This document provides a consultant bio for Pegg Nadler. It summarizes her experience and accomplishments in marketing, database marketing, and direct marketing over 30+ years. She is currently president of her own consulting firm, Pegg Nadler Associates, which provides database marketing and direct marketing solutions. Previously, she held database marketing roles at several large companies and non-profits. Pegg Nadler has received numerous honors for her contributions to direct marketing and is involved in several direct marketing organizations.
1. CONSULANT BIO
Pegg Nadler is a marketing professional with more than thirty years in media, nonprofit, publishing and
retail industries spearheading database marketing and direct marketing strategies. Pegg was the first
database marketer to be named Direct Marketer of the Year by Target Marketing magazine in October
2009. In November 2012, she will receive a Silver Apple from the Direct Marketing Club of New York for
her professional contributions to the DM industry.
Pegg is president of Pegg Nadler Associates, Inc. (PNA), a consulting firm that provides database
marketing and direct marketing solutions to clients. For the past fifteen years, PNA has advised
companies on developing marketing database systems, revamping direct response programs and
restructuring business operations for improved marketing, sales and database performance. Services
include business and product development, relationship marketing and integrated marketing, all as
database-driven initiatives. PNA offers customized client seminars and trainings on best practices in
direct response and database marketing.
Previously, Pegg oversaw database marketing operations at Hachette Filipacchi Media US, Consumer
Reports, Phillips Publishing International and the Smithsonian Institution. She led marketing divisions at
Hadassah, Jindo Furs, The Fur Vault and Belvedere Press. Her database marketing career began at
MetroMail (now Experian) providing data, databases and modeling solutions to the mail order and retail
industries. Pegg launched her direct marketing career at Abrams Books developing products for book
clubs, limited edition publishers, continuity programs and catalog companies.
Pegg is the immediate past president of The Direct Marketing Club of New York and serves on the DMA’s
Ethics Policy Committee as well as its Annual Conference Planning Committee. She is former Chair of
the DMA Nonprofit Federation Advisory Council. As an adjunct faculty member, she taught database
marketing at the undergraduate, graduate and professional level programs for New York University and
Baruch College, CUNY. She is a frequent keynote speaker at national and international conferences on
the uses and abuses of database marketing. Her database marketing articles have appeared in industry
publications including Target Marketing, Inside Direct Mail, DMAW Advents, DMCNY Postings and the
DMA Nonprofit Federation Journal.
Pegg has a BA from The University of Albany. She can be reached at pegg@peggnadler.com or at 212-
861-0846.
3. COVER STORY
Direct Marketer of the Year:
Pegg
Nadler
Vice President, Database Marketing,
Hachette Filipacchi Media U.S.
P
egg Nadler loves the unknown. Where others see challenges, she sees
Making sense opportunities. Where others fear change, she fears boredom.
and dollars out These are some of the qualities that have driven her 30-year direct
marketing career, the bulk of which she’s spent advancing database marketing
of database operations at commercial and nonprofit organizations and giving back to the
marketing direct marketing community. And they’re why she’s Target Marketing magazine’s
Direct Marketer of the Year.
Speaking over the telephone on a recent Friday evening from her New York
By Heather Fletcher office, the vice president of database marketing for magazine publishing empire
Hachette Filipacchi Media U.S. (HFMUS) quotes a saying from Hungarian Nobel
laureate Albert von Szent-Györgyi Nagyrapolt that has verbally captured her
world view since she studied English and art history at the University at Albany,
State University of New York: “Discovery consists of seeing what everybody has
seen and thinking what nobody has thought.”
“My approach to problem solving has actually always been the same,” Nadler
says. “And it’s interesting how some people will find this a good approach and
others will find that it could be maddening. It has always been very important
for me to see the total scope of business in order to come to a decision. And this
is probably one of the reasons why I love database marketing—because it really
provides that wide picture.”
Falling Into Love
Nadler began fusing her left and right hemispheres early.
The English and art history major entered direct marketing in 1979 by selling
art and gift books for Harry N. Abrams.
“I fell into direct marketing,” Nadler says. “When I came to New York in
the late ’70s, I landed a job at Harry Abrams … and I was first their advertising
4. which she supervises. So when she accepts
a new challenge, which is usually “directing
startup operations, restructuring business
operations and overhauling marketing
departments,” she is either in charge of or
overseeing every aspect of the solution.
“I’ve always been the person who can
see the large business application and put
the database together and then bring in the
analytical people who will do the number
crunching,” she says. “So I’m really a market-
er who moved into database marketing. …
While I’ve spent all these years doing direct
and database marketing, in my heart of hearts
I’m a marketing, product-development,
business-development person.”
Since diving headfirst into database
marketing in 1990, Nadler steadily has
created and overhauled database systems
and operations for some of the mightiest
corporations and nonprofits in the country.
Each situation is different and requires
her to pull from her well-rounded direct
marketing background as a vendor, con-
sultant and client in the commercial and
nonprofit worlds.
