- New Customers via Catalogs = 43% purchased multiple items in a first order.
- New Customers via Email Marketing = 44% purchased multiple items in a first order.
- New Customers via Google = 33% purchased multiple items in a first order.
Kevin Hillstrom: MineThatData
Helping CEOs Understand How Customers Interact With Advertising, Products, Brands, and Channels
July 07, 2025
Problem #1 With Digital Marketing
July 06, 2025
New Customers
A few years ago I analyzed a business that was struggling with new customers (duh). Upon digging into the information, another issue revealed itself.
- The customers the brand acquired STUNK. They were lousy customers.
- The brand didn't always acquire lousy customers ... the brand changed their marketing strategy and the customers they now paid Google for were not "customers", they were "Google Users" who had a need at a point in time and Google facilitated the transaction.
- 6+ Yes Responses = You are a very smart marketer and likely know more than most of your peers.
- 4-5 Yes Responses = You are likely an average marketer, good job!
- 2-3 Yes Responses = Talk to your analytics team and get some answers.
- 0-1 Yes Responses = Oh oh.
July 02, 2025
Buc-ees
Recently somebody emailed me and said "where have all the customers gone?"
They're at Buc-ee's, founded in 1982, expanding in 2025 like there is no tomorrow.
Let me just start by saying that I thought it was a tad inappropriate to take a picture of the restroom (for obvious reasons) ... but the stunned look on my face when I walked in ... I mean, this is Making America Great Again. I've been in some filthy latrines in all sorts of Shell / BP / Amoco stations this year. I mean, red/green led lights to show you if a bathroom stall is being used? I get it, your CFO will tell you that you don't make money on a modern restroom. Your CFO needs to stop talking.
As you drive in, you notice that no semi-trailer trucks are allowed. None. There was a Loves right across the freeway and Buc-ee's says "you can have those customers, we don't want 'em". Meanwhile, you're taking every customer Facebook will allow you to pay for. Heck, we even saw truckers walking a quarter mile from their rigs to visit Buc-ee's.
The gas pumps ... all three hundred of them (I have no idea what the actual number is, it felt like 300, it wasn't) were generally being used.
Cars packed the parking lot.
Inside, the store is busier than a 1990 Mall the Saturday before Christmas.
Many readers work for apparel brands. You want to know where your customers are? They're inside this store in Amarillo! I walked off the square footage ... 3,000 square feet dedicated to apparel, until my wife told me I missed a section ... 4,000 square feet. 2/3rd the size of a mall-based store. My home town just leveled a mall ... it's time for apartments ... meanwhile, Buc-ee's is reinventing apparel retail.
"But Kevin, I just want to get a bag of Doritos after getting gas." Ok, have at it. They have Doritos. But they prominently feature THEIR in-house brands ... and they merchandise a lot of products!
You'll also find a jerky bar, a candy bar, and essentially an entire restaurant paired with performing employees.
Can I ask you a question? Do you post your salaries anywhere / everywhere for anybody / everybody to see?
The Assistant Food Service Manager is making $80,000 a year.
One of those "strategic leaders" on LinkedIn messaged me about a job paying $180,000 a year, wondering if I'd be interested? The "strategic leader" needs to look at what Buc-ee's is paying a GM and re-evaluate ... well ... just about everything. I mean, if I have to hear one more person tell me that "nobody wants to work" or "young people just don't want to work" ... it's just cruel. It means your work environment does not attract top-level talent. Either your culture stinks, your leadership stinks, you aren't paying enough money, or some combination of all three is true. Look in the mirror.
The people in the Buc-ee's store were working their living butts off ... they had no choice, because customers were just opening their wallets and throwing money at 'em.
Businesses with a heritage that pre-dates e-commerce all decided to jump off the omnichannel deep end ... tethering old with new, forcing sameness everywhere, offering tepid products that are perpetually available and always 30% off or more, focusing entirely on discounts/promotions for success while constantly throwing money at Google/Facebook for customers that have well-below average lifetime value. We called this a "best practice". We were so dumb.
Walk into a Buc-ee's and see what real leaders were doing while we spent decades aligning channels. My goodness.
P.S.: This is where many of you email me and tell me the reasons why Buc-ee's is "wrong". Here's my email address: kevinh@minethatdata.com
June 30, 2025
Accountability
- It's not my fault, our merchants stink.
- It's not my fault, my industry is dying (looking at you, catalogers).
- It's not my fault, the CFO asked me to stop spending so much money.
June 29, 2025
Doing Something Different
- Merchandise (i.e. food ... like sizzling steaks with smoke filling the restaurant at McGregor's Blink Bonnie). Good food matters. A lot.
- Scarcity that forces people to line up well before the restaurant opens because seating is limited. Why accommodate everybody then sit empty most of the time when you could have limited seating that forces people to line up at the door before you open?
- A "hook" ... something that sets one apart from everybody else.
June 25, 2025
Uh Oh
It's fifteen months after The Lemonhead was hired.
The results? They aren't good.
- Net Sales are down 12%.
- Comp Segment performance is up 4%, strongly suggesting that existing customers like what the brand is selling.
- New/Reactivated buyer counts are down 25%.
- Loyal buyer counts are down 5% even though The Lemonhead implemented a brand new loyalty program nine months ago.
- The Executive Team didn't earn an annual bonus, and that's a problem because the VP of Operations wanted to buy a new BMW.
- The Marketing Team has been gutted ... a team of eight individuals has been replaced by eleven individuals (three new people to manage the loyalty program) ... three employees from the old regime and five hand-picked mini-Lemonheads hired by The Lemonhead.
June 23, 2025
The Damage Is Done Before The Results Are In
The Lemonhead has a playbook, tried and true, tested under the most intense of circumstances.
It's the exact wrong playbook for 90% of brands, likely including the brand you work for.
The Lemonhead believes in Customer Loyalty. Of course he does ... he worked for a multi-billion dollar brand that sold addictive products on a daily basis ... so of course his formula of applying a loyalty playbook on your brand who sells sundresses that the customer only needs 1x or 2x per year will "turbocharge" your brand.
The Lemonhead immediately ends wasteful "customer acquisition" tactics, saving the brand a fortune. "WHY ARE WE DOING THIS?" The Lemonhead screams. Of course, this angers the long-term employees who know that without new customers the brand will never had loyal customers. The Lemonhead labels these employees "Luddites" ... "THEY DON'T GET IT!"
The Lemonhead celebrates three months in charge with a p&l that looks spectacular. Sales are roughly flat, maybe down a percent or two ("THE MERCHANTS DON'T GET IT!"), but profit is surging.
Everybody in Leadership is pleased with the results.
Several key employees on the marketing team elect to leave the company ("I'm not working for this stupid lemonhead"), taking a ton of institutional knowledge with them.
The damage is done before the results are in.
Next, we review results a year later.
Problem #1 With Digital Marketing
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