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End Times
2nd November 2018, 12:00 PM
https://www.wsj.com/articles/on-hold-for-45-minutes-it-might-be-your-secret-customer-score-1541084656

On Hold for 45 Minutes? It Might Be Your Secret Customer Score

Two people call customer service at the same time to complain about the same thing. One waits a few seconds
before a representative gets on the line. The other stays on hold. Why the difference?

There's a good chance it has something to do with a rating known as a customer lifetime value, or CLV. That secret
number is used by all manner of companies to measure the potential financial value of their customers.

Your score can determine the prices you pay, the products and ads you see and the perks you receive.

Credit-card companies use the scoring systems to decide what to offer customers who want to cancel their cards.
Wireless carriers route high-value callers immediately to their most skilled agents. At some airlines, a high score
increases the odds of a seat upgrade.

"There's no free lunch," says Sunil Gupta, a marketing professor at Harvard Business School who has researched
models for calculating lifetime value. "The more profitable you are, the better service you will get."
These days, companies are resorting to all sorts of data and scores to size up consumers and predict their
behavior. Retailers use risk scores to try to limit merchandise returns and prevent e-commerce fraud . There are
scores to measure the likelihood a person will become sick , cancel a subscription or bad-mouth a company.
Everyone with a bank account, cellphone or online shopping habit has at least one CLV score, more likely several.
And most people have no inkling they even exist, let alone how they are used, what goes into them or how accurate
they are. Unlike credit scores, CLVs aren't available to consumers and aren't monitored by any government agency.
"There needs to be a public conversation around the accuracy of the scores being used," says Pam Dixon,
executive director of the World Privacy Forum, a nonprofit digital-privacy research group. "You can essentially be
accused of being cheap or a fraudster, and it may not even be true."

To determine how the scores are compiled and how they are used, The Wall Street Journal interviewed data
scientists who develop the models and employees of the software and analytics firms that help companies put
them to use.

Most CLV score users contacted for this article declined to comment on how they score customers, citing
competitive reasons. Many say the scores make them more comfortable offering costly services and products in
the short term because they are confident they will pick up more business in the long term. Some say they aim to
increase each customer's lifetime value by encouraging repeat business.

In some respects, the scores are just a high-tech version of what shopkeepers have done for generations--make
judgments on a customer's value based on how they look or behave. As far back as 20 years ago, academics were
publishing models to calculate the future value of customers.

Now there are hundreds of analytics firms that calculate customer lifetime value, each with its own approach.
Some of them put a value on shoppers based simply on what they spend, while others use hundreds of data inputs,
adding and deducting points for demographic information such as ZIP Codes or behavioral details such as the
number of returns they make or when they shop.

"Not all customers deserve a company's best efforts," says Peter Fader, a marketing professor at the University of
Pennsylvania's Wharton School who helped popularize lifetime value scores. His scoring method is based on
transaction history, which he says is all companies need to determine how customers will behave in the future.
This year, he sold the firm he co-founded, Zodiac Inc., which performs such analysis, to Nike Inc.

The data that goes into a score can come from transaction records, website interactions , customer-service
conversations, social-media profiles and third-party brokers such as Acxiom LLC and Alliance Data Systems
Corp.'s Epsilon, which sell information on such things as the number of bedrooms in a house and the type of credit
card someone carries. Each piece of data is weighted based on past patterns and perceived level of predictability.
Marital status is often factored in, with some companies assuming that singles are better customers, and others,
the opposite. Age also is a common input, potentially penalizing older people because of their shorter projected
lifespans.

Some companies deduct points from shoppers who exhibit costly behaviors. Banks sometimes take into account
the calls people make to customer-service agents or the number of times they visit branches. Online retailers track
shoppers who buy things only when they are deeply discounted. People expected to cost more than they spend
can have a negative score.

Computer systems sometimes tag customers as high-value or low-value. Marketing staffers or service agents
gauge interactions based on the status. Vendors such as Zeta Global and Salesforce Inc. can automatically offer
discounts and other incentives based on the scores.

Phone service

At wireless carriers such as Verizon Communications Inc. and Sprint Corp., lifetime value can determine marketing
offers and other perks. At some carriers, high-value customers who are at risk of switching to another carrier are
prioritized and get routed to a top-rated call center.

Verizon and Sprint declined to provide specifics about how they assess customer value. "The predominant way we
route calls is based on the reason for the call," says a Sprint spokeswoman. She says customer lifetime value is
"one of many ways we guide customer interactions."

Zeta Global , whose clients include wireless carriers, generates scores using data points such as the number of
times a customer has dialed a call center and whether that person has browsed a competitor's website or
searched certain keywords in the past few days. The firm says it has a database of more than 700 million people,
with an average of over 2,500 pieces of data per person.

