By Peter Gergen, Solution Architect CX
A Customer Data Platform (CDP) offers companies a wide range of benefits when it comes to using and managing their customer information. It enables extensive insights into customer behavior, personalized customer journeys, improved data quality and data integrity, automated marketing processes, and real-time interaction over a variety of channels. A CDP optimizes marketing strategies, improves customer satisfaction, and increases sales.
The CDP: Peering into the world of data – gaining insights, identifying patterns, and analyzing customer behavior.
In the final post in this series of three, I will be examining the key differences between conventional data management and using a CDP with regard to data analytics, segmentation, and audience-building, to emphasize the value added by a CDP.
A Customer Data Platform (CDP) initially guarantees precise harmonization and normalization of raw data from different source systems. This data does not deliver its full potential or become truly valuable until it is linked with historical data. Clever combination of information, particularly from the customer’s transaction and activity data, creates meaningful indicators. This comprehensive data analysis makes it possible for companies to gain valuable insights and make informed decisions based upon them.
The customer data platform (CDP) – harmonization and consolidation of raw data from a variety of sources for valuable insights and informed decisions.
Here are a few examples (based on the SAP Customer Data Platform):
Indicators represent the fundamental building blocks for enabling deeper analytics of the data in the customer data platform (CDP). They serve to form the parameters whose thresholds are relevant for creating customer categories (segments) or triggering workflows and therefore have a major impact on the development of the customer experience. By basing its activities on these indicators, the CDP can initiate complex processes targeted at optimizing customer care and interaction.
Based on the raw data and indicators, the CDP can define threshold for forming segments and trigger points for individual customer flows, as well as audience activities. What does that mean? Let me explain briefly:
The CDP makes it possible to execute situation-specific immediate actions for individual customers in real time, particularly when the customer’s individual situation demands exceptional service. At the same time, the audiences defined by the CDP simplify targeted marketing activities that focus on the interests of the respective audience.
The Customer Data Platform (CDP) – effective real-time actions and targeted marketing for personalized customer experiences
You might remember the example of a completely misguided customer experience, in which a customer expected help from the company for an expensive repair, but was instead notified of a price increase by their contact person. This unfortunate encounter also caused the customer to search for ways to terminate the contract.
A customer data platform could have done a lot to proactively prevent a situation like this: potential problems with the product might have been identified in advance, through IoT tickets, before the company opened a service ticket. This would have triggered targeted, proactive, CDP-driven actions. The service and support inquiries would have made it possible to assign the affected customer to a specific audience that demands greater attention from its contact persons. As soon as a certain indicator in the customer data platform reached a threshold indicating customer dissatisfaction, the CDP could have notified the responsible contact person via the CRM system, who in turn could have called the customer – to find an amicable solution to the problem together.
Customer Data Platform: The Core Element for Customer Information
The Real 360° Customer View – SAP Customer Data Platform in Action
Data Governance and Compliance in CDP
Unlocking Value in CX Development: The Way to the Perfect Set of Use Cases