Chapter 18
Ten (or So) Ways to Capture Customer Data
In This Chapter
Linking anonymous transactions to customers
Capturing data online
Capturing data at the point of sale
Purchasing customer data
Bits and pieces of customer data are spread out over virtually all the systems that your company uses. But this data is only useful to you if it’s centralized and can be connected to customers. Much of your company’s sales and transaction data is either summarized or cannot be directly traced back to individual customers.
There’s also a lot of information that would be useful to you if it were actually captured. The conversations that occur between your sales staff and customers uncover a great deal of information about customer’s attitudes and preferences. This information would be of great value to you if you could capture and store it.
Identifying Customers with Loyalty Cards
Capturing customer-level sales data is particularly challenging for consumer retail businesses, especially those that operate physical stores. The problem is that almost all of their sales are made anonymously. Grocery stores, department stores, gas stations and a host of other businesses do not require customers to identify themselves in order to make a purchase.
But understanding customer purchase patterns is as important to these retail businesses as it is to anybody. One approach to getting at this data has been to implement loyalty programs. Loyalty programs operate by offering customers discounts in exchange for personal information. You fill out a form with the basic name and address information necessary to create a customer record in the company’s marketing database. You’re then given a plastic card that you swipe at the cash register when you make a purchase. The card swipe applies discounts or points toward a future discount to your “account.” But it also ties the details of your transaction to your customer record.
Make the application as simple as possible so that it can be filled out quickly.
Make the discount meaningful. Being able to tell a customer that they can take $5 off this purchase if they fill out an application is a powerful motivator.
Make the card easy to use. I actually have a half dozen mini-plastic cards attached to my key ring. This has the additional benefit of making sure that I always have my card with me.
Actively manage your loyalty program. You should have a resource dedicated to actively monitoring and tweaking the program rather than simply putting it on autopilot. It’s easy to fall into the trap of simply training your customers to expect discounts rather than actually building loyalty.
Consult your accountant. Loyalty programs can have accounting implications related to the benefits that are promised to the customers. Some of these benefits need to be reflected on your company’s balance sheet.
A Variation on the Theme: Rewards Cards
Rewards cards operate in a similar way to loyalty cards. In fact, many people use the two terms interchangeably. But there’s a slight difference. The difference lies in the nature of the financial incentive. Whereas loyalty cards offer discounts on your company’s products, rewards cards often offer discounts on another company’s products.
The grocery store I usually use has a rewards card that earns me points toward discounts on gasoline. Every $50 I spend at the store earns me 10 cents off per gallon at a particular gas station.
In this case, the card is actually both a loyalty card and a rewards card. I also get discounts on certain products at the grocery store. But my purpose for making the distinction has to do with the cost of a rewards program versus a loyalty program.
Tracking Transactions with Offer Codes
You’ll face another challenge related to associating purchases with particular marketing campaigns. Even if you can track transactions back to individual customers, it may not be clear whether a transaction is related to a specific marketing campaign.
For example, you might communicate that a discount is available for a limited time on a given type of purchase. But a customer may stumble onto that discount by noticing a good price while they’re idly browsing the shelves. It’s hard to tell whether your marketing communication had anything to do with the customer knowing about the offer.
Use a generic offer code that’s the same for everyone.
Issue serialized codes that are unique to individual customers.
Issuing a single discount code makes implementing the program at the point of sale fairly simple. Your transaction system only needs to know about a single code. This means that the discount can be used multiple times. That’s not necessarily a bad thing. But it does make measuring the campaign’s performance a little tricky.
Identifying Potential Customers with Newsletters
One way to generate lists of potential customers is to offer a newsletter. This approach has two advantages. First, in order to receive the newsletter, customers have to identify themselves. These days, the vast majority of newsletters are delivered electronically, which requires an e-mail address. And because the e-mail channel is so inexpensive, these newsletters can be delivered at very low cost.
What’s more, these tend to be pretty good leads. By requesting a newsletter, the customer is signaling that they have some interest in your products. This means that when you design marketing communications to them, you know they already have an interest in what you have to offer. You don’t have to waste your breath on brand recognition or product awareness messages. The newsletter does that for you.
Offering Physical Information Packets
You can expand on the newsletter approach by offering potential customers more actual physical collateral with information about your products. Videos, CDs, planning guides, or even product samples can be shared with your customers.
