Customerpremisesequipment or customer provided equipment CPE is any terminal telecommunication terminal and associated equipment located at a subscriber s premises and connected with a common carrier carrier s telecommunication channel communications channel s at the demarcation point demarc . The demarc is a point established in a building or complex to separate customerequipment from the equipment ... CPE are overvoltage protection equipment and pay telephone s. CPE can refer to both devices purchased by the subscriber and provided by the operator or service provider. History The two phrases, customerpremisesequipment and customer provided equipment , reflect the history of this equipment. Under ... System, located on customers premises hence, customerpremisesequipment. In the U.S. Federal Communications ... customerpremisesequipment, Customer provided Equipment, or CPE may also refer to any devices ... also Demarc extension Demarcation point Interconnection On premises wiring Terminal equipment References FS1037C references Category Telephony equipment de CustomerPremisesEquipment es CustomerPremisesEquipment fr CustomerPremisesEquipment it Customer Premise Equipment ja ko pt CustomerPremisesEquipment ru CustomerPremisesEquipment sk CPE ... market. ref http www.cybertelecom.org ci cpe.htm Cybertelecom Customers PremisesEquipment ref With the gradual ... some non Bell owned equipment to be connected to the network a process called interconnection , equipment on customers premises became increasingly owned by customers, not the telco. Indeed, one eventually became able to purchase one s own phone hence, customer provided equipment. In the Pay ... may sometimes internally refer to cellular phone s a customer has purchased without a subsidy or from a third party as customer provided equipment. It is also notable that the fully qualified domain ... Ethernet . This includes any customer owned hardware at the customer s site Router computing router ... more details
in construction. Note that a single house or a single other piece of property is premises , not a premise , although the word premises is plural in form as in The equipment is located on the customer s premises and never The equipment is located on the customer s premise . Premises liability Premises ...otheruses Premise disambiguation wiktionary premisesPremises are land and building s together considered ... holes, improperly secured mats, or defects in chairs or benches . ref name Premises Liability and Slip & Fall http www.aeelaw.com practice areas new york city premise liability lawyers Premises Liability and Slip and Fall . Retrieved June 27, 2011. ref In sum quote Premises liability law is the body of law which makes the person who is in possession of land or premises responsible for certain injuries suffered by persons who are present on the premises. ExpertLaw website ref name expert For premises liability to apply The defendant must possess the land or premises . ref name expert http www.expertlaw.com library premises liability premises liability.html ExpertLaw website . Retrieved ... ref name law http www.locate personal injury lawyer.com Articles premises liability.asp Article on premises liability . Retrieved January 12, 2009. ref Traditionally, trespass ers were not protected under premises liability law. ref name expert ref name law However, in 1968, the California Supreme ... whether one could hold the possessor of a premises liable for harm. This opinion led to changes ... of the law of premises liability. There must be negligence or some other wrongful act. ref name law In recent years, the law of premises liability has evolved to include cases where a person is injured on the premises of another by a third person s wrongful act, such as an assault. These cases are sometimes referred to as third party premises liability cases and they represent a highly ... the driver and owner of the vehicle were 100 liable for plaintiff s injuries. ref name Morales Premises ... more details
In telecommunication , on premises wiring is customer owned telecommunication communications transmission telecommunications transmission lines. It is also called customerpremises wiring CPW . ref tsp.ncs.gov docs TSPServiceUserManual.doc TSP Service User Manual, p 2 4 National Communications System 2000 May 5 ref The transmission lines can be metallic copper or optical fiber , and may be installed within or between buildings. Premises wiring may consist of horizontal wiring, vertical wiring, and backbone cabling backbone wiring . It may extend from the point of entry to User telecommunications user work areas. Any type of communications or information technology wiring will be considered premises wiring, including telephone , computer network computer data , intercom , closed circuit television , etc. Premises networks are wired worldwide, across every industry, in both small and large scale applications. Any type or number of network topology topologies may be used star network star , bus network bus , ring network ring , etc. Ownership see also Demarcation point The ownership of on premises wiring