When a person's "churn" score, which predicts his or her chances of switching to another carrier, exceeds a certain
threshold, Zeta's system flags that customer to a customer-service agent. The higher the customer's lifetime value,
the more likely that Zeta will recommend responding to the customer more quickly and offering free phones and
other perks, says David Steinberg, Zeta's chief executive. "Most of this comes down to how you're marketed to and
how you're treated," he says.

Apparel

Apparel retailers often compare a shopper's lifetime value with the cost of marketing to that person before
deciding whether to woo him or her and how much money to spend doing so.
"What CLV does is allows us to see beyond the day-to-day to ensure we're focused on the quality of the new
customers we're acquiring, not just the quantity," says Ed Boyle, senior director of performance marketing at
Bonobos, an apparel retailer acquired by Walmart Inc.

In a research paper last year , ASOS, an online retailer, said it scores shoppers on over 100 data inputs, including a
customer's age and location. Since ASOS doesn't recoup delivery costs for returned items, "customers can easily
have negative lifetime value," the paper said. The company declined to comment on the paper.

Brad Birnbaum, chief executive of customer-service platform Kustomer Inc., says some of his e-commerce clients
use scores, including CLV, to respond to email inquiries. "If you've got an angry shopper with a high lifetime value,
you might want to bump up the priority," he says.

Shoppers with higher scores, however, won't necessarily get the best deals all the time, says Jerry Jao, chief
executive of Retention Science, which has worked for companies such as Target Corp. and Procter &Gamble Co.
Retailers sometimes withhold discounts to high-value customers until they are at risk of losing them. "Why waste a
25% offer when the person is going to buy anyway?" Mr. Jao says.

Cars

At auto dealerships, a high score can mean access to loaner cars, preferential service slots and special events,
says Scot Eisenfelder, chief executive of Affinitiv Inc., which uses lifetime value to create marketing campaigns for
dealerships. The scoring helps dealerships weed out costly customers. "This is what you call grinders--people who
visit 16 stores to get the absolute lowest price," he explains.

Mr. Eisenfelder says his firm develops scores by crunching data on things such as previous car purchases,
whether a household has a teenager, where else a person has shopped and ZIP Codes, which can be used as a
proxy for income. Someone who has a Neiman Marcus credit card is going to be more valuable for a car dealership
than someone with a credit card from a discount chain, he says.

Air travel

At airlines, CLV scores incorporate frequent-flier information and other data. A high score can increase a person's
chances of getting seat upgrades or better service, says Laks Srinivasan, co-chief operating officer of Opera
Solutions LLC, which works with airlines, retailers, banks and other companies.

The firm's scores can draw from more than 5,000 data "signals" per customer, Mr. Srinivasan says, translating
them into recommendations for flight attendants , gate agents and other personnel. The company tracks, for
example, the number of times a person calls to complain over the prior 90 days, which can affect the CLV.
An airline can compare how often a shopper complains with his or her lifetime value and customer experience
score, which measures inconveniences such as number of times in the middle seat, flight delays and lost bags.
"A high-value customer who had a real service disruption and never calls to complain should be compensated
more quickly than someone who is complaining and costing time and money," Mr. Srinivasan says.

Credit cards

To calculate lifetime value, credit-card companies analyze spending behavior, payment history and credit scores,
among other things. "Banks know what you buy, and where and when you buy it," says Arpan Dasgupta, head of
financial services and telecom practices at Fractal Analytics, which helps companies analyze customer data. "It's
powerful data that can be useful for CLV."

The score can determine which customers receive credit-card offers and other incentives. When customers call to
cancel at a card company such as American Express Co., their relationship with the issuer and past spending
behavior are some of the criteria used to determine what perks will be offered to retain them.

End Times
2nd November 2018, 12:05 PM
https://www.wsj.com/articles/why-paying-for-fast-shipping-could-get-you-flagged-as-a-fraudster-1524139200

Why Paying for Fast Shipping Could Get You Flagged as a Fraudster

When people shop online at retailers like Macy's Inc. and Finish Line Inc., their visits are tracked and shared with
an outside firm that scores their behavior and decides whether to approve or deny purchases.

Shoppers who exhibit behavior that such scoring firms often associate with fraud, such as buying without
checking the return policy or paying for the fastest shipping option, have a higher chance of getting declined.
Sometimes they never find out why their transactions are canceled or who made the call.

Behind these decisions is a group of firms hired by retailers to weed out fraudulent online customers. They
determine which indicators correlate with fraud and then evaluate shoppers based on hundreds of data points. A
Tel Aviv-based company called Riskified works with Macy's and Finish Line. Its rivals include fellow startups like
Signifyd and Forter, as well as players like CyberSource, which was acquired by Visa Inc. in 2010, and Accertify,
which American Express Inc. bought the same year.

