Tuesday, January 16, 2007

The Customer is like a Butterfly

I couldn't help but feel the butterfly effect. Here's what this week HBR IdeaCast (great show) had to think about it in the last half.


"Who wouldn't want loyal customers? Surely they should cost less to serve, they'd be willing to pay more than other customers, and they'd actively market your company by word of mouth, right? Maybe not. Careful study of the relationship between customer loyalty and profits plumbed from 16,000 customers in four companies' databases tells a different story. The authors found no evidence to support any of these claims. What they did find was that the link between customers and profitability was more complicated because customers fall into four groups, not two. Simply put: Not all loyal customers are profitable, and not all profitable customers are loyal. Traditional tools for segmenting customers do a poor job of identifying that latter group, causing companies to chase expensively after initially profitable customers who hold little promise of future profits. The authors suggest an alternative approach, based on well-established "event-history modeling" techniques, that more accurately predicts future buying probabilities. Armed with such a tool, marketers can correctly identify which customers belong in which category and market accordingly. The challenge in managing customers who are profitable but disloyal--the "butterflies"--is to milk them for as much as you can while they're buying from you. A softly-softly approach is more appropriate for the profitable customers who are likely to stay loyal--your "true friends." As for highly loyal but not very profitable customers--the "barnacles"--you need to find out whether they have the potential to spend more than they currently do. And, of course, for the "strangers"--those who generate no loyalty and no profits--the answer is simple: Identify early and don't invest anything."


RSS
Here's the page.

Sunday, January 7, 2007

Ken Jacobs

I just listened to a great podcast from zoominonline.com with Ken Jacobs It's a nice look into an artistic mind, Ken can't quiet explain his thought process in a a to z type fashion but for me and I'm sure a lot of others it really comes across in the end. So Check It Out!

From the Zoom In Online:



A true icon of avant-garde cinema, Ken Jacobs sat down with Zoom In at this year's Tribeca Film Festival to talk about art, technology, and Laurel and Hardy. Jacobs's career as an experimental filmmaker began in the 1950s, and he's always been interested in using technology to explore the relationship between the eye and the brain. With his latest film, Ontic Antics: Laurel and Hardy (Bye, Molly!), Jacobs has taken an analog process into the digital realm. You'll learn about his patented process and innovative workflow, and soak up Jacobs' insights into the artistic process, aesthetics and the necessity of stretching yourself.

Saturday, January 6, 2007

"Flash" Back

Since I don't yet have anything in my Sketchpad yet I figure I better show that I have done something in the past. Here's some designs I've done that are up on Flashkit.com.

Ben's Work!

- Ben Yokitis

stock.xchng

I got some of my photos up on stock.xchng now! sxu is a great site, I've used it a ton of times and wanted to give something back. I encourage designers to looked it up, a great community.

It looks like Worn is the most popular right now. What do you think?

Short Term
Worn
Bottle in Bag
Baby Pines

- Ben Yokitis

Tuesday, January 2, 2007

Lets Go Chiefs



Just wanted to post some photos from the Johnstown Chiefs game my Dad and I went to on New Year's eve, here's the link.

Also I wanted to mention a podcast I just listened to, Leo Laporte's TWIT number 82 with Michael Arrington of TechCrunch. I really like Mike Arrington, wish the Gillmor Gang was still around, I love Steve Gillmor.

Well, till tomorrow, laters.

- Ben Yokitis

Site launch today!

Just a quick note this evening the site went live!

Go now!;)