varies between jurisdictions It depends where the demarcation point falls. This is significant because ownership determines responsibility for maintenance and repair. In the United States US and Canada , most premises wiring is owned by the customer. There will generally be a demarcation point as close to the poles as possible. For many installations, this will be a network interface device mounted on the outside of the building. In some cases, it will be a minimum point of entry MPOE location inside the building. In the United Kingdom UK , the demarcation point is in the wall jack, and hence most of the on premise wiring is the property of the telephone company telco . See also Customerpremisesequipment Demarc extension Demarcation point Network interface device Riser cable Structured cabling References Reflist FS1037C DEFAULTSORT On Premises Wiring Category Signal cables ... more details
orphan date June 2009 merge Consumer to consumer date January 2012 Customer to Customer C2C markets are innovative ... business to customer relationships, in which a customer goes to the business in order to purchase a product or service. In customer to customer markets the business facilitates an environment where customers can sell these goods and or services to each other. ref Customer To Customer C To C. investopedia.com. ... to customer B2C . ref Ky kai, Nihon R d . Migration and the labor market in Asia By Organization ... B2B , Business to Consumer B2C , to Customer to Customer C2C azhar . While many companies usually operate in one or more of these areas, Customer to Customer businesses operate only within that specific area. Customer to Customer marketing has become more popular recently with the advent of the internet ... for greater interaction between consumers, facilitating the Customer to Custome model. Furthermore ... implementations of customer to customer markets that are credited with its origin. These are classifieds ... the success of any business. In the case of customer to customer marketing, advertising often relates ... Customer to customer marketing has become very popular in the recent years. Customers can directly contact .... Online auctions can be categorized into five main models C2C, B2C, B2B, B2G, and G2P. C2C refers to customer to customer, B2C signifies business to customer, B2B refers to business to business, B2G signifies ... classifieds are another example of customer to customer marketing. An example of an internet classified company, is Craigslist. Craigslist utilizes the internet to attract a wide customer and buyer base which employs the website to list and sell items. Since the customer to customer marketing strategy is strongly focused on serving the customer, the business model of Craigslist is simple serve the customer first.Utilizing this model, Craigslist hes developed into a prime example of a customer to customer driven machine , which focuses on the customer selling to the customer. Revenues which ... more details
unreferenced date June 2011 On premises software often abbreviated as on prem software is installed and run on computers on the premises in the building of the person or organisation using the software, rather than at a remote facility, such as at a server farm or Cloud computing cloud somewhere on the internet. On premises software is sometimes referred to as shrinkwrap software, and off premises software is commonly called software as a service or computing in the cloud . The on premises approach to deploying and using business software was the most common until around 2005, when software running at a remote location became widely available and adopted. The new, alternative deployment and use model typically uses the Internet to remove the need for the user to install any software on premises and had other accompanying benefits running software remotely can result in considerable cost savings because of reduced staffing, maintenance, power consumption, and other factors. Since the advent of software run remotely, on premises software has sometimes come to be called old style software, although it is still the preferred model in some industries such as banking, finance, and defense, where the ability to supervise and secure data on premises that are locally owned or controlled is required. See also Software as a service Software distribution Software stub IT stub Category Software distribution de On Premise ja ... more details
div style float right width 200px margin left 25px File MurrayPremisesEntrywayStJohnsNewfoundland.JPG thumb right 200px Courtyard view of Murray Premises div The Murray Premises is a National Historic Site located in downtown St. John s , Newfoundland and Labrador . The Murray Premises was renovated in 1979 and now contains office suites, restaurants, retail stores and, most recently, a boutique hotel. The buildings once served as a fishery premises, with facilities for drying and packaging fish and warehouses for fish, barrels and other items. The oldest of the buildings is the one facing on Beck s Cove. It was built after the 1846 fire and for a time served as both shop and house. ref http downtownstjohns.com discover attractions Downtown St. John s Attractions ref References reflist St. John s landmarks coord 47 34 07.67 N 52 42 29.52 W region CA NL type landmark display title Newfoundland geo stub Category National Historic Sites in Newfoundland and Labrador ... more details
