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Have you seen The Customer-Focused Marketing Playbook?

This comprehensive and practical guide to the latest ideas in customer-focused marketing hands you over 200 packed pages of strategy, best practices, do's and don'ts, practical know-how, facts and figures, and ideas to optimise your marketing strategy, boost sales, market share, increase ROI and profit.

Get it on Amazon (Kindle/Print)
 

Consumers will share data if it's clearly protected

More than half of consumers will share personal data willingly if asked and data usage and protection measures are clearly defined, according to a survey from Bain & Company.

Customers' trust cannot be bought by companies offering compensation in exchange for selling or sharing personal data. Instead, the only viable approach is to ask consumers in a clear, straightforward way.

Bain surveyed more than 900 US consumers and found that 91% of respondents do not want companies selling their data, even if they are compensated for it. People opposed to having their data used or shared-even when asked-are rarely swayed by offers of monetary compensation.

Moreover, the reluctance to trade their data for monetary compensation applies to all customers, no matter how active or sophisticated they are online.

The survey revealed that about 80% of respondents know their data is being used in one way or another and has become a type of 'currency' for companies seeking to better attract and retain customers. Yet they are often uncomfortable with how their data is used and shared. A full two-thirds feel that it should be illegal for companies to collect or use such data without getting prior consent.

Eric Almquist, a Bain partner in the firm's Customer Strategy & Marketing and Retail practices, said that in designing the survey, he and others expected to see that demographic characteristics such as age, income and education would play a big role in attitudes toward sharing data. They also expected more active or sophisticated online users to have different attitudes than laggards. "In fact," Almquist said, "the survey showed little variation in attitudes due to demographics or online sophistication".

Instead, consumer opinions vary according to the industry or sectors that could be using their data. Nearly 70% of respondents want to prevent any level of government or any financial institution from sharing their data. Only 43% have the same concerns with retailers and airlines. Utilities, search engines and communications providers land in the middle. The industry differences partly reflect longstanding loyalty programmes in retail and travel, as well as the nature of the data that different types of companies collect and store.

Consumers are most willing to share user-contributed social data, such as product reviews; for that data, 44% said it is fine to share without their explicit permission. But fewer than 20% want their purchase behaviour or demographic data shared without permission, while hardly anyone wants to see family/friend networks or financial or health information shared.

"Strategies to obtain customer permission for using data should vary by industry and the type of information being requested," concluded Rasmus Wegener, founder of Bain's Advanced Analytics Practice. "But open and transparent communication is a good place for any company to start."


Sources: Bain & Company /
The Marketing Factbook.
Copyright © 2015 - 2025 The Marketing Factbook.

    Categorised as:

  • Customer Experience
  • Customer Loyalty
  • Knowing The Customer
  • Marketing Know-How
  • Marketing Technology

Have you seen The Customer-Focused Marketing Playbook?

This comprehensive and practical guide to the latest ideas in customer-focused marketing hands you over 200 packed pages of strategy, best practices, do's and don'ts, practical know-how, facts and figures, and ideas to optimise your marketing strategy, boost sales, market share, increase ROI and profit.

Learn the insider's tricks and techniques to turn every customers into a 'super spreader' for your brand. It's better than free advertising. Once you start this ball rolling, your brand can grow rapidly through word-of-mouth, advocacy, influencers, and customer loyalty. Super-charge your company's marketing strategy, build up your market share, and make more sales through repeat business and customer loyalty.

Find out what works - and what doesn't - and who's succeeded, and how they did it. See how the world's top brands keep their competitive edge against all odds.

The Customer-Focused Marketing Playbook walks you step-by-step through the techniques, metrics, reporting, analysis, marketing models, technologies, tools and innovations for successful marketing strategies - both traditional and emerging - with expert guidance from thought leaders in every major market. Find out the best ways to gather, analyse, and act on customer data to increase profitability, build your brand, empower your customers, beat the competition, reduce churn, and increase customer profitability. This is a marketing book you simply can't afford to be without.

This book aims to hand you all the facts, figures and research data you need for the best decisions for a more profitable, more engaging marketing strategy. It also highlights all the facts, forecasts and trends identified by our experts from the global Marketing Factbook's vast database of market data, news, studies, research and articles, and presents you with an invaluable library of ideas and practical support you can call upon at will.

With The Customer-Focused Marketing Playbook at your side, you'll have instant access to a true goldmine of easily adaptable and up-to-date strategies, walk-throughs, trends, research and market data, plus all the supporting arguments you need to build a solid, profitable marketing strategy.

Get it on Amazon (Kindle/Print)
 
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