- More items matters.
- Independent of items purchased, AOV size matters.
- Selling at full price matters.
- Selling best-selling items matters.
- Multiple categories (after controlling for items purchased) matters.
- Lapsed marketplace buyers are a CATASTROPHE!
Kevin Hillstrom: MineThatData
Helping CEOs Understand How Customers Interact With Advertising, Products, Brands, and Channels
September 12, 2024
Are You Ready For The Best Finding So Far?
September 11, 2024
Diversity of Product Matters Among Reactivation Candidates
In this example, I look at 18 month 1x customers who purchased exactly two items in their first order. Then, I layer on top of this analysis the number of merchandise categories the customer purchased from in a first order.
Ready for the results?
- 18 Month 1x Buyer with 2 Items in First Order, 1 Merchandise Category = 5.58% Rebuy Rate.
- 18 Month 1x Buyer with 2 Items in First Order, 2 Merchandise Categories = 7.28% Rebuy Rate.
- More items matters.
- Independent of items purchased, AOV size matters.
- Selling at full price matters.
- Selling best-selling items matters.
- Multiple categories (after controlling for items purchased) matters.
September 10, 2024
Look At This, Reactivation Lovers!
Have you ever noticed that a lot of songs from the 70s and 80s used the word "lovers"? Those were wild times, dear readers.
But I digress.
In order to reactivate customers at a credible level, you have to love the process. Lovers of the process stack attributes on top of each other. One of the attributes you stack is "winning items".
In this example, to make analysis easy to digest, I analyze 18 month 1x buyers who only purchased one item in the first order. Was that item a winner (graded as "A"), or a B / C / D / F item, where "F" items are items that only sold a few units during the year?
- Rebuy Rate for "A" Items = 4.55%.
- Rebuy Rate for "B" Items = 4.38%.
- Rebuy Rate for "C" Items = 3.99%.
- Rebuy Rate for "D" Items = 3.74%.
- Rebuy Rate for "F" Items = 2.99%.
- Average Rebuy Rate = 4.03%.
- More items matters.
- Independent of items purchased, AOV size matters.
- Selling at full price matters.
- Selling best-selling items matters.
September 09, 2024
Reactivation Customers Buying Discounted Items
In most projects, I categorize items as selling at/above their historical average price point, or selling below their historical average price point. In other words, you have an item that sells for $50.00. Sometimes it is 10% off ($45), sometimes it is 40% off ($30.00). Average it all together, and the historical average price point for the item is $43.77. When it sells for $45.00 or $50.00, it is selling at/above the historical average price point for the item. When it is selling for $43.77, it is selling below the historical average price point for the item.
- $50 = Above
- $45 = Above
- $43.77 = Historical Average Price Point
- $30 = Below
- No Items Below Historical Average Price Point = 4.27% Annual Rebuy Rate.
- Item Is Below Historical Average Price Point = 3.36% Annual Rebuy Rate.
September 08, 2024
Target Specific Reactivation Customers
Not all reactivation customers are created equally.
This week, we'll look at 18 month 1x reactivation customers ... they bought for the first time eighteen months ago and then just went dormant. This is the typical scenario ... by this point maybe 30% of the first-time buyers purchased again, while the other 70% are getting less and less like to buy again by the day.
Yes, you need to do something here.
No, you don't need to figure out the following.
Let's look at annual repurchase rates for this audience, segmented by initial average order value and initial items purchased in the first order. Tell me what you observe.
This segment of customers is not likely to purchase/reactivate in the next year, with only 5.16% of the segment doing so. This segment of customers is pretty close to dormant.
But some customers are less dormant than other ones.
Notice that customers who bought one item are less likely to reactivate ... about 4.03% reactivate vs. 6.04% of customers buying two items, vs. 7.64% of customers buying three items, vs. 8.45% of customers buying 4+ items in a first order.
Would you rather try to reactivate a customer with an 8.45% chance of reactivating, or a customer with a 4.03% chance of reactivating?
This is a pretty simple cross-tab ... one every one of you should be able to create from your customer data in about thirty seconds. Go run it today, tell me what you learn, ok?
September 05, 2024
There Isn't A Lot Of Time To Take Action
- As mentioned a thousand times here, if the customer does not buy for a second time within three months, the customer quickly becomes inactive.
- As mentioned a hundred times here, look at the peaks at months 12/24/36. This happens when a business has a strong seasonal component ... a seed business selling garden products in April ... a gift business selling stuff in November/December. Seasonal peaks are key reactivation triggers that almost nobody takes advantage of.
- After twelve months, the customer is generally not coming back.
- Welcome program for months 1/2/3 after a first purchase. If you don't convert the customer to a second purchase here, you've got problems.
- Educational program for months 4/5/6/7/8/9/10 to keep the customer interested ... or as the kids say, "engaged". Here, you want the customer interacting with your content, given how unlikely the customer is to purchase again.
- Anniversary programs for months 11/12/13/23/24/25/35/36/37. Push the product families the customer purchased in a first order, remind the customer of the anniversary event.
- Low-Cost programs for all other months. Do not spend money on an unresponsive customer. Outside of email, social, and your website, do not spend money unless you can prove significant ROI. Use free content to "engage" the customer.
September 04, 2024
Here's The Situation
Show of hands ... how many of you think this is the marketing playbook for reactivating customers?
Here's the situation so many of us are dealing with.
Are You Ready For The Best Finding So Far?
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