Remember our graph from yesterday?
Once the customer purchases for the second time, the customer is ready to roll!
- 2x Buyer: Quality to Average.
- 3x Buyer: Quality to Average.
- 4x Buyer: Mostly Quality.
- 5x Buyer: Loyal to Quality.
Helping CEOs Understand How Customers Interact With Advertising, Products, Brands, and Channels
Remember our graph from yesterday?
Once the customer purchases for the second time, the customer is ready to roll!
Much, much worse.
The secret to success in e-commerce is getting a customer to a second order. From there, the customer has significantly better long-term value.
Look at the blue line in the image above. These are first-time buyers ... even at the very moment the customer purchases for the first time, the customer only has a 23% chance of buying in the next year. From there, the customer continually becomes less responsive. This is why having a Welcome Action Stream is so darn important ... your odds of converting a first-time buyer are best at months 0/1/2/3 after a first purchase.
After a second purchase, the customer is reasonably responsive. In the image above, a 24 month 2x buyer is as responsive as a 1 month 1x buyer.
In my projects, I create Action Segments. For twelve-month buyers, here's what the segments look like:
The 2x customer is at 7 months of recency, and has the following repurchase metrics.
Here's data for customers with two life-to-date purchases. We're measuring the probability of the customer buying in the next year.
The arrow is important ... that's where the customer slumps to a lower Action Segment. At four months of recency, the customer has a 39.2% chance of buying in the next year. The customer just dropped from what I call a "Quality" Action Segment to a "Average" Action Segment.
At three month of recency, the customer is about to drop to a lower Action Segment. This is where the "minus" indicator kicks in, causing you to kick off an Action Stream to try to prevent the customer from falling to a lower-value segment.
Does that make sense?
One of the most important variables in your customer database is the plus/minus indicator.
Not in the print world? You can skip, we'll see you tomorrow.
If you are mailing catalogs, you likely need to immediately evaluate three things.
I promised you there was a companion booklet forthcoming on the topic of Action Streams. I've got a few things going on require attention for about a week. After that I'll work on getting the text published. Thanks for your patience, it's coming, ok?
Remember our graph from yesterday? Once the customer purchases for the second time, the customer is ready to roll! 2x Buyer: Quality to Ave...