Customer Lifetime Value (SMALL BOOK 167-177) * Customer lifetime value (CLV)‚ is the net present value of the cash flows attributed to the relationship with a customer. * The use of customer lifetime value as a marketing metric tends to place greater emphasis on customer service and long-term customer satisfaction‚ rather than on maximizing short-term sales. * Two approaches to CLV: * Disaggregate (“spreadsheet”)– Complex and cumbersome‚ but allows you to build in any assumptions
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this week. 2 profitable days & selling 100 Santa is coming to Cambridge on 1 day over 4 customers.!! LAST WEEK Friday - postcodes/area DAY OFF HOLIDAY 1. 2. 3. THIS WEEK Monday - postcodes/area: NORFOLK& Suffolk & Cambridge 1. Merchandising & christmas orders for existing customers 3. Tuesday - postcodes/area: HP & WD 1.Merchandising & christmas orders for existing customers 2. 3. Wednesday - postcodes/area: SICK 1. 2. 3. Thursday postcodes/area: at
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Customers will buy from the firm that they see as offering the highest perceived value . Customer perceived value (CPV) is the difference between the prospective customer’s evaluation of all the benefits and all the costs of an offering and the perceived alternatives. Total customer value is the perceived monetary value of the bundle or economic‚ functional‚ and psychological benefits customers expect from a given market offering. Total customer cost is the bundle of costs customers expect to
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of each class. d) percentage of observations in each class. 5. Which of the following statement is false a) The stem-and-leaf display is often superior to the frequency distribution in that it maintains the original values for further analysis. b) The main principle behind the Pareto diagram is the ability to track the "vital few" from the "trivial many." c) When the mean is greater than the median‚ we say the distribution is skewed to the left
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Achieving operational excellence and customer intimacy: Enterprise applications Lesson - -08 Enterprise Systems • Around the global‚ companies are increasingly becoming more connected‚ both internally and with other companies. • Enterprise systems provide the integration to make this possible. • Enterprise systems‚ or enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems‚ integrate the key internal business processes of a firm into a single software system 1 Enterprise software • It is based on
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Activities for Customer Service Excellence Peter R. Garber HRD Press‚ Inc. • Amherst • Massachusetts Copyright © 2005‚ HRD Press‚ Inc. The materials that appear in this book‚ other than those quoted from prior sources‚ may be reproduced for educational/training activities. There is no requirement to obtain special permission for such uses. We do‚ however‚ ask that the following statement appear on all reproductions: Reproduced from 25 Reproducible Activities for Customer Service Excellence‚ by Peter
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StarBucks Cofee: Starbucks coffee successfully changed the perceived value for a coffee and people agreed to pay a higher cost for the same coffee they get in other places. Some of the benefits customers get at startbucs coffee are Wide range of variety Mix and match of the different flavours Custom flavor of the coffee Store ambiance and customer service range of related product Free internet service for the customers Comfortable seating and cozy ambiance Most importantly the availability
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How does an organization create customer value? Marketing experts Don Peppers and Martha Rogers said: “Without customers‚ you don’t have a business.” It is such a simple‚ nevertheless‚ a scary thought. We live in a world of consumerism‚ in which the customer’s wants and desires greatly exceed their basic needs. Even though many see this concept as a threat to modern world society‚ it has created the extremely competitive marketplace for businesses. The companies are competing everyday to win over
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disposable income‚ as whiskey is considered as luxury product. The key issue in this case study lies upon which part Glenmeadie should invest more in product innovations or the front-end of its business. Glenmeadie is an accomplished Scotch Whiskey Company that proved its superior quality in the International Wine and Spirits Competition by winning four gold medals. The company’s Tastemakers programme which assists to improve interactions with customers and the Glenmeadie’s marketing performance had expressed
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Marketing: Creating and Capturing Customer Value Chapter 1- slide 1 Creating and Capturing Customer Value Topic Outline • • • • • • • What Is Marketing? Understand the Marketplace and Customer Needs Designing a Customer‐Driven Marketing Strategy Preparing an Integrated Marketing Plan and Program Building Customer Relationships Capturing Value from Customers The Changing Marketing Landscape Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education‚ Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Chapter 1- slide 2 What Is Marketing? Marketing
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