- Offense
- Defense
- Special Teams
- The offense was good enough to win.
- The defense was good enough for three quarters then fell apart in the fourth quarter.
- Special teams gave up seven points in the kicking game.
Helping CEOs Understand How Customers Interact With Advertising, Products, Brands, and Channels
A quote from the Prof G newsletter:
Every one of you managed Weird Categories.
In the data I'm analyzing, a customer could buy from a category last year or not ... then buy other merchandise (or not). This creates three twelve-month buyer segments. I segment based on behavior 13-24 months ago, then measure rebuy rates in the past year.
Here's what a normal category looks like:
Every category plays a role in your customer/brand ecosystem.
Category 17 - the highest sales category - is responsible for bringing new customers to this brand. This category truly does the heavy lifting for the brand.
Loyal customers are attracted to categories 4 / 6 / 7 / 13.
There's a natural ebb and flow to your business. Customers enter via certain categories, develop in another set of categories, then spend their loyal efforts across a handful of categories. Knowing this ebb and flow allows you to calibrate your marketing efforts. It's stuff you need to know, correct?
As you've been told, I write a Weather Newsletter. I also write a Pickleball Newsletter, but that's a topic for another day.
About three weeks ago an epic heatwave gripped the Western third of the country. I received two themes of feedback.
Last year, my Green Bay Packers were a very good team that was decimated by injuries to key players. There are three overriding teams on a f...