For instance, during the time she spent as
a consultant at the Smithsonian Institution
providing in-house database marketing
expertise, Nadler managed operations first
as a marketing database manager from
1992 to 1993, then as a marketing strat-
egy director from 1993 to 1995. In that
manager and then moved into an area and mailed catalogs. Catering to the jet set, capacity, she analyzed the institution’s
COVER STORY PHOTOS: PAUL GODWIN PHOTOGRAPHY, NEW YORK, N.Y.
called special sales, which was selling books Jindo placed computer terminals at kiosks varied constituencies, including current
into areas other than bookstores. And … in airport waiting areas so passengers could and lapsed audiences.
really it was direct marketing: catalogs, click to buy minks before boarding. Identifying those high-value donor
book clubs, continuity programs. That But her first taste of database market- prospects, proposing a list revenue pro-
was my first exposure into direct market- ing, in 1990 at Metromail Corp. (now gram to double sales within the first year
ing. And I thought that it was a little bit Experian), pulled her in to the direct for rented database names, developing
wacky, but that it was much more fun than marketing specialty. Within 18 months, database user training programs and estab-
selling books into bookstores. And it was she’d secured billings nearing $1 million lishing Smithsonian’s database marketing
something that I then stayed with for the for the marketing information, database conferences probably already sound over-
rest of my life.” and mail production company. whelming.
From 1979 to 1990, her direct mar- “I’ve certainly always been very sys- But wait. There’s more.
keting career progressed from moving tematic,” Nadler says. “My attraction to “Smithsonian had been using the data-
art books to selling facsimile editions of English was that I think that speaking very base, but not really to the best ability,”
ancient manuscripts from the Vatican clearly and getting your message across is Nadler says. “So I came in, made tweaks
Library, then to hawking furs in a mostly an imperative. And probably what has to the database, worked with all of the dif-
pre-Internet, fully mid-animal rights move- attracted me to database marketing is that ferent parts of the Smithsonian Institution
ment era. “So being able to sell through I’ve always … organized … I like to get to really let them realize that they had a
the mail and through the phone became projects done. And it probably is a very very good resource there. My one favorite
very important,” Nadler says of her 1988 neat way of wrapping up the world.” story there at the Smithsonian, and this is
to 1990 stint with Jindo Furs. Creatively really not unique to Smithsonian, is that
working her way around the protester The Problem Solver Smithsonian had a database. It might’ve
problem, she set up an 800 number for Speaking of the global picture, Nadler’s been 9 million [names] when I was there.
customers to call; secured accounts with strengths include all aspects of database And there were names which were not
the Home Shopping Network, Comp-U- marketing—with the exception of in-depth housed on the database, which were in
Card, American Express and Diners Club; statistical modeling, the implementation of each of the development offices, includ-
5. COVER STORY
‘… with the lowering of processing
and technology costs, we are finally able to really
improve our marketing to where everything is
going to be measurable and really everything’s
going to morph into direct. Which is why we’re
calling it integrated marketing.’
—Pegg Nadler
ing the central development office. And appeared from 1997 to 1999, disappearing the whole political arena, and people
divisions didn’t want to share names. This when Nadler accepted the full-time job will be very honest with you about what
is such a common occurrence. Not only in of re-energizing “the marketing face” of is truly making them unhappy and what
nonprofits, but in corporations: ‘Don’t want Hadassah, a nonprofit, pro-Israel Jewish their aspirations and dreams are. So, as I
you to market to my names. Don’t want women’s organization. After a four-year say, it was a big quantum leap to go from
you to contact my names. Want to keep stint as customer database services direc- consulting back to working in a corporate
these names suppressed.’ And I really had tor for Consumers Union, publisher of environment [at Hachette]. But, as I said, it
to work, very carefully, to demonstrate that Consumer Reports magazine, it was back to was certainly for a really good cause. And
the names that were within these various the milliner in 2004 to get refitted for the it’s been hard. It’s been challenging. And
development offices were most probably consultant hat. not for one day have I been bored.”
also on the main database. The list of companies seeking her advice Grabbing Nadler’s attention for a few
“And by being able to overlay data, bring as a consultant is so long and so filled with moments while she’s implementing data-
all of these names together, we would prob- the “Who’s Who” of brands and nonprof- base operations in an environment she clas-
ably have a much more effective develop- its that it simply reads alphabetically, in sifies as undergoing a revolution can feel
ment strategy if we were able to do that,” small type, on her résumé: AT&T, B’nai like pulling a surgeon out of an operating
she continues. “Because we actually showed B’rith Youth Organization, Corporation for room. (While headlines about the publish-
that the names that were housed in all of Public Broadcasting, Discovery Channel, ing industry have been less than flattering,
these different museums were already on the Hachette Filipacchi Media … reflecting widespread industry trauma—
central database. And once we understood That’s where, in 2005, she met from editorial layoffs to magazines folding
what the total correlation was from one area Hachette’s Philippe Guelton. The HFMUS altogether—Nadler is energized about the
to another, we were able to make a much executive vice president and COO had future. She envisions a personalized multi-
better fundraising pitch.” always wanted to build a database. “He channel experience that’s relevant to the
had established a database when he was consumer. More on that later.)
