Drilling Down Home Page Turning Customer Data
into Profits with a Spreadsheet
The Guide to Maximizing Customer Marketing ROI

Site Map


Book Includes all tutorials and examples from this web site
.

Get the book!

Purchase Drilling Down Book

Customers Speak Up on Book & Site


About the Author

Workshops, Project Work: Retail Metrics & Reporting, High ROI
Customer Marketing

Marketing Productivity Blog

8 Customer
Promotion Tips

Relationship
Marketing

Customer Retention

Customer Loyalty

High ROI Customer Marketing: 3 Key Success Components

LifeTime Value and
True ROI of Ad Spend

Customer Profiling

Intro to Customer
Behavior Modeling

Customer Model:
Frequency

Customer Model:
Recency

Customer Model:
Recent Repeaters

Customer Model:
RFM

Customer LifeCycles

LifeTime Value

Calculating ROI

Mapping Visitor
Conversion

Measuring Retention
in Online Retailing

Measuring CRM ROI

CRM Analytics:
Micro vs. Macro

Pre-CRM Testing for
Marketing ROI

Customer
Behavior Profiling

See Customer
Behavior Maps


Favorite Drilling
Down Web Sites

About the Author

Book Contents

 Productivity Blog
 CRM   
  Simple CRM
 Customer Retention
 Relationship Marketing
 Customer Loyalty
 Retail Optimization
 Telco/Utility/Services
 
What is in the book?
  Visitor Conversion
  Visitor Quality
 
Guide to E-Metrics
  Customer Profiles
  Customer LifeCycles
  LifeTime Value
  Calculating ROI

  Workshops/Services
  Recent Repeaters
  RFM
  Retail Promotion
  Pre-CRM ROI Test
  Tracking CRM ROI
  Tutorial: Latency
  Tutorial: Recency
  Scoring Software
  About Jim
  Consulting
  Praise
  Contact
  FAQ
  Search
 
Downloads
  Privacy

Defection Rejection
Drilling Down Newsletter #70  8/2006

Drilling Down - Turning Customer
Data into Profits with a Spreadsheet
*************************
Customer Valuation, Retention, 
Loyalty, Defection

Get the Drilling Down Book!
http://www.booklocker.com/jimnovo

Prior Newsletters:
http://www.jimnovo.com/newsletters.htm
========================

In This Issue:
# Topics Overview
# Defection Rejection
--------------------

Topics Overview

Hi again folks, Jim Novo here.

Each year about this time I get inundated with questions from both B2C and B2B marketers who are looking at the fall season as a heavy customer acquisition opportunity.  They want to know what they can do now to ensure they keep these customers after using lots of resources to acquire them.  Many don't have the resources to "do anything big" because of budget or political constraints - the boss simply rejects the idea customers are defecting or doesn't believe customer retention marketing is profitable.  Still, these folks understand how important it is to retain good customers - especially newly acquired ones.

So today I'm going to begin outlining a basic method for developing your business case and taking some action on the customer retention front.  We'll get into reporting, budgets, politics, culture, the whole thing, and wrap it up before you need to start taking some action early next year.  I hope you will be ready...

Let's do that Drillin'!

P.S.  There's rarely any cutting edge articles in the trade magazines during August, and this year was no exception, so we're skipping the article links this month...


Questions from Fellow Drillers
=====================

Defection Rejection

Reducing costs is one way to get ROI from a Marketing and / or Service system; it's also probably the simplest way.  But the more profitable, highest ROI way to get payout on these systems is to increase the value of customers by keeping them as active, engaged customers for a longer time.

Longer time?  That's where the disagreements usually start.  People get bogged down in LifeTime Value and other arcane stuff and before you know it, once again, nothing will be done about customer retention this year.  

So let's change that!

The first thing you have to do, and I mean have to do, is define a customer defection.  A lot of times this discussion gets bogged down in the minutia of LTV or inflexible attempts to "measure" defection.  This approach is not going to work very well until you have more data and experience working through these ideas by testing and proving the concepts.  Defection is often not an event, it's a process.  If you're just starting out, we need to use a simpler approach.

So the first thing I would put on the table is this: forget about triangulating "customer defection", and talk about productivity.  I'm pretty sure you are familiar with all the discussions about marketing accountability.  Most C-level types get to where they are because they increase productivity - the profits generated per dollar spent - in one way or another.  If you want the marketing / analytics folks to have a seat at that table, you have to talk about marketing productivity.

To talk about marketing productivity, you need data.  So we're going to create your first chart on customer productivity, which you can use to bring people to the table.  There are a couple of ways to do this; use the way easiest for the analysts or whichever way will be more likely understood by managers.  The attrition approach can be more difficult for analysts but is more easily understood by management because it is one data set over time.

Attrition Approach:  Go back 5 years (or 3, or 10, depending on how old your company is and what you have good data for) and find all customers who became new customers in that year.  Then find how many of those customers are still customers, defined by some kind of transaction this year.  If you think 2 years is a better measure of activity (highly seasonal businesses), use 2 years - new customer 5 years ago and the customer is active in the past 2 years.

What you will find is a major percentage of new customers from 5 years ago have not contacted you in the past 1 or 2 years - at least 50%, probably more like 60% - 80%.

