Article:
10 Need-to-Knows to Find Good Customer Targets in the Digital Age
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
In addition to revenue measures, there are other characteristics that make one customer more valuable than another because they’re easier to get and keep, as well as engage as co-marketers. Here are 10 need-to-knows about current and prospective customers that will clearly and definitively guide marketers to good customer targets in the digital age.

With all eyes on marketing’s roi, identifying the “best” current and prospective customers—the ones who will generate the highest return in terms of profits for your brand—becomes even more critical to success. Of course, the explosion of digital and social media certainly hasn’t made it any easier to answer what was already a pretty challenging question: how to tell the “best” from the rest?
Marketers now have to integrate traditional and digital paid advertising with “owned” properties such as the brand’s website, as well as traditional and social “earned” media such as news articles and tweets in a way that gets them the biggest bang for their marketing dollar. The expanding range of communications options has changed not only when, where, and how marketers reach customer targets, but also how to go about assessing their value.
In fact, these days a comprehensive customer valuation process requires a profitability equation balanced with both financial and, very importantly, non-financial inputs. In addition to revenue measures, there are also several other characteristics that make one customer more valuable than another because they’re easier to get and keep, as well as engage as co-marketers.
Here are 10 need-to-knows about current and prospective customers that will clearly and definitively guide marketers to good customer targets in the digital age:
No. 1: Revenues are still relevant
Collect information from customers to establish just how much cash money they are bringing to your table. Measures for every respondent in a survey could include:
- current spending in the category in dollars
- current brand share
- channel behavior and prices paid in different channels
- brand switching history/potential
- lifetime value
If your current segmentation does not offer clear direction on which group or groups offer the highest return on marketing investment, you can rest assured you’ll see the numbers climb if you address the situation head-on. The best place to start is getting financial data for each individual customer.
No. 2: Happiness is contagious
One popular idea circulating in business these days is to “flip the funnel” and focus on the customers who’re currently happy with your brand. Certainly customers that express a high level of satisfaction have a lower likelihood of switching away from you; a higher likelihood of repeat purchases; and a greater chance they’ll enhance marketing activities. You also don’t have to invest significant resources in reversing their negative opinions or undoing its potentially damaging effects. Just ask the folks at Dell about Ihatedell.org.
An addendum to this notion, though, is to take advantage of any unhappiness current and prospective customers may have with the competitive brands they use. Given the right incentive, they might bring their business over to your brand.
No. 3: Price sensitivity is NOT a good thing
Unless you’re Wal-mart and want to grab share amongst the folks who put price above all other brand considerations, price insensitivity is another important indication of a buyer’s value to a brand and one particularly relevant these days. Mickey Drexler, CEO of retailer J. Crew, looked for the customers willing to pay more for well-made clothing and increased revenues 107% his first five years in charge.
No. 4: The bigger the problems the better
The bigger the problem your brand can solve, the bigger the market response. In the early days of internet surfing, AOL went after people interested in getting onto the web, but afraid of doing it on their own. More than 30 million people over several continents signed up for AOL’s service and the USA Today put it at #4 in its ranking of the events that shaped the first 25 years of the web.
No. 5: On the lookout for something new
Introducing new products and services—in good times and in bad—can generate the kind of organic growth companies crave. So why not ensure that new products and services WILL generate bottom line growth by narrowing in on the customers most interested in considering the latest offerings from a brand or company? Apple’s pretty much got this one down.
No. 6: Distinctive needs and wants
The more homogeneous and preemptible a target group’s needs and wants, the easier time marketers will have developing compelling positioning and messaging that breaks through in traditional and digital channels.
Burger King has had a hard time on this front with its professed target: young men 18-24 who are big time fast food eaters. Though they share an age range and behavioral pattern, do they all eat fast food so much for the exact same reasons? Do they all feel the same way about BK? Do they all watch the same TV shows? Do they all connect with the brand on Facebook?
No. 7: A hub with lots of spokes
Because of the speed and number of tools available to customers to spread information about products and services on-line, word-of-mouth activity is even more important to capture in a digital environment. The more active and engaged a customer is with different social media, the more valuable they can be to a brand. Ford picked out 100 twenty-something YouTube storytellers who’d developed a fan community of their own and gave them a Fiesta for 6 months. Each month they shared their experiences with their communities via YouTube, Flickr, Facebook, and Twitter. Ford received 50,000 requests for information on Fiesta—almost entirely from new-to-Ford customers—and sold 10,000 units in the first six days of sales.
No. 8: Out there advocating for your brand
The greater the level of influence a buyer has among their social networks, the more a brand’s marketing ROI will benefit. Customers who do some of the work for a brand because they’re more likely to spread the word to family and friends on-line and off about a product/service they found that really works are like money in the bank. One restaurant chain we worked with found that while the Brand Advocates visited the stores the same number of times in an average month as the Frequent Users, they introduced the brand to other people in their social networks three times as much.
No. 9: Meaningful to traditional and digital decision-makers
Get a sense of how high-value customers use traditional, digital, and social media communications throughout the pre- and post-purchase process, and, in particular, how they like to interact with a brand within different communications channels. The restaurant chain we mentioned earlier, for instance, did some investigating into what information advocates want and when so they can talk about the brand with their family and friends.
No. 10: No needles in the haystack
The “best” communications channels—either current or prospective—are the ones with a disproportionate number of high-value customers. Ask and answer the same questions used in the resources media planners regularly access to develop direct links to syndicated databases like Simmons, MRI, and Carat’s CCS. Or connect to the information in internal customer or sales databases so you can tap into these existing resources.
