1 / 20

Customer Relationship Management: A Database Approach

MARK 7397 Spring 2007. Customer Relationship Management: A Database Approach. Class 6. James D. Hess C.T. Bauer Professor of Marketing Science 375H Melcher Hall jhess@uh.edu 713 743-4175. Past Customer Value . Computation of Customer Profitability Past Customer Value of a customer

Gabriel
Download Presentation

Customer Relationship Management: A Database Approach

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MARK 7397 Spring 2007 Customer Relationship Management:A Database Approach Class 6 James D. Hess C.T. Bauer Professor of Marketing Science 375H Melcher Hall jhess@uh.edu 713 743-4175

  2. Past Customer Value • Computation of Customer Profitability • Past Customer Value of a customer Where i = number representing the customer, r = applicable discount rate n = number of time periods prior to current period when purchase was made GCin = Gross Contribution of transaction of the ith customer in the nth time period • Since products/services are bought at different points in time during the customer’s lifetime, all transactions have to be adjusted for the time value of money • Limitations: Does not consider whether a customer is going to be active in the future. Also does not incorporate the expected cost of maintaining the customer in the future

  3. Jan Feb March April May = ´ Gross Contribution (GC) Purchase Amount X 0.3 $ Amount 800 50 50 30 20 GC 240 15 15 9 6 = Past Customer Value Scoring 2 3 + + + + + 6 ( 1 0 . 0125 ) 9 ( 1 0 . 0125 ) 15 ( 1 0 . 0125 ) 4 5 + + + + = 15 ( 1 0 . 0125 ) 240 ( 1 0 . 0125 ) 302.01486 Spending Pattern of a Customer The above customer is worth $302.01 in contribution margin, expressed in net present value in May dollars. By comparing this score among a set of customers a prioritization is arrived at for directing future marketing efforts

  4. Recurring Revenues Contribution margin Recurring costs Lifetime of a customer Lifetime Profit LTV Discount rate Acquisition cost Lifetime Value metrics (Net Present Value models) • Multi-period evaluation of a customer’s value to the firm

  5. t T æ ö Rr å = ç ÷ LTV CM t + d 1 è ø = t 1 Calculation of Lifetime Value: Simple Definition where LTV = lifetime value of an individual customer in $, CM = contribution margin,  = interest rate, Rr = retention rate, so Rrt=survival rate for t periods • LTV is a measure of a single customer’s worth to the firm • Used for pedagogical and conceptual purposes CM2 CM1 Rrt 1/(1+d)t 0

  6. t T t æ ö æ ö 1 å Õ = ç ÷ - ç ÷ LTV Rr CM AC ç ÷ it + d k 1 è ø è ø = = 1 t 1 k CMi Rr = - LTV AC i - + d 1 Rr LTV: Definition Accounting for Acquisition Cost and Retention Probabilities Note: many typos on page 127 Where, LTV = lifetime value of an individual customer in $ Rrk = retention rate П = Product of retention rates for each time period from 1 to T, AC = acquisition cost T = total time horizon under consideration Assuming that T  and that the contribution margin CM does not vary over time,

  7. To Calculate Customer Lifetime Value • You must be able to forecast profit contributions • You must understand the cost of marketing • You must be able to forecast retention rates of customers • (since if the customer has abandoned the firm no profits • will flow.) • It is possible that customers will “churn.” That is, they may leave • and then return later. • The contribution of a customer may be causally tied to churn and • abandonment, making this trickier than it looks. • You need to understand NPV calculations.

  8. LTV: Definition Accounting for Varying Levels of Contribution Margin Where, LTV = lifetime value of an individual customer i in $, S = Sales to customer i, DC = direct cost of products purchased by customer i, MC = marketing cost of customer i

  9. Recall the Cell2Cell data from last week

  10. CMi=(67.58+.595*Monthsi-7.615*Marriedi-.046*EqpDaysi)*ContribRateCMi=(67.58+.595*Monthsi-7.615*Marriedi-.046*EqpDaysi)*ContribRate

  11. Abandonment versus Churn: Lost for Good or Missing in Action States of Customer: S0 = bought this period S-1 = last bought one period before State Transition (Markov Matrix) Before Lost for Good S0 S-1 S0 0.0 0.7 = T After 0.3 1.0 S-1 Pt=(Pt,0,1-Pt,0)’ Probability that at time t you are in the two states

  12. Abandonment versus Churn (continued) Before S0 S-1 S0 0.7 0.0 After 0.3 1.0 S-1 Pt= T Pt-1 = T T Pt-2 = T T …T P0 0.7k 0.0 Tk = 1-0.7k 1.0 This is the type of calculation we did above with a retention rate of 70%. However, once gone the customer never returns.

  13. Abandonment versus Churn: just “Missing in Action” Before S-2 S0 S-1 S0 0.1 0.7 0.0 S-1 0.3 0.0 0.0 After 0.0 0.9 S-2 1.0 If you haven’t bought in two periods, you are gone, but you could appear and disappear from one period to the next.

  14. .05 .07 .52 .38 0.0 0.0 T2= T3= .16 .21 .03 .02 0.0 0.0 .27 .48 0.9 .93 1.0 1.0 Abandonment versus Churn: just “Missing in Action”

More Related