Unwravelling
the Data Mining Mystery -
The Key to Dramatically Higher Profits
Data
mining is the art of extracting nuggets of gold from a set of seeminngly
meaningless and random data. For the web, this data can be in the
form of your server hit log, a database of visitors to your website
or customers that have actually purchased from your web site at
one time or another.
Today,
we will look at how examining customer purchases can give you big
clues to revising/improving your product selection, offering style
and packaging of products for much greater profits from both your
existing customers and an increased visitor to customer ratio.
To
get a feel for this, lets take a look at John, a seller of vitamins
and nutritional products on the internet. He has been online for
two years and has made a fairly good living at selling vitamins
and such online but knows he can do better but isn't sure how.
John
was smart enough to keep all customer sales data in a database which
was a good idea because it is now available for analysis. The first
step is for John to run several reports from his database.
In
this instance, these reports include: repeat customers, repeat customer
frequency, most popular items, least popular items, item groups,
item popularity by season, item popularity by geographic region
and repeat orders for the same products. Lets take a brief look
at each report and how it could guide John to greater profits.
- Repeat
Customers - If I know who my repeat customers are, I can make
special offers to them via email or offer them incentive coupons
(if automated) surprise discounts at the checkout stand for being
such a good customer.
-
Repeat Customer Frequency - By knowing how often your customer
buys from you, you can start tailoring automatic ship programs
for that customer where every so many weeks, you will automatically
ship the products the customer needs without the hassle of reordering.
It shows the customer that you really value his time and appreciate
his business.
-
Repeat Orders - By knowing what a customer repeatedly buys and
by knowing about your other products, you can make suggestions
for additional complimentaty products for the customer to add
to the order. You could even throw in free samples for the customer
to try. And of course, you should try to get the customer on an
auto-ship program.
-
Most Popular Items - By knowing what items are purchased the most,
you will know what items to highlight in your web site and what
items would best be used as a loss-leader in a sale or packaged
with other less popular items. If a popular product costs $20
and it is bundled with another $20 product and sold for $35, people
will buy the bundle for the savings provided they perceive a need
of some sort for the other product.
-
Least Popular Items - This fact is useful for inventory control
and for bundling (described above.) It is also useful for possible
special sales to liquidate unpopular merchandise.
-
Item Groups - Understanding item groups is very important in a
retail environment. By understanding how customer's typically
buy groups of products, you can redesign your display and packaging
of items for sale to take advantage of this trend. For instance,
if lots of people buy both Vitamin A and Vitamin C, it might make
sense to bundle the two together at a small discount to move more
product or at least put a hint on their respective web pages that
they go great together. * Item Popularity by season - Some items
sell better in certain seasons than others. For instance, Vitamin
C may sell better in winter than summer. By knowing the seasonability
of the products, you will gain insight into what should be featured
on your website and when.
-
Item Popularity by Geographic Region - If you can find regional
buying patterns in your customer base, you have a great opportunity
for personalized, targeted mailings of specific products and product
groups to each geographic region. Any time you can be more specific
in your offering, your close percentage increases.
As you
can see, each of these elements gives very valuable information that
can help shape the future of this business and how it conducts itself
on the web. It will dictate what new tools are needed, how data should
be presented, whether or not a personal experience is justified (i.e.
one that remembers you and presents itself based on your past interactions),
how and when special sales should be run, what are good loss leaders,
etc.
Although
it can be quite a bit of work, data mining is a truly powerful way
to dramatically increase your profit without incurring the cost
of capturing new customers. The cost of being more responsive to
an existing customer, making that customer feel welcome and selling
that customer more product more often is far less costly than the
cost of constantly getting new customers in a haphazard fashion.
Even
applying the basic principles shared in this article, you will see
a dramatic increase in your profits this coming year. And if you
don't have good records, perhaps this is the time to start a system
to track all this information. After all, you really don't want
to be throwing all that extra money away, do you?
-Steven Chabotte
Copyright
© 2001, Steven Chabotte. Used with permission.
Steven
Chabotte is president of Big-Web Development Corp, specializing in
the development of email productivity and marketing tools for the
web. Steven can be reached at webmaster@maxsponder.com
or you can visit our websites at http://www.maxsponder.com
& http://www.maxsvc.com.