Bring it All Together
Rather than look at each of these things separately though, we’re suggesting marketers can and should bring together financial data and the non-financial, what we call, “proxies for profitability” to calculate a single measure of value. Figure out which descriptive characteristics—demographics, anthropometrics, psychographics, attitudes, lifestyles, needs, behaviors, and more—have the strongest relationship to these proxies and marketers will give themselves incredibly helpful guidance with which to build a high performance marketing plan.
As more and more marketers shift their mentality from experimentation with digital and social media to integration of all on-line efforts with the overall marketing plan, they will give themselves a tremendous leg-up in generating the most return from marketing investments if they recalibrate how they separate the “best,” most valuable customers from the rest.
This content was provided by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research. Visit their website at www.copernicusmarketing.com
Other content shared by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
Get More From Advertising Tracking Research
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
Advertising tracking research often returns results that don't help marketers: it can take months for tracking numbers to change significantly and even when they do, they provide little insight into why they went up or down. Here are three things you can do today to get more from advertising tracking research tomorrow. Read Article »
Psychographic Profile: What Your Position on the Legalization of Marijuana Might Say About You
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
Psychographics include variables related to attitudes, interests, personality characteristics, and values. This psychographic profile looks at a side-by-side comparison of the attitudes, behaviors and demographics of the opposite sides of a hotly debated topic: the legalization of marijuana. Read Article »
Good Versus Bad Market Segmentation
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
The qualities of good market segmentation include the results - does the research yield distinct, proprietary, highly profitable market segments? Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research shares their 5 steps toward good market segmentation. Read Article »
Marketing Myth: Positioning Is No Longer Relevant
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
Marketers have lost control of certain aspects of brand communication - it is no longer enough to identify and communicate one brand position. Brands now target specific groups of consumers to ensure their message is relevant, compelling and motivating. One of the most important steps is using customer input, as described in this article. Read Article »
Innovation Needn't Be Such a Scary Proposition For Marketers
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
Marketers view innovation as key to combating hard economic times, yet less than half have expressed satisfaction with innovation efforts. Creating a new product includes finding the perfect price: market research helps pin down this element and in turn helps produce a market winner. Read Article »
The Real Mystery of Political Polls
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
Ahead of the 2008 U.S. presidential election, Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research looked at the phenomenon of "polling failure" and response bias based on social desirability. Read Article »
Attitudinal and Behavioral Profile of People Who Are In Excellent Health
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
Do you start every conversation with litany of what ails you? A behavioral and attitudinal comparison of people who say they are NOT in excellent health vs. those who say they are. Read Article »
You Can Get Marketers To Eat Their Spinach
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
Marketers tend to distrust research and data, even though in principle they agree research is good for decision-making. This article shares tips for getting marketers to bring together principle and practice. Read Article »
Study Shows Emotional Connection Currently More Pipe (or Hype) Dream Than Reality
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
Brands strive to build an emotional connection with consumers, but how many consumers actually respond to these efforts? This article reveals findings from a study of U.S. consumers about emotional connection to brands. Read Article »
Marketing Decisions Still Made With More Guts Than Brains
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
This article shares findings from a survey of marketing executives and their decision-making approaches - intuitive judgment versus data and research-based. Read Article »
Interview: Adapting Marketing Research Tools for the Digital Age
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
Marketing Fray sat down with Copernicus' Eric Paquette, a senior vice president at the firm who's leading the digital charge, and posed three questions about how and what marketers can do to make good digital marketing decisions. Read Article »
3 Tools to Get a Read on Marketing Performance in 30 Days
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
Why Doesn't My Market Segmentation Work?
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
This article shares scenarios where you might run into problems with market segmentation. Read Article »
Psychographic Profile: East Coast vs. West Coast Stereotypes
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting & Research
Psychographics include variables related to attitudes, interests, personality characteristics, and values. This article shares insights on East Coast vs West Coast stereotypes. Read Article »
Top 10 Reasons for New Product Failure
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
This article presents reasons why only 10-20% of new products and services succeed. Read Article »
Rolling Out a New Product? Take 3 Steps to Nail Execution
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
While finding the right new product or service is a pretty high hurdle in and of itself, there’s also the marketing plan and the often overlooked execution plan to consider. Here are three steps you can take to keep all the parts of the marketing plan heading in the same direction as you roll it out into market. Read Article »
How to Identify the Most Profitable Targets
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
A top ten list of criteria used to identify financially-optimal targets. Read Article »
Simulated Test Marketing Gets Your New Products/Services Off on the Right Foot
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
Simulated test marketing research enables you to experiment and hone in on the best marketing plan. Learn more about this method and its application in this article. Read Article »
"Actionable Insights": Watchword or Buzzword?
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
This article discusses the measurement of the return on marketing research investments and what to with all the “insights” into customers and prospects. Read Article »
Customer Satisfaction in a Slump: Even the Net Promoters Agree
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
This article discusses the the latest statistics from the American Customer Satisfaction Index (ASCI). Read Article »
Interview With An Expert: Rolf Olsen on Social Media Listening
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
Social conversation may offer marketers a constant stream of real-time data on trends, unmet customer needs, and campaign and new product performance, but there’s a whole host of questions that marketers still have to answer when it comes to using and applying information gathered via social listening to marketing decisions. Read Article »
5 Ways to Eliminate Advertising ROI Anxiety in 2012
by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
Sticking with tried-and-true media vehicles that have performed reliably may be one way marketers can alleviate advertising ROI anxiety. We have five more solutions to knock it out all together in 2012. Read Article »



