It shouldn't surprise anybody that an S-Tier new customer is one who pays full price. It shouldn't surprise anybody that some marketers view full priced activity to be abhorrent to their "engagement ethos". Consequently, marketers pull in a ton of F-Tier customers. Woo hoo!
For the company we're studying (actual customer data, folks) I use a metric called "above/below" ... if a customer paid $49.99 for a $49.99 item, the customer bought an item that sells at/above the historical average price point. If that item is sold via a 40% off promotion for $29.99, the customer buying the item paid "below" the historical average price point for the item.
Ready to view our tiers?
- S-Tier: 28% of a first order is items selling below their historical average price point.
- A-Tier: 27% of a first order is items selling below their historical average price point.
- B-Tier: 25% of a first order is items selling below their historical average price point.
- C-Tier: 28% of a first order is items selling below their historical average price point.
- D-Tier: 36% of a first order is items selling below their historical average price point.
- F-Tier: 42% of a first order is items selling below their historical average price point.

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