orphan date September 2010 Image premises studios.jpg thumb right 300px The Premises Studios Studio A Control Room The Premises Studios is a music studio complex based near Hoxton in London Borough of Hackney Hackney , London. The studio complex contains ten commercial rehearsal studio spaces, one acoustic recording studio , one mixing studio, and various private long let rooms and office spaces. History Originally housed across two Victorian terrace houses at 201 203 Hackney Rd, London , the studios were opened by two local jazz musicians, Dill Katz and Colin Dudman , in 1986 as a cost effective alternative to London s more established music studios. ref name Blain1993p14 The history of the buildings ... members of The Pretty Things . ref name Simpson2008p24 At this time The Premises Music Education ... 2010, the arrangement between The Premises Studios Ltd and Full Frequency Ltd, the lease holders for 201 203 buildings was dissolved. The Premises Studios business operates only in 205 209 Hackney Rd. In 2007, The Premises Studios finished work on a large acoustic recording space. This was the first ... per cent every year. ref name Moussa2007p18 Later in 2007, The Premises joined Friends of the Earth ... of carbon emissions by 10 by 2010. ref name Dumas2007 In April 2008, The Premises Studios once ... artist Lily Allen . ref name Love2010p75 On the 5th Oct 2010, The Premises received the Audio .... In June 2011, The Premises won the Best Green Business Award at the annual MusicWeek Awards. This was the first ... Premises Cafe.jpg thumb right 300px The Premises Cafe and Studios The Premises Cafe The Premises Cafe ... as the general public. In April 2007, The Premises Cafe was awarded Best Turkish Restaurant in the Evening ... Premises Studios Official http www.myspace.com thepremises Premises Myspace Notes reflist refs ... name Blain1993p14 Blain, B PremisesPremises , page 14. The Musician, 1993. ref ref name Mainwaring1997 ..., May 24th 2009. ref DEFAULTSORT Premises Category Recording studios in the United Kingdom ... more details
Coord 48.647796 53.112931 display title File Ryan Premises1.jpg thumb 300px right Ryan Premises group of red trimmed white buildings in Bonavista, Newfoundland and Labrador The Ryan Premises is a National Historic Sites of Canada Canadian National Historic Site located in the town of Bonavista, Newfoundland and Labrador . It is preserved as an example of a large scale merchant operation in a Newfoundland outport . ref name PC Cite web url http www.pc.gc.ca eng lhn nhs nl ryan natcul hist.aspx title Ryan Premises National Historic Site of Canada History last1 first1 last2 first2 date work publisher Parks Canada accessdate 27 September 2010 ref The site consists of the proprietor s house, a carriage house carriage shed , a retail shop, a retail store, a fish store and a salt store. ref Cite web url http www.tbs sct.gc.ca dfrp rbif pn nb buildings immeubles 56560 eng.aspx?&qid title Ryan Premises National Historic Site of Canada author date work publisher Parks Canada accessdate 27 September 2010 ref The staff house, adjacent to but not part of the historical site, is a Registered Heritage Structure. ref name heritage Cite web url http www.heritage.nf.ca society rhs ab listing 163.htm title James Ryan Tenement House author date September 2004 work publisher Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador accessdate 27 September 2010 ref Earlier, the premises also included a larger salt store, a Cooper profession cooperage , a Magazine artillery powder magazine , a Telegraphy telegraph office, wharves , fish flake s, a lumber yard and a shipyard . ref name heritage ref name mun cite web url http www.mun.ca mha viewresults Accession No mha00000197 title James Ryan Limited Bonavista fonds publisher Maritime History Archive, Memorial University of Newfoundland accessdate 27 September ... and continued on as a general store until closing in 1978. ref name PC In 1987, the Ryan Premises at Bonavista ... learn prof itm2 crp trc htm nryan e.asp title Teacher Resource Centre Ryan Premises National Historic ... more details