Marketer for All Seasons running Hachette’s operations in Japan,” “We’re in the process of putting together
Of all the hats she’s worn during her direct Nadler explains. a very strong operation,” she says during a
marketing career, Nadler does have a favor- Guelton hired Nadler as a consultant quick call on a recent Monday, in between
ite. in 2005, and she worked on the Hachette planning and budget meetings and search-
“I love a startup,” Nadler says. “And project for two years, while mixing in ing for a director of analysis and modeling.
once the operation is going well, I’m bored. other consulting projects and adjunct Database operations, she says, are meant
And that’s when I really like to turn it over. professorships at New York University to determine “the new products, businesses
… That’s what I’ve done all along—startup, and Baruch College, City University and services Hachette should be offering.
or revamp or overhaul. … And that’s why of New York. Finally, in 2007, Guelton And that’s the most fun.”
the consultant role is really a very good successfully recruited her to work full “In today’s environment, a rich and fully
role for me, because that’s how I’ve always time for Hachette so she could complete developed database is imperative,” Guelton
thought as I’ve gone into companies. And building and implementing the database relates. “We are more effective in helping
I’ve been with so many different companies operations. our advertisers target their prime audiences
that it really has provided me with a very “The last thing I wanted to do was and ideal prospects and in providing our
good bird’s-eye view. And it’s so important give up my consulting,” she says. “It’s so subscribers with new products and better
to be able to step back and look at what’s much fun to be on the outside looking in services. Since joining us in 2005, Pegg
going on.” and letting people tell you what really is Nadler has been key in leading our efforts
Pegg Nadler Associates Inc. of New York troubling them. Because you’re outside to expand our database capabilities …”
6. A few of the business leaders who have been influential to Pegg Nadler: Bernice Grossman, Arthur Middleton Hughes, and Don Peppers
and Martha Rogers.
Inf luences he was just aware that suddenly there was tomers differently” by using data to keep
More than just DMRS Group President a movement away from print and that the and grow customer relationships.
Bernice Grossman’s friendship and men- circulation counts weren’t really reflecting That creative rather than facts-only
toring (see sidebar below) and the wisdom accurately how many people were involved approach to database marketing points to
of von Szent-Györgyi Nagyrapolt have with reading or being exposed to a certain the last influencer Nadler mentions: Arthur
provided inspiration to Nadler during her product.” Middleton Hughes. Hughes is the founder
long direct marketing career. To that end, Nadler says nonprofits were of the Database Marketing Institute of Fort
Nadler says her other direct mar- the first organizations to take methodical Lauderdale, Fla., and a senior strategist with
keting influences include Jack Kliger, approaches to understanding their audienc- Burlington, Mass.-based e-mail marketing
former president and CEO of Hachette es, or members. During the ’60s, nonprofits firm e-Dialog. She interprets his stance as
Filipacchi Media U.S. (who, as of press were trouncing commercial enterprises saying that there are two types of database
time, was reportedly taking over as act- with the exception of those like American marketers—constructors, who assemble lists
ing CEO of TV Guide). Chairman of the Express and Reader’s Digest. and successfully build the database, and
Magazine Publishers of America from “What were nonprofits doing early on?” creators, who take those names and turn
2005 to 2007, Kliger took the unpopular Nadler asks. “They were writing down all them into loyal, returning customers.
stance that circulation metrics needed to their donor information on index cards— Finally, in Grossman’s case, the admira-
change and magazine publishers needed the earliest form of database marketing. tion is clearly mutual. Grossman describes
to embrace digital technology instead They got it so soon. … Survival. That was Nadler as a politically savvy “overachiever”
of fighting it. “It is essential, I believe, the only way that they were going to be able who has no use for “fluff” and will work as
that our industry moves to a more timely to keep the funding coming in.” hard as she makes anyone else work.
system of readership measurement— Commercial entities caught on to the “Pegg is a continual learner,” Grossman
a system that shows the connection retention concept later, she says, when says. “She is always asking questions. And
between distribution and readership aggressive acquisition campaigns no longer so, when she’s faced with whatever today’s
more effectively,” according to a tran- worked as easily. Nonprofits, which had surprise is, business surprise, she can go back
script of Kliger’s “MPA Breakfast with been cultivating their existing donor bases to that knowledge store of hers and pull
a Leader” from Dec. 7, 2005. all along and moving them up the giving from it. Also, she’s a really good manager.
