9th
September
2008
Stephan Chase of Marriott generated the third set of thoughts. He is working to make Marriott more customer-centric, in particular by employing predictive modeling to determine what customers are likely to do in the future while using results in marketing to create a learning organization. This is of course the heart and soul of decision [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Adaptive Control, Customer Experience, Decision Management, Marketing, Predictive Analytics |
8th
September
2008
A colleague attended the Aberdeen CMO Summit last week and took some great notes. I am going to have a couple of posts this week based on her notes. First up, some lessons from Paul DePodesta (of the Padres). Paul focused on some of the challenges of moving from judgmental to more analytic decision [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Decision Management, Marketing, Predictive Analytics |
31st
August
2008
Last thoughts from the CMO summit based on comments made by various Aberdeen folks and speakers. Fundamentally, companies cannot allow their marketing to stand still. Marketing cannot afford to keep doing what it’s doing - lots of companies focus on acquisition for instance even when their data suggests that retention and selling to existing [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Decision Management, Marketing |
26th
August
2008
Elana Anderson had a great post on direct marketing while I was on vacation -Next Generation Campaign Management.
She starts off with three great principles:
Listen to all information provided by customers and prospects — both explicit and implied.
Understand past and present information to determine the best possible marketing action.
Communicate in a compelling, timely, and relevant manner.
All of [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Customer Experience, Data Mining, Decision Management, Marketing, Predictive Analytics |
21st
August
2008
Ginger Conlon had a little piece on mobile marketing that caught my eye. This post highlighted the growing importance of mobile devices as both a customer support channel and as a marketing vehicle. I completely agree with this assessment but I think it means that, for both customer service and marketing, we will have to [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Decision Management, Marketing |
18th
July
2008
Transpromotional marketing - yes, another new phrase that I heard for the first time this week. Wooing Customers in a Weak Economy was the source - an article on 1:1. Chris Stone wrote the article and it talks about the need to use different channels to contact customers and to do so consistently and in [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Adaptive Control, Business Rules, Customer Experience, Data Mining, Decision Management, Marketing, Predictive Analytics |
15th
July
2008
Version 17? Yes, SPSS has been at this a while. Today they announced version 17 of their Statistics package. While this has some new features to handle more data and some improved asset management (an analytic repository), the big features are really about bringing more business users into the analytic fold. One feature in this [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Intelligence, Data Mining, Product News |
9th
July
2008
Laura Ramos of Forrester just published a nice report on blogging - How To Derive Value From B2B Blogging. It’s a nice little report (well worth $379 ) and in it she lays out four compelling ways to derive value from a corporate blog:
Strategy One: Be A Conversation Starter, Not A Spoiler
In particular I [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Blogging |
7th
July
2008
Some time ago I saw an article that discussed the 8Ps (4 old, 4 new) of Marketing. It seemed to me that decision making, especially operational/transactional decision making is critical to most of these Ps. Here, then, is my summary of the 8Ps and why decisions, and decision management, matter.
4 Ps
Product
You might think that [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Rules, Customer Experience, Decision Management, Marketing, Optimization, Predictive Analytics, web 2.0 |
3rd
July
2008
The WSJ had a little piece today on personalization - Personalized Emails Are Creepy, Not Effective based on a study done some time ago but still very relevant in today’s market where companies are being told to personalize (including by me). Here are three quotes I think summarize the problem:
[there is a negative] response to [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Customer Experience, Marketing |