Retention Approach:  Take your current active customers (some kind of a transaction this year or past 2 years) and bucket them by how many years they have been a customer; express these buckets as "Percent of Active Customers who were New customers X years ago".  What you will find is the same idea as above, expressed in reverse: at least 50%, probably more like 60 - 80% of your active customers were New Customers in the past year or two.  The rest are spread out over the years back into time.

Either way, the conclusion is the same: the majority of revenue you are generating in the current time period is coming from customers who are newer customers.  "Old" customers generate very little in current revenue as a percentage of total current revenues.

For online only businesses, these numbers will skew even higher, into the 80% - 90% range.  For either approach above, the transaction defining "active" does not have to be a "purchase", it could be a service interaction of some kind, or simply logging into a web site.  It should be an action that has the potential to generate revenue or decrease cost, because in the end, we are talking about increasing the  productivity of marketing dollars spent.

Now, given these numbers sitting right in front of you, you have to ask this question: does it make any sense at all to spend marketing budget equally against "all customers" when it is clear that customers become unresponsive over time when using this exact approach?  Wouldn't it be more productive to reallocate marketing spend against the customers more likely to generate revenue - that is, customers with the more Recent transactions?

Going past revenue, if the average "old" customer generates little current revenue, what do per customer profits look like after you include the cost of marketing?  You don't need to run LTV models to understand that you can't possibly be making money with these customers.  The cost of marketing wipes out any profit you might have in them.  Right?

Now, don't tell your boss these customers inactive for over a year or two have defected - that's too controversial, even though you know it is true.  Tell the boss that in terms of bang for the buck, it makes sense to reallocate marketing spend from the non-responsive "customers" you have been burying with irrelevant marketing efforts towards the more responsive, active customers.

It's really that simple.  This change will increase marketing productivity, and you can prove it.

If you measured back over 5 years and ended up at 20% of 5 year old customers still active in the current period, then your task is to increase this rolling 5 year retention rate to 21%, 22%, 23%, 24% and so on.  Or, if your business is short cycle, choose earlier periods, say 2 or 3 years, and approach it the same way.  The most productive time frame for retention marketing tends to be where you see abrupt drops in current activity.  If when looking at new customers back over 5 years, you find the percentage of currently active customers really drops off at 3 years ago, then use 3 years as the rolling benchmark.

Don't over-think this or get lost in the minutia.  Use this simple, definitive data to track the performance of your efforts.  This must be done in order to measure how many customers you "save" with CRM or Retention Marketing, which leads to finding the value you created and calculating productivity.  

If it helps ease the internal political pain of "letting go" of these customers and declaring them "non-productive", refer to these former customers as "new prospects", for example:

"Hey Boss, look at the huge number of highly targeted new prospects we have - our non-productive "customers".  We can still spend on them, but let's change our marketing approach to them so it reflects their new status as prospects".  Right?  That fixes the "if we tell the President 50% of our customers are not really customers they will reduce our budget" problem.  Shift the mindset, then shift the dollars; reallocate to active customers.

At the risk of repeating myself, this attrition or retention information is your required "base case" to get people to start thinking about marketing / customer productivity.  It provides the platform for you to call a meeting and get people interested in retention marketing.

The results of this analysis will drive a change in the way customer marketing is viewed, and making the appropriate change in tactics will increase the productivity of your marketing efforts right away.  I'll detail some of those tactics for you in a couple of months - no hurry, you've got until Jan 2007 to get ready.

In the meantime, work on setting those "old customers" free by doing the attrition or defection reporting outlines above.  Heck, if you have the resources, break it out by quarters or even months - you know that will be the first question they ask when they see the annualized results - Hey, can I get this information broken out by quarter?

By doing this you will gain the most powerful knowledge an analyst or marketer can have - an understanding of the Customer LifeCycle.

Jim

Next Month: What if the boss still doesn't get it?  Simple follow-up analytics prove the point.
-------------------------------
If you are a consultant, agency, or software developer with clients needing action-oriented customer intelligence or High ROI Customer
Marketing program designs, click here
-------------------------------

That's it for this month's edition of the Drilling Down newsletter.  If you like the newsletter, please forward it to a friend!  Subscription instructions are top and bottom of this page.

Any comments on the newsletter (it's too long, too short, topic suggestions, etc.) please send them right along to me, along with any other questions on customer Valuation, Retention, Loyalty, and Defection here.

'Til next time, keep Drilling Down!

- Jim Novo

Copyright 2006, The Drilling Down Project by Jim Novo.  All rights reserved.  You are free to use material from this newsletter in whole or in part as long as you include complete credits, including live web site link and e-mail link.  Please tell me where the material will appear. 

 

 
    Home Page


Thanks for visiting the original Drilling Down web site!

The advice and discussion continue on the Marketing Productivity Blog
and
Twitter: @jimnovo

Read the first 9 chapters of the Drilling Down book: download PDF

Purchase Book

Consulting

 

Slow connection?  Same content, less graphics, think Jakob Nielsen in Arial - Go to faster
loading website

Contact me (Jim Novo) for questions or problems with anything on this web site.  

 
The Drilling Down Project.  All rights reserved, all media.

 

   

Ask Jim a Question

/

Get the book with Free scoring software at Booklocker.com

Find Out Specifically What is in the Book

Learn Customer Marketing Concepts and Metrics (site article list)

 


This is the original Drilling Down web site; the advice and discussion continue on the Marketing Productivity Blog and Twitter.

Download the first 9 chapters of the Drilling Down book here: PDF
Purchase Book          Consulting