“The whole notion of the measurable pyramid one step at a time, served as a les- People work for her for extended periods
audience going beyond what had been the son to corporate America, Nadler says. of time. I think that there’s something to
standard magazine circulation base is actu- Enter the next set of visionaries Nadler be said for being a good manager; I don’t
ally something that Jack Kliger … began cites: Don Peppers and Martha Rogers, think it’s all that easy.
talking about … years ago,” Nadler says. the founding partners of Norwalk, Conn.- “I also think that in the competitive world
“And I think when he first spoke about based customer-centric marketing strategy of database marketing … she’s done extreme-
it, a lot of people thought that he was consultancy Peppers & Rogers Group. ly well because she earned it,” Grossman
just off-base. And he really saw this years Nadler says the duo talks incessantly about adds. “… She has this … strategic ability, as
before a lot of other parts of media and ad one-to-one marketing. Or, as the group’s opposed to a tactical functionality. She’s able
agencies began to glean onto this. I think Web site attests, “treating different cus- to look at the big picture. [The] big picture is,
8. 2012 DMA Database Marketing Post Intensive
AGENDA
Post Intensive Session on Database Marketing
Developing a 21st Century Database—The Tools, Tactics and Tests to Meet Your Business Needs
Within the past five years, massive changes in data, technology and the web have significantly impacted
the planning, research, marketing and sales processes. Business needs have shifted dramatically with a
focus on faster analysis, broader multi-channel integration and dynamic database information systems.
This nine-hour seminar is designed for the database marketer who is looking to enhance or overhaul
database business operations at their company. The instructor lineup consists of leading industry
professionals who regularly evaluate cutting-edge technologies and best practices in database marketing.
Over the course of two days, attendees will be exposed to current and future systems, trends,
recommendations and pitfalls that lie ahead in the 21st century database marketing landscape.
Day 1 Wednesday, October 17 1:00 – 4:00
Part 1-- 1:00 – 2:00
Marketing ROI: How to Ensure Political, Technical, and Business Success for a Database Project
PEGG NADLER, Pegg Nadler Associates
This session will set a realistic foundation for positioning your database for success within your company.
We will look at war stories and success stories and provide guidance and benchmarks for conducting a
business needs/expectations survey and the justification for the continued investment and deployment in
your marketing database division.
Part 2-- 2:00– 3:00
Re-evaluating Your Marketing Database System: A How To
BERNICE GROSSMAN, DMRS Group
A “check list” of the most important items to review when re-evaluating your marketing database, your
vendor, and the design and attending functionality of your current solution tool. Attendees will be
provided with a proven method of what to look for and how to know what is and is not working. Before
you conclude your marketing database is broken, learn how to answer the key questions that determine
the state of your database.
Part 3-- 3:10 - 4:00
Deadly Sins and the Ten Commandments: How to Achieve Best-Practices Database Content and Key
Metrics Reporting
JIM WHEATON, Wheaton Group
A database is only as good as its content, and bad content always costs you money. There is nothing
glamorous about creating and maintaining best-practices content. Data audits and other forms of quality
assurance are hard work. The same is true about carefully reflecting the nuances of your business and
data when creating dashboards and reports. This session will tell you why all of this, although often
overlooked, is so important for database success.
9. Day 2 Thursday, October 18 8:30 – 2:45
Part 4— 8:30 – 9:30
A Primer on Database Systems—Deciphering Differences and Determining Directions
MARCUS TEWKSBURY, Experian
There is a myriad of database technologies on the market today—and this session is designed to equip
attendees with the key benchmarks to assess and select marketing systems that meet their company’s
existing and anticipated needs. Included in this overview will be an examination of current marketing
automation application software, including traditional vendors, B2B, CRM systems and Web content
systems.
Part 5—9:30 – 10:45
Leveraging Your Database: Reporting, Templates & Strategic Applications
AL BESSIN, Merkle
Identifying the customer, their wants and needs, and what drives their behavior forms the basis for
successful marketing in today’s business environment. Learn how to create a customer balance sheet;
identify where mistakes are being made; and use findings to drive business transformation. Understand
what media is working by looking at different ways in which results are being reported for online and
offline marketing campaigns. Emphasis will be on determining the most practical and actionable methods
to use including marketing performance, lifetime value and business strategy.
Part 6—11:00 – 12:00
Embedded Intelligence, the Next Generation of Analytics
DOUG NEWELL, Calexus
Historically the vast majority of analytic projects have been one-off efforts. By their very nature, such
hand crafted analytics require substantial investment in planning, production and quality control. They are
so labor-intensive that most organizations lack the resources to take advantage of even their most obvious
analytic opportunities. The next generation of analytics is now being embedded into marketing processes.
This session will show how to create such a system of continuous improvement with every analysis.
Break & Boxed Lunch Pickup 12:00 – 12:15 (Boxed Lunch—we will have a working lunch during Part
7)
Part 7—12:15 – 1:15
Navigating the Data Maze
RANDY WATSON, Acxiom
Database marketers are now faced with massive amounts of data, mounting privacy issues and growing
regulations on the use, collection and dissemination of data. This session will look at both traditional and
new sources of data used to shape database analysis programs. We will address the latest trends in
compiled data, co-op databases, online and offline data sources for the B-C and B-B worlds. Best
practices for determining and protecting your customer data needs will be discussed.