For premises approved for marriage Marriage Act 1994 In the United Kingdom, Approved Premises AP , formerly known as probation or bail hostels, are residential units which house offenders in the community. They are recognised under the Offender Management Act 2007 , and can provoke a hostile reception in the communities in which they are located. There are one hundred such hostels in England and Wales, and a further six in Northern Ireland. Fourteen of the APs in England and Wales were banned from housing child sex offender s in 2006 following a media campaign, which has led to some criticism. Description Formerly known as either National Probation Service England and Wales probation or bail hostel s, the properties became known as Approved Premises once recognised under section 13 of the Offender Management Act 2007 . ref name apnapa cite web title Approved Premises url http www.napbh.org.uk premises.html publisher National Approved Premises Association accessdate 15 June 2011 ref They are still commonly called bail hostels in the media, ref name aldridgegrooming although they house few offenders actually on bail with the majority of residents made up of those on release from prison on licence. ref name qabbc cite news title Q&A Bail hostels url http news.bbc.co.uk 1 hi uk 6124534.stm newspaper BBC News date 7 November 2006 ref There are one hundred Approved Premises in England and Wales, providing over two thousand residential bed spaces for offender s in the community, ref name apnapa with a normal hostel holding between twelve to thirty offenders. ref name superhostels They are run ... Approved Premises are also run in Northern Ireland, which had six APs as of 2008. ref name northernireland ... to locating an Approved Premises in a community, with certain communities mounting protests ... Official spokespersons have said that Approved Premises are safer for the public than the alternative ... Halfway house References reflist 2 External links http www.napbh.org.uk National Approved Premises Association ... more details
Customer Retention is the activity that a selling organization undertakes in order to reduce customer defections. Successful customer retention starts with the first contact an organisation has with a customer and continues throughout the entire lifetime of a relationship. A company s ability to attract and retain new customers, is not only related to its Product business product or services, but strongly ... the marketplace . Customer retention is more than giving the customer what they expect, it s about ... customer loyalty puts customer value rather than maximizing profits and shareholder value at the center ... not the delivery of a consistently high standard of customer service. Customer retention has a direct ... customers returns a revenue gain of 3.4 times the norm. Customer lifetime value Customer lifetime ... profit an organization will realize on a customer over a given period of time. Retention Rate ... for cancellation. Standardization of Customer Service Published standards exist to help organizations deliver process driven customer satisfaction in order to increase the lifespan of a customer. The International Customer Service Institute TICSI has released The International Customer Service Standard ... of customer service, whilst at the same time providing recognition of success through a 3rd Party registration scheme. TICSS focuses an organization s attention on delivering increased customer ... Model uses the 5 P s Policy , business process Processes , People , Premises , Product business Product service economics Service , as well as performance measurement . The implementation of a customer service standard should lead to higher levels of customer satisfaction, which in turn increases customer loyalty and customer retention. ref cite title TICSS2009 last The International Customer Service Standard first year 2009 publisher The International Customer Service Institute location isbn ref See also Customer Service Customer Loyalty The International Customer Service Institute References ... more details
IPstack The customer edge CE is the router at the customerpremises that is connected to the provider edge of a service provider Internet Protocol IP Multi protocol label switching MPLS network. CE peers with the PE and exchanges routes with the corresponding VRF inside the PE. The routing protocol used could be static or dynamic an Interior Gateway Protocol like OSPF or an Exterior Gateway Protocol like BGP . Category MPLS networking compu network stub ... more details
A Customer Engineer CE is a person whose primary job scope is to provide a service to customers who has signed a contract with the company. Originally, the term was used by IBM , but now Customer Engineer is also being used by other companies. IBM Customer Engineer IBM CE Originally simply engineer , those who specialized in servicing IBM equipment in use by its customers were designated customer engineers by Thomas J. Watson Tom Watson circa 1942. So told me by my dad, who was an IBM CE from about that date. He was in training in Endicott when Watson addressed the student body, including this change. dav4is Based on the requirements, an IBM CE could be a Field CE and service many customers around a defined territory, e.g. Kuala Lumpur , or he could be based at the place of business of a particularly large customer and service only that one customer e.g. Malaysia Airlines . Category Engineering occupations Category Computing terminology Job stub ja IBM ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 In telecommunication s, the term customer office terminal has the following meanings 1. Termination equipment that a is located on the customerpremises and b performs a function that may be integrated into the common carrier equipment. Note An example of a customer office terminal is a stand alone multiplexer located on the customerpremises. 2. The digital loop carrier DLC multiplexing function that is near the exchange termination ET when provided by a stand alone multiplexer. Note This function may be integrated into the ET. References FS1037C Category Telecommunications equipment ... more details
