Companies are understanding the importance of ‘customer centricity’ but fail to come to terms with the raft of multi-channel data that could be used for personal targeting campaigns, according to new research.
The study, from Experian, found that 72% of UK businesses recognise the competitive advantage of using data and insight to put their customers at the heart of their business and are already exploring how a ‘single customer view’ (SCV) would work for their organisation.
Yet few are able to fully exploit the consumer demand for greater personalisation from brands and effectively link customer data across multiple channels and digital platforms to accurately tailor marketing communications, according to research released today by Experian Marketing Services.
The study of 400 UK businesses found that only 16 per cent – the “SCV Elites” – currently have a true SCV in place.
A Single Customer View is defined as a readily accessible summary of all customer relationships across numerous brands, businesses, products and channels, which in turn enable personalised multi-channel engagement with customers.
The same research also polled 2,000 UK consumers to explore perceptions of marketing today and clearly demonstrated the benefits to business of becoming an “SCV Elite”. Seventy four per cent of consumers said they would respond positively to personalised marketing communications while 44 per cent would request additional marketing information, demonstrating that they are ready to reward the brands that understand and communicate correctly with them across multiple channels.
Key findings from the Experian Marketing Services study of 400 UK businesses:
• The ability to put the customer first was an important business driver for implementing a SCV:
o 50 per cent acknowledged they would see improved customer service levels
o 41 per cent indicated they would see better customer retention
o 37 per cent said they would be more attractive to new customers
• 70 percent identified cost savings as a core benefit from SCV, of which:
o 21 per cent thought they would grow wallet share with customers
o 33 per cent wanted to increase revenues
o 20 per cent said it would help them to reduce bad debt
• 85 per cent recognised the lack of a single customer view had caused business problems:
o 17 per cent felt they had exposed themselves to business risk as a direct result of having an incomplete view of their customers
o 29 per cent said it delayed important business decisions being made
o 16 per cent said it was the cause of high levels of customer churn
o 22 per cent felt that they had lost opportunities to competitors
o 18 per cent said they had likely missed cross- and up-selling opportunities
Nigel Wilson, Managing Director, Data & Analytics at Experian Marketing Services said “The benefits of a SCV are indisputable, both in terms of costs savings for the business and customer satisfaction, but our research shows that many marketers are still struggling to make effective use of the data that their business holds across multiple-channels. Some organisations are already on their way, so the rest need to see SCV as more than just an intangible ideal and instead a key business requirement for the future if they are to avoid being left behind by their competitors.”
Single customer view terminology and distribution of groups across the sample
“Proper integration of the data collected from different channels is particularly important for marketers. Our research found that even the SCV Elites – those furthest along the journey to implementing a true SCV solution – had only integrated 3.2 channels from the average of 6.65 through which they collect data,” concluded Wilson. “We are definitely moving in the right direction, but many UK businesses have a long way to go in their data journey, in fully understanding their customers and achieving effective multi-channel communications”.
Methodology
Research undertaken by Dynamic Markets in February 2012 from a sample of 400 UK businesses.
Source: http://www.experianplc.com.