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Customer Database

Customer Database

Photo of a woman shopping.

For retailers, CRM systems store three primary categories of information:

  1. Customer profiles
  2. Customer activities
  3. Customer management

Since CRM systems evolved from contact information applications from the 1960s and 1970s, customer profile data would include customer’s names, contact information, birthdays, etc.

Customer activity would include purchase history data: what is being purchased, how much is being spent, and how frequently the customer is purchasing.

Customer management data allows the retailer to keep track of automated outreach programs, loyalty programs, and cross-marketing ties to other stores and sites.

One of the most powerful aspects of a CRM system is the analysis that can be generated leading to good business decisions. Having detailed information about individual customers and their activities is essential to being able to foster a deeper relationship with them. CRM systems can also aggregate customers into groups based on location, spend amount, and other factors so that retailers can measure overall impact of marketing activities.

In 2012 Mercedes Benz identified a major business objective to improve their overall customer experience. MB developed a CRM project aimed at customers in various stages of the relationship lifecycle. They created the “RFID Tap to Like” program for the Canadian auto show utilizing Facebook and RFID technology. At the auto show, attendees could interact with the exhibits by simply tapping to like selected vehicles. With this simple process, attendees would receive uploaded pictures and customized e-brochures of their favorites and MB would receive valuable customer information, including their preferences of the new auto models.

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