Understanding Customer Database & Its Applications - Module II
Understanding Customer Database & Its Applications - Module II
2. Explanatory Methods
Lifetime Value Calculation
Acquisition marketing budget =
Allowable recruitment spend per customer * target number of customers
= £20 * 1000 = £20,000
Market research does have its advantages over the lifestyle database
route:
- Accuracy of data
-Representativeness
Using external data as a basis for
segmentation
• External databases can potentially add a lot of value to analysis of
customers product needs.
• It is usually the case that a company’s internal data is more valuable
than external data in determining customer behaviour.
Geodemographic Databases
• Geodemographic profiling suggests there are a number of factors that
will be common to neighbourhoods.
• One would expect that our income, the size of our families, our stage
of life and so on, could be predicted by where we live. But the
profilers have found that it is also our interests, lifestyle and
psychographic variables, such as our social image – how we want
others to see us – that are predicted by where we live.
• These findings are useful to direct marketers: geodemographic,
attitudinal and lifestyle traits often ‘explain’ what we buy.
Geodemographic Databases
• Geodemographic products provide a ‘statistical probability’ that
people living in a described area are more likely than average to fit
that description.
• In other words, in the absence of perfect information, you are better
off using these products to target prospects than relying on random
chance. Geodemographic operators will give you scores that reflect
the extent to which the chosen postcodes fit the descriptions.
Lifestyle Databases
• Lifestyle databases were introduced into the UK in 1983.
• lifestyle databases were originally developed by consumer goods
manufacturers who were finding conventional advertising and market
research methods either inadequate or poor value for money.
How the lifestyle products are created
Four broad categories of data are collected by lifestyle companies
(Reynolds, 1993):
1. Name and address information
2. Data relating to the purchase of products and services, known as
‘lead-to-purchase’ data
3. Demographic and socio-economic information
4. Values and lifestyle (VALS) information
VALS
• VALS looked for a link between product/service consumption and the
attitudes held towards benefits sought from the service; activities,
interests and opinions; and value systems subscribed to by
consumers.
Building up Virtual Consumers