Nine Mistakes
Lack of a Strategy
Building In-House
Focus on Price
Treating all
customers alike
Lack of tests &
controls
Too big and
delayed
Lack of a retention
program
Lack of leadership
Failure to use the
web
41
Rules for success
Put yourself in your customer’s shoes
Build a lifetime value table
Build a database team
Think small, and think fast
Keep your eye on the bottom line
42
Thank You
Books by Arthur Hughes
From McGraw Hill. Order at
www.dbmarketing.com
Contact Arthur:
[email protected]
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