Part 8—1:15 – 2:30
Integrating Digital Media Data with Your Marketing Database
RANDY HLAVAC, Lecturer Professor – Northwestern University, Medill IMC (Integrated Marketing
Communications)
10. Social media, mobile, web communities and other electronic media hold the potential for providing new,
high impact data to improve the ability of our marketing database systems to drive highly targeted CRM
and electronic programs. But challenges exist using this data. What data is important (and legal) to add to
your database? How do we monitor and assess data quality and impact? How do we entice visitors to
provide data? We will examine how to integrate your social, mobile, web, and CRM marketing efforts
into a single Social CRM system.
Part 9--2:30 – 2:45
Database Intensive Wrap Up
Review, Q&A, General Discussion
11. 9/18/2012
Marketing ROI:
How to Ensure Political, Technical,
and Business Success for a Database Project
DMA Database Post Intensive
Presented by Pegg Nadler, President
Pegg Nadler Associates Inc.
Pegg Nadler: Background
• Database marketing consultant specializing in media, nonprofit,
publishing and retail industries.
• Experience: Headed DB operations at Smithsonian, Phillips Publishing,
Consumers Union, HFMUS. Former National Accounts Manager at
Metromail (now Experian). Ran marketing operations at Abrams Books,
Belvedere Press, The Fur Vault, Jindo Furs, Hadassah
• Clients include AT&T, China Post, Corporation for Public Broadcasting,
Discovery Channel, DMA, HFMUS, Smithsonian, Thirteen.org, Time Life
Books, US News & World Report
• Professional Associations: Direct Marketing Club of New York Past
President, DMA Ethics Policy Committee Member, DMA Annual Planning
Conference Program Advisor, DMANF former Advisory Council Chair
1
12. 9/18/2012
Today’s Presentation
• The Changing Business Landscape
• Keys to Database Success
• War Stories
• Success Stories
• Lessons Learned
• Recommendations
3
The New Business Reality
Integrated marketing
communications
Real time analytics & product
offerings
Data generation explosion
Growth of online, mobile &
social media
Audience fragmentation
Databases as key drivers to
revenue
4
2
13. 9/18/2012
Challenges Still Exist
Measurement is Managing the
critical but customer multi-
knowing what to channel
measure & how to experience is a
measure is a key priority
investment theme
Today’s customer
databases are insufficient
to deliver the insight
needed
Top Concerns
Marketing’s Push to
changing reduce costs Integrate
needs are not internally & technologies
Improve ROI
met by externally across
internal IT channels
departments
3
14. 9/18/2012
The Big Question
How do we convince management to
invest or reinvest in the database?
7
What is Key to Database Success?
A “decent”
database
system &
The “right” adequate
team of data
players
An “intelligent”
business
strategy
8
4
15. 9/18/2012
#1: Key Business Issues
Begin with an intelligent business strategy
Not data, not technology, not tools
What decisions need to be made to be successful?
What questions do you want to answer to drive your sales & marketing
programs?
The competitive advantage comes from how analysis is handled
Address the problem, not the technical solution
9
#2: A Database Champion
Statistically Politically
savvy astute
Technically IT
proficient independent
Database Vendor &
Marketing
system
expert Leader knowledge
10
5
16. 9/18/2012
#3: The Right Team
Statistically Politically
savvy astute DB
Modelers Leader
Technically Senior
proficient DB Management
Analysts Support
Database DB Vendor &
Marketing
system
experts Team experts
11
#4: Top Management’s Commitment
Initial & ongoing
financial
backing
The Big C’s—
CEO, CMO,
COO, CFO,
CTO
Mandatory People
compliance & power—
participation in DB personnel for
projects staffing
6
17. 9/18/2012
#5: A Decent Database
Robust
systems &
capabilities
Easy access Budget to
to data by support
database ongoing
team operations
Adequate &
Timely comprehensive
updates
data
13
War Stories: Multi-Product Company
DB manager, no
Opposition to use DB Modeling programs
staff, multiple users
by various slow to test and/or
with little training
departments rollout
around the company
Little DB knowledge, Little or no funding
no standardized for email, online or DB staff reductions
business rules social data
Lack of management IT drives DB vendor A failed database
commitment selection & build project
Inadequate Funding Questionable ROI
14
7
18. 9/18/2012
Lessons Learned
• Absence of dedicated trained staff undermined project
No time for novices success
• No commitment from top C’s to override lack of DB
Big Guns Support cooperation throughout company.
• Top C’s thought they could save $$ by using IT—major
The Black Hole of IT mistakes since IT does not know marketing
• Penny wise & pound foolish—the company must commit
Money in the Bank adequate $$ to fund project properly
War Stories: Membership Organization
Data &
DB initiatives
capabilities ROI unproven
driven by CEO
concerns
CEO hires DB Internal
New DB RFP
director modeling team
issued
hired
Limited Lack of DB No budget
experience DB knowledge approval
director across company
Fulfillment
vendor used as “Black box” DB project
DB system models stalled
provider
16
8
19. 9/18/2012
Lessons Learned
• Don’t let your CEO or management team hire an
No time to be Green inexperienced database director.
Penny wise • You get what you pay for. Spend what you need to hire
expertise.
