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customer experienceMarketing automation

The value of 1st party data: seeing is believing

By October 23, 2017November 21st, 2019No Comments
Marketing automation and loyalty marketing - the value of 1st party data

Big Data. Trending topic in the marketing arena for some years now. Encouraged by an industry that is making a nice buck, Big Data is supposed to be the goose that lays the golden egg. Their credo: Big Data builds future-proof marketing. Which, at this moment, is at least questionable. For why focus on Big (= 3rd party) Data when you are sitting on your own pot of gold, i.e. small (= 1st party) data? Apart from the chance of ending up getting lost in your data warehouse or drowning in your very own data lake? Working with your own 1st party data allows for making serious steps in rendering your customers their personalized customer experience. 

Data really pay off!

That is what I found out back in 1993 when working for IBM’s International Logistics Center. Our mission: 100% customer satisfaction among our EMEA clientele through timely order delivery and information. A 200 headcount venture with people gaining their information from separate systems of all sorts. “There’s got to be an easier way”, were my first thoughts. So, after office hours I took the time to dive into the world of databases and queries, building reports to make my own life easier. After 3 months it had grown into a management information system enabling us to manage by exception. With all of my colleagues getting their specific reports in their mailboxes overnight. Just imagine what valuable information that yielded and, consequently, what huge time savings. From that moment onwards we spent that time on raising customer service levels. This aroused my appetite for more.

Divestment

Activity-based costing was the next project: measuring the time employees needed for individual activities in our operational processes. Recently, ILC gained, with a lot of effort, a contract for product distribution in a specific market segment. An alleged cash cow. The reality the activity-based costing project revealed was that these activities did not make a positive contribution margin. Instead, they were loss-making. The divestment decision was easily made.

Shipping accuracy

The next step I made was visualizing the inbound and outbound supply chain. A report I made explained crystal clear that our suppliers’ shipment accuracy left a lot to be desired. This was the trigger to renegotiate all service level agreements. The result: an average inventory reduction by 35%, equaling structural cost savings in the amount of tens of millions of US Dollars. A welcome ‘present’ in a market with short-cycled product introductions. Easily resulting in obsolete products with, consequently, product scraps and huge inventory write-offs.

Transportation

The last example from the supply chain discipline: analyzing the transportation method for purchase orders I proved that, based on the volume/weight ratio, there ís a preferred shipping method. Above a specific ratio, it is cheaper to ship products by air instead of ocean. By default. The result: yearly structural cost savings of millions of US Dollars. A nice side-effect was a considerable reduction of the total number of expedited purchase orders with related high transportation costs. As we introduced a ‘the responsible party pays’ principle.

All in all, this was ample proof that meaningful insights retrieved from 1st party data in one’s own systems allow for making a tremendous improvement with regards to competitive edge and yield. So, if this works in supply chain management why not in marketing?

Fruit salad or ‘apples vs. apples’

Years later, we talk 2005, I worked as an account director/strategist for a couple of car brands on a pan-European scale. Thoroughbred CRM. Not only strategic advice. But also omnichannel model introductions and brand activations. And the implementation of a technical integrated CRM infrastructure with a Customer Data Platform as the centerpiece: one single database as the source to fuel all marketing and communication activities from 360° customer profiles. We worked, of course, in the triangle client-media agency-ourselves. Looking at campaign results at a given point in time something caught my eye. The media agency reported figures that deviated from what we saw in our own central customer database.

I advised my clients to orchestrate their analytics activities in-house. We implemented Adobe SiteCatalyst. A true relief: no more discussions about which figures being correct, knowing that all analytics were based on the exact same definitions. No longer an indefinable fruit salad but being able to compare apples with apples. And, not insignificant: we were able to put targets on individual channels while measuring results (channel attribution). This allowed us to re-allocate budgets and pursue conversion optimization.