In telecommunication , the term terminal equipment has the following meanings Telecommunication Communications equipment at either end of a communications data link link , used to permit the stations involved to accomplish the mission for which the link was established. In radio relay systems, equipment used at points where data are inserted or derived, as distinct from equipment used only to relay a reconstituted Signalling telecommunication signal . Telephone and telegraph switchboards and other centrally located equipment at which communications circuits are terminated. See also Customerpremisesequipment Data terminal equipment , an end instrument that converts user information into signals for transmission or reconverts the received signals into user information References FS1037C Telecomm stub Category Telecommunications de Endger t kk vi Thi t b u cu i ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 nofootnotes date June 2009 Customer equity is the total combined customer lifetime value s of all of a company s customers. Overview In deciding the Value economics value of a company, it is important to know of how much value its customer base is in terms of future revenues. The greater the customer equity CE , the more future revenue in the lifetime of its clients this means that a company with a higher customer equity can get more money from its customers on average than another company that is identical in all other characteristics. As a result a company with higher customer equity is more valuable than one without it. It includes customers Social capital goodwill and extrapolate s it over the lifetime of the customers. The term is a misnomer since the term has nothing to do with the traditional meaning of Ownership equity equity . There are three drivers to customer equity, all of which refer to three sides of the same thing Value equity What the customer assesses the value of the product or service provided by the company to be Brand equity What the customer assesses the value of the brand is, above its objective value Customer retention Retention equity The tendency of the customer to stick with the brand even when it is priced higher than an otherwise equal product Customer equity strategy Companies often attempt to gain more customers and increase revenues by improving customer equity. They do this by improving consumer service improving the value ... Customer Equity to Focus Marketing Strategy , Journal of Marketing 68 1 , 2004, 109 127 See also Net worth Ownership equity Customer service CustomerCustomer relationship management Customer value proposition External links http www.copernicusmarketing.com about customer equity.shtml Customer equity http www.customerequity.com ce indepth.html Customer equity http www.scribd.com doc 13423473 Customer Equity Customer equity Category Microeconomics Category Marketing Category Valuation ja ... more details
Marketing Customer advocacy is a specialized form of customer service in which companies focus on what is best for the customer. It is a change in a company s culture that is supported by customer focused customer service and marketing techniques. Customer advocacy business model A customer advocacy policy encompasses all aspects of customer contact, including products, services, sales and complaints. Some examples of a customer advocacy approach are suggesting a product even if the profit margin is less for the company, setting service call appointments based on the customer s, not the company s preferred hours, or recommending a competitor s product because it better meets the customer s needs. Role of the customer advocate Customer advocates are facilitators between customers and the company. They are trained in cross functional roles and empowered to provide customers with assistance in all areas of the business. The role of the customer advocate is three fold To be the main contact for the customer in handling a question or problem and keeping the customer updated with timely and frequent updates as to the progress of resolving the issue. To facilitate a resolution by bringing together the appropriate department heads. To implement a procedure that ensures the problem does not occur again or recommends products or services to better meet customers needs. Measuring customer advocacy Customer advocacy can be integrated into a company s strategic goals and measured through customer satisfaction, retention, and profitability. References Refbegin http www.customercentricity.biz PDFs Customer Advocacy.pdf Customer Advocacy, March 2006 http citeseerx.ist.psu.edu viewdoc download jsessionid 9486DE619F81D725D62FA1C8325FB2E4?doi 10.1.1.138.5175&rep rep1&type pdf Building trust and relationships through customer advocacy, 2005 refend Category Business models Category Loyalty marketing Category Types of marketing Category Strategic management ... more details