Pound foolish
• Your fulfillment company should not serve as your
Experience counts database vendor. Find a DB provider with the expertise
and services you require.
• Transparency in operations, analysis and modeling
Information is power methodologies are necessary to encourage DB
confidence, participation and success across a company.
Do Your Homework • Get the DB RFP requirements right the first time.
Success Story: Hearst Magazines
No DB, use
DB build begins ROI plan detailed
Fulfillment System
Modeling & Analytics Program test and
VP DB Marketing
done using disparate rollouts begin
hired
systems
Ongoing investment
Senior Management Commitment to to improve DB &
Team makes modeling & analytics marketing & real time
commitment to DBM
online capabilities
Online & offline data
Select DB vendor
integration
18
9
20. 9/18/2012
Lessons Learned
• Big C’s commitment to DB marketing
Big C’s Support for the short and long term success of
the company
Business • Company objectives and goals clearly
Intelligence defined
DB Partnership • Build with MDB experts, not IT experts
• Hiring a competent DB champion
DB Champion accounts for a quick start and continued
success in DB programs
Demonstrating ROI: Hearst
Projected DB Investment Actual ROI
• Planned for 200% ROI in 3 years • DB paid for itself in one year
• Increased mail efficiency, higher • Consolidating information, getting
customer response rates, clean data, buying better
reduced marketing execution demographics and using online
resources information for DM efforts
• 30% more revenue from internet- • Resulted in 25-30% offline
sold subscriptions response lift
• New models to produce 5% lift on • The database enabled reduction
response for mail on outside lists by around 30%
10
21. 9/18/2012
Taking Inventory
What are your company’s business and customer objectives?
What obstacles are in the way?
What data and campaign information can you not integrate today?
What systems capture customer data across the company?
What is happening across the company that was not included in the initial DB build?
What is done in marketing, research, digital, social, editorial, customer
service, email, mobile and finance?
21
Building the Case for Senior Management
Gather case studies & success stories that pertain
to your particular business & industry
Identify quick wins & gains vs. a long term
detailed plan
Determine a reasonable budget for funding &
operations
When necessary, think small using test databases
& prototypes to gain approval
Don’t overbuild—meet your current & near future
needs since technology & business change
22
11
22. 9/18/2012
Critical Areas for Database Success
A Decent
Senior Database &
Management Adequate
Commitment Data
The Right
Team of
Players
A Savvy
Database
Champion
Key
Business
Issues
Identified
Questions?
Thank you so very much!
Please feel free to reach me at:
Pegg Nadler
President
Pegg Nadler Associates, Inc.
212-861-0846
pegg@peggnadler.com
24
12
23. Bernice Grossman, DMCNY 2001 Silver Apple Award recipient, Vice Chair
of the Marketing Technology Council and Board Member of the ECHO
Academy of Direct Marketing Arts & Sciences, former Chair of the DMA
B-to-B Council, and member of Who’s Who in B-to-B Marketing created
DMRS Group, Inc. (DMRS) in 1983 to be an independent marketing
database consultancy that determines the complete scope of a customer's
project; "architects" the solution, and administrates the vendor solution that
integrates all of the systems to deliver marketing databases (MDB’s) that
have contributed heavily to the success of leading national marketing
programs. (www.dmrsgroup.com)
DMRS assists companies to better manage their marketing information by
showing them how to capture and leverage customer, prospect and suspect
data to best meet marketing’s needs. No matter what channel is used to
generate the data -- mail, internet, call center, social, space, DRTV, etc.,
through the use of a properly designed MDB / CRM enterprise, greater
"reach" is achieved -- and companies can lower acquisition costs and
increase the lifetime value of each and every customer
Bernice is a noted data expert and can testify in the US Court System on data
theft, fraud, and abuse; she is frequently retained to serve in an advisory
capacity on merger and acquisition projects where the data asset needs to
quantified and monetized.
She is a frequent speaker for The DMA, National Center For Database
Marketing, and Direct Marketing Business and Industry Conferences,
DMAW, DMCNY, and NYU’s Direct Marketing Program, among others.
Prior to starting DMRS, Bernice held key direct marketing / marketing
systems positions at AMI Industries, Inc., ABS, McGraw-Hill, and
Scholastic Inc.
Clients on the DMRS roster have included Avis, Chase Manhattan
Mortgage, Coca Cola, Epson, Kansas City Power & Light, Microsoft, Nestle
Food Services, McGraw-Hill, MTV, Pfizer, Simon Property Group, and
United Airlines.
Ms. Grossman is a native of New York City. She graduated from Ithaca
College and attended Hunter College Graduate School.
24. 9/18/2012
How to Re-Evaluate Your
MDB
MDB Vendor
Howand/or
to Re-Evaluate
Your MDB,
MDB Functionality
MDB Vendor, and/or
By
MDB Functionality
Bernice Grossman
President
By
DMRS GROUP, Inc.
Bernice Grossman
President
bgrossman@dmrsgroup.com
DMRS GROUP, Inc.
bgrossman@dmrsgroup.com
Who is DMRS ?