From insights to relevance

Some 10 years later I worked in a similar role for one of the big DIY players, where our main activities focused on email marketing. A powerful medium with the capabilities to make a substantial contribution to brick and mortar as well as online sales. Íf you make use of all of email marketing’s capabilities. And tailor content to the preferences and behavior of individual customers. To optimize email marketing activities, I proposed an analysis of the database where we connected email behavior to online and offline cash register transactions through a personal ID. The client was not so much interested in their customers’ response to promotions, so the said. Out of curiosity, we decided to look into it nevertheless.

What struck us: as much as 40% of their turnover was promotion-driven! The analysis also provided valuable insights in combinations of products purchased, seasonality, day in the week and time per day. At which specific store, both online and offline. This is all valuable information as an input to make your email marketing efforts more decisive and create more relevance on an individual customer level. Unmistakeably the value of 1st party data.

From crystal ball to data-driven predictions

Geese with golden eggs may exist in fairy tales, in real life I have not encountered them so far. Despite what software vendors make you believe there is no such thing as a comprehensive, all-over software solution that covers all your marketing needs. Hence, for Tommy Hilfiger, the choice for a technological best-of-breed solution, i.e. a Customer Data Platform in their existing system infrastructure, was easily made.  

What in 2007 started with sending out email newsletters (with of course insight in open and click behavior and specific interests) has grown into the omnichannel MyTommy loyalty program. One of the first steps was adding purchase behavior in both online and offline stores. Which provided interesting insights in product preferences. As well as a basis to adapt the content in email newsletters and banner campaigns to reflect individual customer preferences.

From that moment onwards we added well over a dozen additional data sources, thus creating rich and relevant customer profiles. Think data from a personal shopper app, data from customer satisfaction questionnaires and data gathered from a product recommendation engine. All 1st party data. This enabled us to tailor the Tommy Hilfiger collection even more to individual preferences and needs. Based upon insights in socio-demographic preferences, omnichannel purchase behavior, purchase frequency (RFM), purchase behavior throughout time, and interest in specific types of customer events.

This provided us with the ‘tools’ to develop different types of campaigns, tuned to specific and actual customer behavior. Such as onboarding programs, and activation and churn campaigns. Also, we are able to reward individual customers based on their purchase behavior and brand engagement with special promotions and treats. Like VIP pre-sales and invitations for member-only events. A step that has brought awesome results: well over 7 mio active members that spend on average some 48% more than customers who did not register for the MyTommy program!

Recently, we implemented AI-based predictive models that feed event-driven campaigns and ongoing communication programs on a day-to-day basis. Thus bringing interesting insights: a clear view of customer lifetime value (CLV) helping us to give individual customers an even better brand experience. But we can also predict when leads are inclined likely to make their next purchase within a specific category. Or the likelihood for customers to return their purchase. The latter insight may be used to implement a business rule that shows shipping costs in the webshop check-out process for those customers who frequently return their purchases. We also narrowed down well over 30 communication target groups to 4 distinct personas. Based on slicing and dicing the data. Tommy Hilfiger’s yield: marketing cost savings. And being able to tune their product suggestions, promotions, and invitations even better to individual customer needs.

Hence, we created a look into the future that allows Tommy Hilfiger to be increasingly relevant for individual customers. Connecting data from the recently launched MyTommy app – again 1st party data – is the next step in the evolution of Tommy Hilfiger as a love brand. And … of course we do not deny the value of 3rd party data: with selected data points from the DMP, customer profiles gain in value. And it allows targeting look-a-likes of Tommy’s most loyal customers. In other words: spend the online advertising budget as efficiently as possible.

Shift to 1st gear   

Despite a huge amount of attention for trending themes as Big Data and DMPs, I want to make a case for shifting focus from 3rd to 1st party data. Not only for reasons that your own data is still more reliable than 3rd party data. But also for the tremendous value, you will create for your customers when combining data from individual online and offline data sources to create a single customer view.

Turn your plans into action and shift to 1st gear. With a focus on 1st party data, you will be able to make valuable progress in creating brand preference among existing and, in the end, new customers. Improved results will come your way. That’s a promise. The value of 1st party data: seeing is believing!

(this article was previously published on marketingfacts.nl)