This event occurred while I was visiting my local grocery store to accomplish a very specific goal - to cook a stir fry dish for a very special occassion.
I purchased the usual suspects:
- Sesame seeds
- Rice vinegar
- Soba noodles
- Soy sauce
- Beef strips.
Below is an outline of a brainstorming exercise I conducted shortly after this trip to the grocery store.
Yes...I am that dorky.
1.
Develop audience levels
·
VIP Card – based on card number
·
Individual ID – based on usage of card(s),
strong correlation between card transaction eventdatetime and/or customer data-
match (firstname, lastname, emailaddress)
·
Household ID – based on usage of cards, strong
correlation between card transaction eventdatetime and/or customer data- non
match (firstname, lastname, emailaddress)
Analyze data based on audience
levels and execute campaigns accordingly:
2.
Develop correlation measure between VIP Cards –
measure percentage rate of VIP cards used in consecutive transactions. The
measure will be indicative of a relationship between the two cards may it be
the same individual or same household
3.
Trigger campaigns –
a.
Customer purchases cold medicine – trigger
campaigns related to remedies for a cold, promote complimentary products (i.e.
chicken noodle soup)
b.
Customer purchases product with specific
expiration dates (i.e. milk) – trigger reminder
campaigns at point of expiration to purchase upcoming expiry product
c.
Customer purchases items that strongly suggest
cuisine – trigger personalized recipe campaigns (i.e. customer purchases soba
noodles, sesame seeds and beef, there is a strong likelihood of customer
preparing ‘Stir Fry’, send Asian cuisine recipes, suggestions for other sesame
seed usage, etc.)
d.
Male VIP card holder purchases famine product –
trigger quarterly ‘Date Night’
campaigns, indicative of female companion
e.
Develop traditional seasonality campaigns
·
Thanksgiving
·
Valentine’s Day
·
Christmas
·
Easter
·
Super Bowl
·
Halloween
·
July 4th
·
Summer Weather– Icecream, BBQ
·
Winter Weather – Roast, Soups
f.
Develop traditional weekly sales campaign –
highlight weekly sales items based on customer’s transaction history
g.
Develop ‘Complimentary Product’ campaign series
–
·
Shampoo to Conditioner (bi-lateral relationship)
·
Cold Medicine to Chicken Noodle Soup
(uni-lateral relationship)
h.
Develop ‘Recommendation’ campaign series
(specifically for beauty products) – i.e. ‘customers who bought X also bought Y’,
think Amazon
i.
Purchase of baby product (i.e. newborn baby
diapers) – deduce recent addition to family, trigger baby product campaign
series (baby product sale items, ‘ways to stretch a budget-for families’,
upsell baby items in trend-site references from reputable publications or
public figures
Your are welcome.
- Candice M. Narvaez
I like where you're headed. What if you took it one step further, beyond traditional email, and did real-time, point of purchase mobile offers.
ReplyDeleteImagine "checking-in" once you arrived at the store by texting a code, scanning your loyalty card, etc. Then, based on many of the attributes and scenarios you outlined above the store gave real-time mobile coupons along with its location (e.g. Huggie diapers $1.00 off, aisle 14).
You could further customize the experience through an online contact preference center.
This isn't too far removed from some of those wifi enabled shopping carts that track you're in store movements. http://images.businessweek.com/ss/09/02/0208_buying_habits/8.htm
Ah man, now I'm hungry and have to go to the store!