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    Gaming & Leisure
    You are at:Home»Hospitality»A ROADMAP TO PATRONCENTRIC MARKETING

    A ROADMAP TO PATRONCENTRIC MARKETING

    March 17, 2015 Hospitality
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    There is a lot of competition

    for the gaming consumer.

    New markets and new properties

    are opening around the

    world. Consumers have a

    wide range of leisure options

    to consider. New channels

    and distribution players are

    entering the market, while existing players

    increase their reach and penetration. Every one of

    these competitors is after your patrons.

    Savvy marketers know that consumers are looking

    for value when they seek out leisure experiences,

    and in today’s increasingly interconnected

    and transparent world, they have endless sources of

    information, from you and from their fellow travelers,

    to assess what their experience will be like.

    You need to be able to demonstrate that they can

    find exactly what they are looking for with your

    property and service and no one else’s!

    To accomplish this, the patron must be at the

    center of marketing efforts. How you communicate

    with your patrons should be driven by what

    you know about their interests, needs and preferences,

    not what the organization has decided

    should be promoted. Patron-centric marketing

    means building a complete picture of patrons’

    activities and interactions, and using that information

    to identify, target and nurture the most valuable

    patrons.

    Figure out who they are: Build a

    360-degree view of the patron

    The 360-degree view of the patron is not a new

    concept. Casino marketers have been talking

    about this for years. The investments casino

    resorts have made in non-gaming offerings like

    restaurants, spa and retail are driving patron

    behavior, and contributing to patron value. It is

    crucial to understand how patrons spend across the

    enterprise to get that complete picture of who they

    are and how valuable they are to you.

    The real 360-degree view is not limited by the

    four walls of the establishment, and it doesn’t end

    when the patron leaves the property. In today’s

    hyper-connected, digital world, patrons interact

    through websites, social media channels and

    mobile apps before, during and after their visit. It

    is now possible to track online behavior (including

    mobile devices) and append that to the offline

    patron profile. Knowing what they looked at, not

    just what they actually bought can help with

    cross-sell and upsell strategies as well as targeted

    marketing efforts. Understanding how patrons are

    connected to each other can also contribute to

    understanding their value. Some companies, particularly

    in retail, are using iBeacons or other location

    tracking devices to collect traffic patterns and

    to push offers to mobile devices while they are

    moving past or through their location.

    Obtaining a 360-degree view requires a combination

    of technology investment and business

    process change. Any system that a patron touches

    must to be set up to identify the patron and track

    the transaction or interaction back to their profile

    (anonymous or known). Many casinos are challenged

    by disparate selling systems or third parties

    that are not obligated to share data. Setting up the

    technology infrastructure is challenging enough,

    but even if you can integrate all these disparate systems,

    they may not be speaking the same language

    – or collecting data in the same format. Business

    processes must be set in place to ensure consistency

    and accuracy in patron profile information.

    Patrons may need to be encouraged to identify

    themselves at every transaction. Additional information

    might need to be gathered when patrons

    are signing up for loyalty cards or checking in at

    the front desk. In most cases, casinos will need to

    rethink their loyalty programs, adding or adjusting

    incentives to encourage patrons to identify

    themselves and provide required information.

    After all, what else is a loyalty program but a way

    to “buy” patron data?

    The success of any patron data collection project

    has generally more to do with the business process,

    or governance, placed around the data that is collected,

    than the amount or type of data. There are

    several recommended best practices when embarking

    on a patron data collection project:

    1. Define the information that will be collected

    about patrons. Review all source systems

    and understand what data is collected, and at what

    level of detail. Understand what is available right

    now, and what requires a business process or technology

    change to collect. Review any regulatory

    issues that might be associated with certain types

    of data. Determine a common definition of key

    fields or key metrics among everyone who might

    be using the data.

    2. Define how this information will be

    used. Every element collected in the guest

    portfolio should have a purpose. Just because

    you CAN capture a data source doesn’t mean

    you SHOULD or that you need to. Be disciplined

    in defining what you would do with

    every piece of information. If you don’t need itor can’t really use it, then you don’t need to go

    through the effort of collecting it.