Online shopping has created new challenges for retailers trying to combat fraud, such as people using a stolen
card or falsely reporting a transaction as fraudulent. Credit-card companies typically cover the cost of
unauthorized purchases in stores. But with online transactions, retailers are usually on the hook when a customer
reports a fraudulent charge.

As card issuers can't verify online purchases through chip-card technology and other measures, they take the
money back from the retailer to reimburse the shopper, which means the store loses both the product and the cost
of shipping.

Retailers are increasingly turning to third-party firms for help, but many don't publicize which firms they use, why
customer purchases are declined or the criteria for the decision.

Michael Green, 50 years old, found out about one of the firms by accident. He ordered headphones online for his
son's 18th birthday. Days later, when he hadn't heard anything about the order, he contacted the headphone brand,
Audeze, which told him the purchase had been canceled because a third-party firm had determined he was a fraud
risk.

Mr. Green noticed that the status of his order said "Riskified Rejected." When he emailed Riskified to ask why he
had come up as a fraud risk, a customer service agent told him the company had no further information.
"There was no explanation, no appeal," said Mr. Green, a financial professional in Austin, Texas. "Big data affects a
lot of things, but you never hear of it affecting your ability to return something or buy something in the first place."
Audeze CEO Sankar Thiagasamudram said it uses Riskified because, as a very small company, it can't afford to
police fraud on its own. "Unfortunately, we do not have any visibility into Riskified's decision-making process," he
said.

After The Wall Street Journal contacted Riskified, CEO Eido Gal said Mr. Green's order was incorrectly declined.

"Riskified tends to be far more accurate and efficient than traditional fraud-prevention methods, but no solution is
perfect, and we're still improving," he said.

Riskified evaluates shoppers based on online browsing behavior, along with other details like transaction data and
geolocation information, and then issues approvals or denials at the time of purchase. A retailer can override a
denial, but the retailer assumes responsibility if the purchase turns out to be fraudulent.

The threshold for issuing a decline varies by retailer and tends to be set lower when the products are more
attractive to fraudsters. For example, Audeze's headphones are more prone to fraud because they are compact
and cost up to $3,995, making them easy to transport and lucrative for resellers.

Riskified said it works with more than 1,000 merchants. Some retailers use its services only to assess international
online orders. The company said it provides its clients with tools to understand the reason for declines, but leaves
it up to the retailer to decide what it wants to tell shoppers.

A spokeswoman for Finish Line, a Riskified client, said that when the shoe retailer is contacted by customers
whose purchases have been declined, it directs them to contact their banks because their information has often
been compromised by some other means.

A spokeswoman for Macy's said the company uses such services "for the limited purpose of fraud detection."
"Like any company with a large online presence, Macy's has a robust fraud detection system that combines our
proprietary internal detection resources with multiple vendor solutions," she said.

Chip-card technology has reduced fraud in stores, but many retailers say they are now seeing the behavior shift
online. A third of the 50 largest retailers in the U.S. say online fraud has risen more than 30% since they
transitioned to the new chip-related technology in 2015, according to a survey of members by the Retail Industry
Leaders Association, a retail trade group.

Many retailers still use rule-based or manual systems, which decline purchases based on fixed criteria. Riskified
said its use of machine learning and big data has reduced the number of erroneous declines.

"Our whole reason for being is to approve more transactions for the retailers," said Riskified's Mr. Gal. "Because we
have so many resources and we have network effects across our merchants, we tend to have better performance
than retailers managing this process internally."

Retailers have been scoring shoppers to combat other types of fraud. The Journal previously reported that Retail
Equation, an Irvine, Calif. service, has been generating risk scores on people to limit the amount of merchandise
they can return.

midnight rambler
2nd November 2018, 03:39 PM
The goy exist solely to serve the Beast.

Ares
2nd November 2018, 04:29 PM
The goy exist solely to serve the Beast.

https://i.kym-cdn.com/entries/icons/original/000/007/617/jew_basic.jpg

Fixed it for you.

midnight rambler
2nd November 2018, 07:55 PM
This nonsense is taking root all over -

https://professorconfess.blogspot.com/2018/11/mention-alex-jones-on-twitter-no.html

End Times
2nd November 2018, 10:04 PM
This nonsense is taking root all over -

https://professorconfess.blogspot.com/2018/11/mention-alex-jones-on-twitter-no.html

I have railed for years on deftly managing one's online presence, to little avail. The signups and daily usage of Facebook, Twitter, Instagram - using one's own real name (!!) - continued among my family, friends, and associates.

My "paranoia" is now increasing reality for exponentially more folks.

Sure, the NSA and other state-level actors know who you are despite pseudonyms/noms de guerre, but why make it easy for the private corporatists?

BrewTech
29th May 2019, 07:23 PM
Uber is on board... are you good enough to ride in a fu**ing taxi?

https://www.aol.com/article/finance/2019/05/29/uber-will-soon-ban-passengers-with-low-ratings/23736781/