• DMRS has been working with client companies to maximize their data
marketing efforts since 1983. We are an independent consultancy, we
own no data, no software, nor any processing services or facilities.
• We manage data audits/assessments and operational needs
assessments:
Choosing the right vendors Data / ETL, MSP / ESP, MDB / CRM, MA
/ SFA Implementation End-user marketing applications for off-line
and on-line
• Our client list spans a broad spectrum of Domestic and International
businesses including Avis, Epson, Microsoft, Pfizer, United Airlines,
Nestle, Simon, United States Gypsum, and United Airlines
1
25. 9/18/2012
This Session
• This session will provide a check list of the most important items to
review when re-evaluating your marketing database, your vendor,
and the design and attending functionality of your current solution
tool.
• Attendees will be provided with a proven method of what to look for
and how to know what is and is not working. Before you conclude
your marketing database is broken, come to this session and learn
the key questions to ask that will help determine the state of your
database.
• Key takeaways:
– What do you need now that you didn't need when your marketing
database was built?
– What about your data?
– How should you review database integration with email and
social media - what exists now that didn't exist at the time of the
build?
First, A Definition
just so that we’re all on the same page
An MDB (Marketing Database) is a single repository for all data identified as
relevant to meet the goals of marketing that are defined as actionable and
accessible for:
• Capturing data from all channels
• Consistent data hygiene and de-duplication rules
• Allows for segmentation and query
• Integrates Direct, E-Mail, Social Media (transactional, web site, call center,
behavioral, attitudinal, events – more)
• Performs complete Campaign Management
• Measures media performance
• Manages multi-channel marketing
• Performs modeling and predicting behavior analyses
• It is read only. It is NOT a contact management system.
2
26. 9/18/2012
IS YOUR MDB “BROKEN”?
• What is “broken”? We’re going to look at a few examples in a moment.
• Length of contract
• When does your contract expire?
• (If inside) Is it time to take it off-site?
• Are you all integrated?
• Does your MDB work?
• What are the metrics you use to decide this?
– Do the MDB counts match the transaction counts?
– Does the geography match
• Who decides that it does or does not work?
• Does anyone want to use it?
• Who? Why?
• Who does not?
• Is marketing grumbling
• Is IT smirking
Some “Broken” Examples
• Pharmaceutical Company
– Kept each drug on a separate MDB – became too expensive – realized
they were paying for certain processes three times but only needed to
“buy” it once
• Membership Organization
– The users were in silos – just like their data
– Change Management was very difficult
– Never contemplated the problems of moving data back and forth
(especially from their SFA to the MDB)
• Large Retail Shopping Installation
– Never thought through how to use the response management
functionality
3
27. 9/18/2012
Is Everything Still the Same at the
MSP?
• Corporate mission statement • System software information
and customer service • Percent of budget applied to
philosophy
R&D
• Total number of staff
• Willingness to provide details
• Key executives
pending litigation
• Ownership information and
organization chart • MDB staff attrition over the last
• Quality control procedures year
from data receipt to MDB • Company privacy policy
update • Primary industries that are
• # of customer support staff served
• # of technical support staff • Number/type of user group
• Customer mix meetings held each year
Are Their Data Center Capabilities Still
the Same?
• Available data center locations
• Back up procedures
• Real-time redundancy (servers, HVAC, etc.)
• Disaster recovery and business continuity procedures
• Contingency for downtime and preventive maintenance
• Physical and data security measures
• Connectivity options
• Service levels for problem reporting and resolution
– Do these meet your needs today?
• Ability to provide support 24 x 7 x 365
4
28. 9/18/2012
What About …………
• Has their client list changed? How?
• What have they done to enhance their look-up tables for
company name, title, first name
• Can their solution now support both your marketing and
contact management/SFA needs? How?
• Have they integrated with an ESP?
– Who?
– How are they integrated?
– Is it really one platform or is it two that are “made” to
look like one?
• How are they integrating Social Media?
• What is available to you in Real Time? WHY do you
need real time?
THE CRITICAL QUESTIONS
• When was the last time your BRD was updated?
• When was the last time you compared your BRD to what
you are receiving? This should be done at least 1x/yr
• When was the last time you looked at your ERD?
• Has the staff that manages your MDB changed?
• What do you need now that you didn't need when your
MDB was built? How old is your MDB?
• Have you reviewed the MDB integration processes with
email and social media issues that didn't exist at the time
of the build?
5
29. 9/18/2012
Do you still have the same
“25 Questions”?
WHAT 25 Questions?
If you had an ideal standard and fresh marketing database,
what questions would you want answered from the data?
But, there are 2 conditions:
• Question must be quantitative!
• Question cannot use a subjective word (e.g. big
or better)!