Customer intimacy is a concept from marketing , which describes the ability of a Distributor business supplier to become accepted and known as the regular partner with its customer. Customer intimacy creates a virtuous circle the better the supplier knows the customer company with its objectives and difficulties, the better able he is to provide an optimal solution . The more adapted the supplier s product or service is, the happier the customer will be, and the stronger the intimacy between the two parties. External links http virtual.nationalschool.gov.uk StrategyExchange Documents Customer 20intimacy 20and 20other 20value 20disciplines.pdf Original article and concept developed by Michael Treacy and Fred Wiersema in Jan Feb 1993 article in Harvard Business Review http www.deanmcmann.com Customer Intimacy as a Business Model Insights & Next Practices blog Category Customer experience management ... more details
Customer Dynamics is an emerging theory on customer business relationships that describes the ongoing interchange of information and transactions between customers and organizations. These exchanges occur over a wide range of communication channels, such as phone, email, Web and text, including those outside of organizational control like social media. Similar to the scientific disciplines of family and social dynamics, Customer Dynamics looks at the relationships between organizations and customers from an interpersonal viewpoint. It goes beyond the transactional nature of the interaction to look ... occurrences. Customer Dynamics is a subset of Organizational Dynamics ref http www.oandp.com articles .... Customer Dynamics is a specific dimension of Customer Experience Management and Customer Relationship ... that occur between the customer and the organization, and its consideration of implications for both the customer and the business. According to 2009 benchmark research ref http www.nice.com ... expect increases in the volume of customer interactions. Initially driven by consumer concerns regarding ... places additional importance on increasing operational efficiency without sacrificing customer service. Customer Dynamics addresses how the growing volume and diversity of interactions impacts the customer business relationship in the areas of operational efficiency, customer experience, and revenue ... by understanding the customer s true intent and meeting that in a way that also supports the business ... Practices, NICE Systems, 2009 ref ref Managing Customer Relationships for Profit The Dynamics of Relationship ... ref Dynamic Customer Relationship Management Incorporating Future Considerations into the Service Retention ... ref See also Customer Experience Customer Service Customer Relationship Management Workforce Optimisation Speech Analytics References Reflist Categories DEFAULTSORT Customer Dynamics Category Marketing Category Customer experience management Category Business analysis ... more details
orphan date December 2009 Customer profitability CP is the difference between the revenue s earned from and the cost s associated with the customer relationship in a specified period. According to Philip Kotler, a profitable customer is a person, household or a company that overtime, yields a revenue ... the customer Uses Although CP is nothing more than the result of applying the business concept of profit economics profit to a customer relationship, measuring the profitability of a firm s customers or customer groups can often deliver useful business insights. Quite often a very small percentage ... exactly who the best customer are and how much they contribute to firm profit. At the other end of the distribution ... The biggest challenge in measuring customer profitability is the assignment of costs to customers. While it is usually clear what revenue each customer generated, it is often not clear at all what costs the firm incurred serving each customer. Activity Based Costing can sometimes be used to help determine the costs associated with each customer or customer group. For components of cost not directly related to serving customers, the calculation of customer profit must use some method to fully allocate these costs to customers if the total of customer profit is to match the operating profit of the firm. If the firm decides not to allocate these non customer costs to customers, then the sum of customer profit will be greater than the operating profit of the firm. Cautions Like other profit measures, customer profitability is historical. It is a financial summary of what happened in a previous ... and vice versa . The forward looking measure of the value to be derived by serving a customer is called customer lifetime value . Unprofitable customers can have high customer lifetime values and vice versa . The ABCs of unprofitable customer management Michael Haenlein and Andreas Kaplan 2009 propose ... of Unprofitable Customer Management Step 1 Avoid their acquisition in the first place Step 2 Bear ... more details