    3. Agree on a process for updating or

    adding new information. The long-term sustainability

    of the patron database depends on

    well-defined processes for updating or adding new

    patron information. For each piece of data, define

    the system of record and how it relates to the rest

    of the data sources. For new data, develop a

    process to carefully evaluate it to answer key questions

    like how it relates to what is already in the

    database, how often it is collected/updated, how

    reliable it is and how it will be used in analyses.

    Following this process will not only ensure

    that you will maintain a clean and credible

    360-degree patron view moving forward, but

    also that you have a process in place to manage

    any data concerns that come up such as

    privacy or security issues.

    Keep in mind that it is not necessary to

    have the “perfect” patron database to start on

    patron-centric marketing efforts. Using what

    you have now while planning what you can

    get in the future is a really good way to drive

    value (and attention) in the short term and to

    inspire innovative thinking for the future.

    Put the patron at the center:

    Identify and target your most

    valuable customers

    Creating that 360-degree view is only the first

    step. Without advanced predictive analytics,

    you are operating on guesswork gleaned from

    historical snapshots. While you might be able

    to identify your most valuable patrons right

    now based on historical data, without

    advanced predictive analytics you will not be

    able to identify an “unknown” patron with

    high value potential, or predict when a patron

    is about to defect and know the right intervention

    that will keep them coming back.

    Using techniques like advanced segmentation,

    data mining for behavioral patterns, acquisition

    and retention modeling, and customer lifetime

    value calculations, you can not only identify your

    most valuable patrons, but derive insight into

    what drives that value. Segmentation helps to

    identify profiles of like patrons from the existing

    database to help you match an “unknown” patron

    to a group of like patrons, making sure you don’t

    miss out on the opportunity for a valuable new

    acquisition. Customer lifetime value calculations

    identify who is valuable to you now, but also how

    their value is likely to change over time. Analysis

    of previous response rates can help predict who is

    most likely to respond to a particular promotion,

    and forecast what the response rate will be overall.

    When Caesars Entertainment (formerly Harrah’s)

    designed the Total Rewards Program, they used

    analytics to discover that their most valuable

    patron segments were not the high-rollers that visited

    the casino a couple of times a year, but rather

    the frequent slot players whose bets were smaller,

    but visit-frequency significantly greater. This

    insight changed their whole service proposition,

    leading them to value frequency as well as spend.

    By putting these patrons in the center of marketing

    efforts, they were able to identify the “perks”

    that mattered to these high-value patrons,

    like shorter lines and access to nicer facilities or

    services. This treatment encouraged high-potential

    patrons to switch their loyalty to Caesars. This

    analytically driven mindset changed the game for

    Caesars (for more on this see Competing on

    Analytics – The New Science of Winning by

    Tom Davenport and Jeanne Harris).

    An important point to take from the Caesars

    experience is that analytics can support your creative

    efforts, but certainly not replace them. Once

    you have the information, it’s what you do with it

    that counts. To understand whether your patroncentric

    marketing is hitting the mark, it is important

    that analytics are leveraged at every phase of

    the marketing process from design through execution

    to post-campaign evaluation. Combining

    what you know about your patrons with how your

    marketing efforts are performing over time will

    identify what is working and what isn’t, and most

    importantly, help you survive and thrive in a highly

    competitive environment.

    Kelly A. McGuire, PhD leads the Hospitality

    and Travel Global Practice for SAS. In this role,

    she is responsible for driving the offering set and

    setting strategic direction for the practice.

    McGuire works with product management,

    sales, alliances and R&D to ensure that SAS

    solutions meet the needs of the market, and

    evangelizes the value of advanced analytics to the

    industries she serves. Before joining SAS,

    McGuire consulted with Harrah’s

    Entertainment on restaurant revenue management

    strategies for their major markets. Prior to

    that, she was a senior consultant at Radiant

    Systems. She also worked for RMS (Restaurant

    Revenue Management Solutions) providing

    menu item pricing recommendations to major

    chain restaurants. She is also a frequent contributor

    to industry publications, speaker at industry

    conferences and is co-author of the SAS/CHR

    blog “The Analytic Hospitality Executive”. You

    can reach Kelly at Kelly.McGuire@sas.com.

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