Next-best-action marketing

Next-best-action marketing (also known as best next action or next best activity), as a special case of next-best-action decision-making, is a customer-centric marketing paradigm that considers the different actions that can be taken for a specific customer and decides on the ‘best’ one.[1] The Next Best Action (an offer, proposition, service, etc.) is determined by the customer’s interests and needs on the one hand, and the marketing organization’s business objectives, policies on the other. This is in sharp contrast to traditional marketing approaches that first create a proposition for a product or service and then attempt to find interested and eligible prospects for that proposition. This practice, direct marketing, typically automated in the form of a campaign management tool, is often product-centric, and usually always marketing-centric.

Further positioning

The next-best-action paradigm is very much suited to inbound customer communication because a customer making contact will accept a considered response from the company to his or her request, complaint, inquiry, etc. Leveraging Next Best Action will enable the company to respond to the customer’s needs during the interaction, while ensuring that the action taken also benefits the company. Without a next best action capability in place, a call center or branch agent would be enabled to follow a script in their communication with the customer, which, while perhaps furthering the company’s marketing goals, would most likely be impervious to customer context. Nothwithstanding its relevance to inbound customer communication next-best-action marketing is equally applicable to outbound communication. In this case the next-best-action strategy is applied in batch, overnight for instance, after which customers that have been assigned the same action (i.e. make proposition X) are aggregated.

Enabling technology

Since early this century, the technology has been available to allow a company to reliably achieve next-best-action capabilities in high volumes as well as in real-time.[2] Typically, this requires a multi-channel, centralized decisioning authority that dispenses all decisions with regard to the customer (see Enterprise decision management). This “decisioning hub” leverages “decision logic” that combines the company’s business rules with predictive and adaptive (aka self-learning) decisioning models to help determine how to approach a customer prior to as well as during an interaction. The decisioning authority takes into account each customer’s expectations, propensities and likely behavior through the use of predictive modeling. Interfaces that can leverage this intelligence must also be in place to externalize the logic and guide an agent (or the system itself) in how the customer would prefer to be treated at any given moment, continuously recalibrating the approach based on customer responses. The approach taken may be to make an offer, resolve a complaint, or to make some other kind of recommendation (or a combination of all of these).

History

The Next Best Action paradigm is not new nor is it only applicable in marketing. A similar concept was suggested by John Boyd of the United States Airforce (OODA Loop). In a military context it describes thinking on the fly with distributed, local decision-making versus planned campaigns and objectives. In marketing it has only recently been possible to make decisions fast enough on an enterprise scale to build a ‘mini-business case’ in real-time, considering many courses of action before deciding on the best one.

From a business perspective, the rise of the next-best-action paradigm has in part been triggered by an increasing emphasis on inbound marketing. Organizations have found that volume in the inbound channels (web, call center, ATM, branch, etc.) is increasing in recent years, while outbound channels (direct mail, cold calling, etc.) are increasingly challenged. The reason for this is threefold: 1) customers have become less tolerant of receiving outbound marketing solicitations; 2) new regulations limit spam or spam-like activities, telemarketing calls and direct mail; and 3) customers are increasingly Internet savvy.

Benefits and drawbacks

Although the new paradigm is elegant, both in its business and technical implications, it faces two challenges. The first complication is that most companies are organized in a product-oriented way. This means that product managers have specific volume or revenue targets. Traditional campaign management is very much aligned with this. The Next Best Action paradigm, although capable of reflecting the same priorities, is normally used for bottom line optimization. Organizationally this means that different lines of business will need to collaborate to define next-best-action strategies, and goals may need to be reset to better reflect the customer-centric nature of the new processes. The second complication is its unpredictability. Although overall it will optimize the bottom line and have other attractive features (like built-in customer centricity), the ‘on the fly’ decision-making makes it harder to know in advance what the results will be. There are implications for supply (chain) management, staff incentive schemes, budgeting, and service level agreements. Next-best-action strategies can be made predictable again by simulating them in advance.

References

  1. Hayward, Neil (April 29, 2009). "Five rules for the next-best offer in marketing". Retrieved May 1, 2009. Stop thinking of next best offer and instead think of next best action ... Is there a complaint to handle or an issue to fix?
  2. Walker, Rob (June 26, 2007). "Next-Best-Action Marketing: Creating the Segment of One". Retrieved May 1, 2009. Next Best Action marketing ... enables companies to make real-time decisions about their customers based on individual conversations, and provides the framework for the customer conversation to unfold naturally.
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