Define Your Customers Part 1

Target Marketing Magazine printed an invitation to take a look at who your customers really are.

Many marketers think of customers in straight-forward terms: females, 45 to 60 years old, $75,000-plus household incomes, for example. These broad-sweeping descriptors have a place in customer definitions but aren’t the end in defining who does business with you.

Many of the data points necessary to understand your customer are available in your database. Purchasing data, for example, provides the foundation of analysis in marketing, merchandising and price points. But some of the more meaningful data—the information that allows you to complete the puzzle—is often available through knowledgeable providers. These professionals can offer data appends that allow you a more complete and robust view of who the customer really is.

Let’s look at several techniques you can use to learn more about your customers (and even your noncustomers) and how, put together, they give you the intelligence and insights to tighten your brand, improve your marketing and boost profits.

What Customers Are

The first step in building a comprehensive customer profile is the application of demographic data. There are more than a thousand different demographic variables that can be appended to the typical consumer’s name and address record. These demographics, or descriptive characteristics, can range from age and income to gender and ethnicity to home ownership and consumer credit availability. By compiling data from a variety of outside sources, a professional list provider can overlay demographics data onto any consumer data file and provide back either a series of descriptive reports or, better yet, appended data for additional analysis.

The demographics most commonly employed in developing customer profiles are generally age, income and gender. Additionally though, it can be powerful to know more about the customer, like how much she paid for her home and how long she’s lived there; how wealthy she is, beyond just annual income estimates; etc. By applying these data points, you start to paint a picture of the person “materially”—essentially the 45- to 60-year-old, $75,000-plus household income female mentioned earlier. The additional demos also allow for more understanding about the kind of home she lives in, how thin she spreads her income, how settled she is and more. And from a marketing standpoint, demographics can enhance RFM (recency, frequency, monetary value) selection as well.

In the next post we will look at customer beliefs (psychographics) and the meaning of purchasing patterns.

4 comments

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