Customer intelligence CI is the process of gathering and analyzing information regarding customers their details and their activities, in order to build deeper and more effective customer relationship management customer relationships and improve strategic decision making ref Shaw, Robert, Measuring and Valuing Customer Relationships 2000 Business Intelligence ISBN 9781898085331 ref . CI and CRM Customer Intelligence is a key component of effective customer relationship management CRM , and when ... s customer base. As an example, some customers walk into a store and walk out without buying anything ... a survey and using this data to make inferences about customer behaviour, is an example of CI. Process Customer Intelligence begins with reference data basic key facts about the customer, such as their geographic ... p25feature.html Capturing Customer Intelligence Oracle ref with transactional data reports of customer ... dimension can be added, in the form of customer satisfaction surveys or agent data. Finally, a company .... ref http www.crm2day.com customer intelligence Customer Intelligence by CRM Today ref ref http www.g2i.org article 2005 09 customer intelligence ref Example sources of data for CI Speech analytics ... and buying intention. For example, a company may infer a customer is interested in purchasing a particular ... Products WebTrendsVisitorIntelligence.aspx ref Customer Relationship Management software solutions used for Salesforce automation and to manage customer relationships which can store data on the quantity, type and category of customer and prospect contacts. Frontline data capture which may or may not form ... data regarding customer contacts, such as the root cause of the customer picking up the phone e.g. they received their bill or their emotional state. Customer satisfaction and market research surveys, often mined via text analytics , which can additionally be applied, for customer intelligence purposes, to contact center notes, e mail, and other textual sources. Benefits Customer Intelligence ... more details
A customer magazine is a magazine produced by a business as a means of communicating to its customer s. It is a branch of custom media , a product that broadly shares the look and feel of a newsstand or consumer magazine but is paid for in part or whole by a business. Rather than copy sales and advertising, the primary goal of a customer magazine is to achieve a particular business objective. This could be for a firm to cross or up sell, change brand perception or engender loyalty. In flight magazines, sponsored by airlines, were among the first customer magazines, and remain typical of the genre. In the UK, every supermarket chain now provides a customer magazine to promote its products through recipes and other food editorial. Some customer magazines carry advertising this is often seen as a useful way to offset the cost but equally can have some benefit in making the product look more like a regular magazine. As a communications tool customer magazines are enormously powerful and allow firms to have a level of engagement with their customers that other media do not have. They are particularly good at conveying difficult and complex messages to an audience. They also lend themselves well to measurement and tracking, offering tangible information on return on investment and performances against objectives. External links http www.apa.co.uk Association of Publishing Agencies http www.magforum.com custom publishers.htm Customer magazine publishers listed at Magforum Category Magazines de Kundenzeitschrift it Customer magazine ... more details
Multiple issues unreferenced November 2010 orphan May 2011 Customer toolkits are devices that enable customers to Product design design products , which are in turn created by the Business firm . Firms must make their proprietary knowledge available to customers through easy to use resources in order to allow the average customer to approach the skill of an expert. An example of a customer toolkit is the Lego Digital Designer . comm design stub Industry stub Category Product design ... more details
Customer analytics is a process by which data from customer behavior is used to help make key business ... is used by businesses for direct marketing , site selection , and customer relationship management .... Customer analytics is playing a very important role in the prediction of customer behavior today and takes place among social sciences. ref Kioumarsi et al., 2009 ref Uses Retail Gathering customer ... making process is a common application of customer analytics used by retailers. Community Municipalities utilize customer analytics in an effort to lure retailers to their cities. Using Psychography ... their community s profile. Customer relationship management Analytical Customer Relationship Management, commonly abbreviated as CRM, enables measurement of and prediction from customer data to provide a 360 view of the client. Predicting customer behavior Forecasting buying habits and lifestyle ... far a given customer will drive to a