These advertisements are typically run on cable channels whose audiences have specific demographic characteristics. By targeting the advertisements to segments that fit your customer profile, the leads you get tend to be of very high quality. Another advantage is that you have additional demographic information on these leads that can help you design re-contact messages.
Encouraging Web Registrations
As I discuss in Chapter 13, a vast amount of data is available on how your customers use your website. You can learn a great deal about customer browsing behavior without requiring consumers to be registered or logged in on your site. But if you want to use this information to communicate with them directly, you need to have an e-mail address.
You can encourage this sort of “light” registration by simply restricting full access to content on your website. The pizza delivery store I usually use requires me to log in to see the weekly specials, for example. The newsletters and information requests discussed earlier in this chapter are also good ways of encouraging web registrations.
Once a customer is registered, you have a way of communicating with them. You’ll have many opportunities to collect more data about that customer as the customer browses your website in the future. Detailed address data, for example, can be captured when the customer actually makes a purchase. In the next section, I discuss other ways of adding to your customer’s online profile.
Building a More Robust Online Customer Profile
If a customer is registered, you can actually tie future browsing behavior to that customer record, even if the customer isn’t logged in. As I discuss in Chapter 13, cookies are small files that you can place on a user’s computer that allow you to tie browsing sessions together. Simply put, you drop a cookie on a user’s computer when they register. You can then recognize the user every time they come back to your site, logged in or not.
Once the customer is registered, you have access to what pages they’re looking at. You know what products they’re searching for. You also know what ads they’re clicking on. You can learn a lot from studying this behavior.
Customer Data and the Call Center
There’s a great deal of information that’s exchanged between customers and call center representatives. Making customer profile information available to your call centers can help your sales and service agents immensely. It can also cut down on the length of phone calls, which in turn brings down the cost of running the call center and improves the customer experience.
Conversely, it’s very helpful to your database marketing efforts to have access to the information that call center reps collect from customers. Those reps can be trained to ask for key pieces of information about customers. If a customer asks a call center rep about a specific product, for example, that could trigger an offer from you. But only if you have access to this information.
A variety of software systems available for call centers facilitate the capture and sharing of customer data. These are frequently called Customer Relationship Management (or CRM) systems. They typically require a significant investment to implement, both in technology and training, but the investment may prove worthwhile.
Customer Data at the Point of Sale
Like call center reps, the frontline salespeople in your stores can also benefit from having customer data available. And you can benefit from the data that they might capture.
The grocery store loyalty swipe card connects my past purchase data to the transaction. This allows the point-of-sale system, by which I mean the cash register, to spit out coupons that are relevant to my buying patterns. This cross-selling technique is quite effective.
Auto parts stores do this very effectively. By collecting information on a customer’s car, they can easily identify which parts are needed. They can also tell when certain parts are likely to need replacement. This information can trigger marketing communications to remind the customer to change their wiper blades, for example.
Purchasing Customer Lists
When all else fails with your lead-generation efforts, you can fall back on third-party list providers. You can buy lists of names and addresses of potential customers or e-mail addresses from a wide variety of companies.
These lists can be targeted in the sense that the consumers on the list meet certain criteria. Depending on the list provider, the level of targeting varies. The simplest (and cheapest) lists are simply geographically concentrated. You’re selecting addresses within a given set of zip codes, for example.
But list providers can be a great deal more sophisticated. Age, income, marital status, presence of children, and other demographic profile information can be used to select lists that meet very specific profile requirements.
Purchasing Demographic Data
You can also buy demographic information on your customer base. Several companies compile consumer data from a wide variety of sources. They look at census data, public records, warranty cards — literally any data they can get their hands on. Several of the big players in this space have records on virtually every household in United States.
Because of privacy concerns, some of the data that these companies have cannot be provided to you at the individual customer level. They get around this issue in one of two ways. They either aggregate the data or they provide you with a targeted list of prospects (I discuss prospect lists in the previous section).
The aggregation I’m talking about involves using the individual customer data to create customer segments. These segments are relatively small groups of consumers who share deep similarities in their demographic makeup and purchase patterns. They create literally hundreds of such segments. They can even tailor customized segmentation schemes to your particular business goals.