Customer value and management strategy
0 comments | 682 reads
Posted on Jan 02, 2010
Too often we see
articles and blogs claiming expertise in customer value and customer profitability management that are regurgitating lessons learned at business school instead of in the trenches of business. Simple two-by-two martices that show "how you should use customer value to manage customers" are only illustrations - we fear for those who take them as strategies.
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The illogical logic of credit card rates
0 comments | 390 reads
Posted on Dec 16, 2009
We have been hearing a lot of talk in Washington and Main Street about how credit card issuers are managing risk and rates lately, so I thought it would be a good idea to offer up a quick analysis of the so-called rationale that supports raising rates on deteriorating-credit clients.
The pricing mantra goes like this...
the expected credit losses on the portfolio is rising so we need more revenue to pay for those losses. And we raise the rates more on people with the worst credit scores because they are the most likely to go under.Well, this is not very sensible, folks. There are several problems with this way of thinking.
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Current value, historical value, present value, lifetime value....
0 comments | 623 reads
Posted on Dec 16, 2009
One of the more interesting aspects of customer value measurement - the precedent to customer value management - is that it can have so many different temporal definitions. There is a vast difference between each of these terms:
- customer current value
- customer historical value
- customer present value
- customer lifetime value
and even within those terms there are variants in meaning. For example current value may mean last week | month | year or it may mean the value of the customer's current business over the next week | month | year.
Getting basic definitions right is crucial to
successful acceptance of your customer value measurement techniques. Each of the value metrics identified above has validity - there is no one right answer or single version of the truth that everyone seeks. The reality of customer value measurement is that the techniques and policies used to define the metric must be tailored to the decisions that are to be based on this information.
For pricing decisions one set of definitions might be ideal, while for customer retention strategy another might be more applicable. You need to get the relationship between definitions and decisions right if you want to encourage the right behaviour...and that is what it is really all about.
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Unprofitable Customers: Naughty or Nice ?
0 comments | 566 reads
Posted on Dec 15, 2009
Customer value helps identify the top tier customers we need to focus retention activity on, but what of the other 80% of customers who generate nominal or even negative contribution? Are they naughty or are they nice to have in your portfolio?
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