particular location. Combining these sources of information, a dollar ... will be worth to a company. Through customer analytics, companies can make decisions with confidence ... of data mining . Predictive models use previous customer interactions to predict future ... processes. Future By continuing to improve customer prediction techniques it will become a necessity rather than a convenient commodity for businesses to use customer analytics. Fact date June ... are areas that customer analytics could be used in the future. See also Buyer decision processes ... Wharton Customer Analytics Initiative http appricon.com index.php building attrition models using logistic regression.html Customer Attrition Modeling Using Logistic Regression http ... blog.scoutanalytics.com Blog on B2B Customer Analytics in a Recurring Revenue Business http buxtonco.com Kioumarsi, H., Khorshidi, K.J., Yahaya, Z.S., Van Cutsem, I., Zarafat, M., Rahman, W.A. 2009 . Customer ... http www.dmreview.com article sub.cfm?articleId 1003979 Paper on implementation of Customer Level Decisioning ... more details
refimprove date November 2008 Customer Insight is the collection, deployment and interpretation of information that allows a business to acquire, develop and retain their customer s. Analysis Firstly, the collected data must be audit ed to fully understand the quality and opportunity within the database . Once this is done, there are a number of different types of analysis that can be applied. Impact Assessment will help a business to understand how actions taken by the business affected their customer behavior , and also allow for some predictions of customer reaction to proposed changes. Customers as Assets measures the lifetime value of the customer base and allows businesses to measure several factors such as the cost of acquisition and the Churn rate rate of churn . Propensity Modelling predicts the future behaviour of customers based on previous actions and helps businesses understand how likely it is that a customer will behave in a given way. Cross Sell Analysis identifies Product business product and Service economics service relationships to better understand which are the most ... sell in the future. Critical Lag allows a business to deliver specific customer communications based on the individuals purchase patterns, helping to increase loyalty and improve customer retention . Customer Insight in Practice Customer Insight provided the basis for success for the Marks and Spencer ... purchase. Through statistical reasoning, EWA the company hired by Marks and Spencer to handle their Customer Insight developed a critical lag formula, which helped M&S to judge when a customer s current ... and heightened their risk of lapsing. If a customer fell outside of this lag, M&S communicated with them ... services customer insight lunchtogo m s customer insight case study title LunchToGo Critical Lag Case Study publisher EWA ref References reflist Category Marketing Category Customer experience management cs Customer insight es Insights del consumidor ... more details
Customer experience CX is the sum of all experiences a customer has with a supplier of goods or services ... and commentators who write about customer experience CX and customer relationship management have increasingly recognized the importance of managing the customer s experience. ref cite web coauthors Thompson, Ed and Kolsky, Estaban title How to Approach Customer Experience Management publisher ... it interacts with a customer 2011 . Furthermore, it has been shown that a customer s perception of an organisation ... channel, and that a positive customer experience can result in increased share of wallet and repeat ... first Jessica date 2008 02 20 work publisher CRM Magazine ref To create a superior customer experience requires understanding the customer s point of view, say Don Peppers and Martha Rogers, Ph.D in Rules to Break and Laws to Follow . What s it really like to be your customer? What is the day in, day out customer experience your company is delivering? How does it feel to wait on hold on the phone ... Wiley year 2008 isbn 978 0470227541 pages 24, 164 ref In short, customer experience meaning a customer journey which makes the customer feel happy, satisfy, justify, with a sense of being respected ... in particular are focusing on delivering superior customer experiences. A 2009 study of over 860 corporate executives revealed that companies that have increased their investment in customer experience management over the past three years report higher customer referral rates and customer satisfaction Strativity Group, 2009 . ref citation author Strativity Group title 2009 Global Customer ... completed by software company Chordiant in 2008 into the customer experience management performance of large organisations across Europe. ref http www.cxm model.com Cx Customer Experience Maturity ... in four key business areas market share, retention, profitability, and customer satisfaction ... white paper ref The customer experience has emerged as the single most important aspect in achieving ... more details