TY - JOUR
T1 - Overcoming the "recency trap" in customer relationship management
AU - Neslin, Scott A.
AU - Taylor, Gail Ayala
AU - Grantham, Kimberly D.
AU - Mcneil, Kimberly R
PY - 2013/5/1
Y1 - 2013/5/1
N2 - Purchase likelihood typically declines as the length of time since the customer's previous purchase ("recency") increases. As a result, firms face a "recency trap," whereby recency increases for customers who do not purchase in a given period, making it even less likely they will purchase in the next period. Eventually the customer is effectively lost to the firm. We develop and illustrate a modeling approach to target a firm's marketing efforts, keeping in mind the customer's recency state. This requires an empirical model that predicts purchase likelihood as a function of recency and marketing, and a dynamic optimization that prescribes the most profitable way to target customers. In our application we find that customers' purchase likelihoods as well as response to marketing depend on recency. These results are used to show that the targeting of email and direct mail should depend on the customer's recency and that the optimal decision policy enables the average high recency customer, who currently is virtually worthless to the firm, to become profitable. © 2012 Academy of Marketing Science.
AB - Purchase likelihood typically declines as the length of time since the customer's previous purchase ("recency") increases. As a result, firms face a "recency trap," whereby recency increases for customers who do not purchase in a given period, making it even less likely they will purchase in the next period. Eventually the customer is effectively lost to the firm. We develop and illustrate a modeling approach to target a firm's marketing efforts, keeping in mind the customer's recency state. This requires an empirical model that predicts purchase likelihood as a function of recency and marketing, and a dynamic optimization that prescribes the most profitable way to target customers. In our application we find that customers' purchase likelihoods as well as response to marketing depend on recency. These results are used to show that the targeting of email and direct mail should depend on the customer's recency and that the optimal decision policy enables the average high recency customer, who currently is virtually worthless to the firm, to become profitable. © 2012 Academy of Marketing Science.
KW - Customer lifetime value
KW - Customer recency
KW - Customer relationship management
KW - Migration model
KW - Optimization
UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84875486124&origin=inward
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U2 - 10.1007/s11747-012-0312-7
DO - 10.1007/s11747-012-0312-7
M3 - Article
SN - 0092-0703
VL - 41
SP - 320
EP - 337
JO - Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science
JF - Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science
IS - 3
ER -