Customer Marketing Segmentation

Continued liveblogging from the Frost & Sullivan Sales & Marketing East 2007 Executive MindXChange.

James Mendelsohn of Capital One, with over 50 million customers and $180 billion in managed loans, gave a presentation entitled “Measure, Manage and Maximize Your Return on Customer Investment.” Capital One invented the credit card balance transfer; commonplace now, but an innovation when they first did it.

With 50 million customers, they are looking for ways to extend relationship with them into other financial services, where they are the 11th largest player in the nation. They see themselves as big enough to compete and change the game, but not so big and vested in the status quo that they won’t. For example, Bank of America has 10 times as many retail branches, so they have to make retail branches part of their strategy. Capital One doesn’t.

First innovation: smashing the cost of credit from an almost universal 19.8% to an average of below 10 percent. Another: the blank check for auto financing, taking the hassle out of buying a car so people don’t have to do dealer financing.

Financial services is attractive for innovation because it is huge and profitable, has an attractive industry structure, and ripe for reinvention because of negative customer feelings and the ability to create electronic/virtual products.

Consumer lending businesses are consolidating nationally, with for example 90 percent of credit card share in the top 10 players. It’s less consolidated in other segments, but the trend is toward consolidation.

One key point was that by de-averaging results from a marketing test, you can actually see places where a test that appeared to have “failed” vs. the control was in fact successful. This suggests that targeted media/social media and retailers groups would enable marketers to focus on groups that would be profitable.

For example, one retailer’s customers may be more loyal, bigger monthly spenders and more inclined to cash rewards points. Understanding this can help marketers tailor product offerings.

For call center customer satisfaction, in the final example, the location of the call center (U.S. or outsourced) made no difference in satisfaction scores. What mattered was the type of call. They use a robust data model to see what things matter for resolving problems (e.g. late payment fee waivers) to create more long-term, satisfied customers who will stay with the company.

I guess that’s why the phone system always says, “Your call may be monitored for quality control purposes.” They probably really are using them for marketing analysis.

Good presentation; James obviously needed to keep some of the data confidential because of competitive concerns, but he gave a good introduction to model-based, data-intense market segmentation.

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Blogger Dinner Photo

Hopefully Jim comes through with the video of our philosophical discussion on the existence of Jeremiah (we have a Facebook group dedicated to the question, too.) Meanwhile here’s our sans Jeremiah group photo, from Dennis.

Note: Jim just called, and he’s got the video on Blip.tv…I’ll be adding that as soon as I can get access to my email. Dennis has added it to his post.

Updated: Thanks to Jim for sending me the video link via Twitter.

Frost & Sullivan Sales & Marketing Conference: Day 1

First-day highlights from the Frost & Sullivan Sales & Marketing East 2007 Executive MindXChange (at least from my perspective):

Looking forward to Day 2, and meeting Jeremiah!

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Fighting Facebook Fears

Craig Coblenz, Director of media sales for Facebook, was the resident thought leader, and Tara Lamberson, VP of Marketing, MindComet, was the moderator of an afternoon breakout, “Balancing Web 2.0 & User Generated Initiatives with Traditional Marketing.”

Facebook is growing 1.2 million users per week, with 31 million active users. Apple, for instance, has a sponsored Apple Students group within Facebook with 417,000+ members.

Top challenges or concerns about Facebook and other sources of consumer generated media cited in the breakouts included:

  • Losing control of brand messaging (or the perception of it) – risk of negative content and what do you do then?
  • Do we want competitors to know who our customers are?
  • Having the staff to monitor, manage and review comments and take action. Finding internal resources passionate about it and not having it be just an another add-on to their “real” work; making it a real job.
  • Legal concerns – whether HIPAA for patients or in cases in which federal regulations (like Medicare supplement products) limit what a company can say.
  • Complexity – understanding the customs of the social media to avoid missteps
  • How many channels – which ones do you join (e.g. Facebook vs. MySpace vs. LinkedIn)
  • Who takes it over and assumes continuity when the proponent of blogging leaves.

Craig said lots of companies want to be fast followers, not first adopters. They don’t want to be laggards, but they would like someone else to go first.
Some of the suggested solutions that were brainstormed for these challenges included creating a password protected intranet site as a first step to create comfort (or maybe an invitation-only blog on wordpress.com.) By starting small with internal blogs, people become familiar with the concept, and then as comfort builds you can evolve toward where you want to go.
Debby Brannon from TMNG Global recommended Wikinomics as a good resource, which I reviewed here yesterday.

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Twitter Knitter Dinner

I just got back from a blogger dinner with Jim Long and Dennis McDonald. Jeremiah Owyang organized it but wasn’t able to attend. There was this little matter that he had thought he was traveling to the DC area yesterday, but then realized he wasn’t arriving until late tonight. We’ll have more on that, including an interesting video, in the next few hours.

It should be good, because it was shot by Jim, whose day job is as a videographer for NBC News. We had a really good conversation tonight, and Jim showed us his new venture, craftynation.com, which is a social network for what Jim calls the “Twitter Knitters.”

Speaking of Twitter, Jim’s in love with it, and he regularly tweets about what he’s doing at work. Last week he went on a round-the-globe trip with Defense Secretary Gates. I’ll look forward to following his feed…and Dennis‘.
Dennis recently did a post asking whether Facebook is going down the tubes because it’s new openness has wrecked its simplicity. I understand but don’t share his concern because people decide what applications they want in Facebook, customizing it to their needs. He also is concerned that putting too much original material behind Facebook’s walled garden doesn’t make sense: if he’s going to write something, he wants it to be on his blog where anyone can see it. I told him about the WordPress.com application for Facebook, which solves that problem: you can post to the blog for the wide world, and the fact that you’ve done it shows up in your Facebook news feed. Of course, that’s only for WordPress.com, but eventually applications will be written for other blogging platforms.

Thanks to Jeremiah for introducing us. None of us had met each other before, and none of us had met Jeremiah. It’s the power of new media and social networking that got us together for a truly enjoyable discussion tonight.

I see on Twitter that Jeremiah says he’s hung up in Dallas, with his flight delayed due to thunderstorms. A likely story!

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