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Keep it personal: five keys to successful marketing

Ask customers for personal details, they’ll want better service. (Photo: Shutterstock).

By Lori Bieda, Executive Lead, Customer Intelligence, SAS Americas

There was a time when customer intelligence would have seemed like an unattainable concept. In the era of  bricks and mortar, traditional retail was where it was at.  Where  mom and pop shops were the norm, and knowing your customer meant knowing their name and more. It was also about knowing where they lived in the community and, likely, what they needed when they came in your door.

Fast forward to a new era of bricks and clicks, where the family of customers have mushroomed to millions of customers and prospects who often are nameless.  We’ve come a long way from those days. Knowing customers personally is virtually impossible in a world where people can interact with your business from anywhere in the world, and where brands are borderless At the same time, customers still expect you to know them, and while they’re not always across from you at the point of sale, they’re giving you insight about their needs and preferences at every turn. Whether that insight is conveyed through loyalty programs, retail credit card purchases, online behavior or responses to promos and offers, there’s no excuse to not know your customers individually, even if you can’t know them personally.

Knowing what your customers want is just as important as knowing who they are. New research by Leger Marketing, commissioned by SAS Canada, has some important insights for retailers, marketers and any business interested in customer intelligence. The results show some interesting facts about what Canadians expect in return for their personal information. What we discovered is that consumer demographics is no longer enough information when it comes to knowing and acting on customer needs. Consumers expect more from the companies they engage in business with: they want personalized exchanges.

Here are some of the insights from the survey:

Canadians expect something in return for their personal information

For marketers, opportunity is at your doorstep

You’re wasting more than paper

The medium is the message

There’s light at the end of the tunnel

You can learn more about SAS’s Customer Intelligence survey here.

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