For example: How many customers who purchase SKU
#123 in Mississippi also purchased SKU #456
Original Business Goals and Functional
Requirements
Business goals Functional requirements
• Become customer-centric by • Provide access for query and analysis by
developing a complete view of the both marketing and sales
customer with all pertinent data • Integrate the mail and email query and
• Increase effectiveness and efficiency campaign management functions.
of acquisition and retention marketing • Provide accurate information on new
with better customer targeting and customers, cost to acquire customers,
campaign management number of inactive customers, migration
• Improve overall ROI by marketing to of customers between value segments
most valuable customers and the cost of migration
• Target individual customers with • Use 3rd party B-to-B data to establish
specific messages designed to best corporate hierarchy links of ownership
meet their needs and firmographic profile info
• Understand customer behavior for • Enhance customer data through the use
each product within channels and of 3rd party for demographics, lifestyles,
across the brands behavioral, attitudinal
6
30. 9/18/2012
Has Your Team Changed?
• Team Champion – Owns the Vision and Articulates it to the Team
• Marketing (all channels)
– Direct mail
– Email
– Telemarketing
– Social Media
– Space
– Acquisition
– Retention
– Product
• Sales
• IT
• Finance
• Legal
HAS YOUR ENVIRONMENT
CHANGED?
THIS IS WHAT IS WAS:
Data locations: Files included
– Oracle data warehouse business-to-business
– Mainframe flat files
– SQL Server consumer
– SalesForce.com US and International data
2,000,000 eligible records customers/prospect
on file. Approx. 50 Gb of
data representing the last full postal address, just
3 years. Growth over the email, some “handles”
next 3 years is expected Estimated # users = 20.
at a rate of 25% per year.
WHAT ABOUT NOW?
7
31. 9/18/2012
What about your data?
• Is it the same or has it changed in scope
• Have you added new products, services,
bought other companies, etc.,
• Have you changed the channels you use
for acquisition and/or retention or the
amount you use of a channel?
• Have you changed data vendors?
Data Sources – Marketing Strategies
Have You Added New Ones or Made Significant
Changes?
DATA MARKETING
• Transactional Files • New Channels
• Email • Different Schedules
• Web Site Data • Re-Organized
• Operations • New Management
• Complaints • Decided to Outsource
• Reviews • Added / Deleted Partners
• Tech Support • Bought / Sold a Company
• Social • Other
• Other
8
32. 9/18/2012
Have You Recently Reviewed..
Your data enhancement sources and methodologies
Have you created a “best record” and are the requirements
still the same
Have you reviewed data standardization and sanitization
routines
What about records with only:
Postal Addresses.
E-Mail Addresses.
Social Media “handles”
What about those record missing “key” data elements
What About……………
• Response time
– Do you need increased speed?
– When was the last time you had the server sized?
• Query capabilities
• Multiple users
– Have you added or deleted users?
• Simultaneous usage
– Has this stayed the same?
• Multiple locations
• Data feeds and updates
– Have you added new ones?
9
33. 9/18/2012
Remember when you ……
• Created validation rules for all of the data feeds
• Developed Appropriate Audit Reports for
Data feeds
Database refreshes
Standard reports
• Developed Reject procedures – and decided what to do
what to do when key checkpoints failed
• Do you still follow those rules??
Created Sanity Checks….
• Standard reports that ran after database
refreshes and database feeds to verify key
metrics
• Threshold reports
If “x” metric exceeds an appropriate number
does a red flag goes up?
Who is advised?
Are the reports still automatically distributed to
the appropriate people?
are those people still at your company?
are the reports read?
10
34. 9/18/2012
THE 8 MUST HAVE’S –
Do You Have More / or Are They
Just Different?
Query
Calculating
Reporting
Direct and E Mail Campaign Management
Social Media Integration
Data Extract
Data Import
Data Mining, Analysis, Tracking & Modeling
Do Any of These Still Exists?
• Disparate platforms ---- not everything is connected
• No common repository to store everything
• Creating selections is just too complicated – almost no
one knows SQL except IT
• Data is still not sanitized, standardized, unduplicated nor
aggregated the same way across all of the sources
• Still no written set of up-to-date business rules
• Sill no written BRD?
11
35. 9/18/2012
Nice to Have or Now Must
Have’s
• Real time access
• Data from files not integrated (by name
and address) with the MDB – integration is
done by an ID
• Social Media “handles” are matched to
email addresses
• Bi-synchronous feed with SFA
What are your users doing?
• What are the work-arounds?
• Might these be the reason your MDB is
“broken”
• How many are there?
• How can you get these to be integrated
into the on-going functionality of the
processes your MSP provides?
12
36. 9/18/2012
Some Final Thoughts
• Politics will always rear it’s ugly head – nothing
changes
• This was a high emotional stressful project and it still
it
• There was high, often undirected, energy and its still
there
• Big questions like, “who really owns the data”, MUST
be answered - this is like a moving target!
• Although there were multiple levels of expectation for
the Master Marketing Database (MDB), have you
finally all agreed? Does this need to be reviewed?
LIST OF PLAYERS IN THIS SPACE IS ENDLESS
Customer Relationship Extract, Transform, Load
Management (CRM) (ETL)
Marketing Automation / Lead
Marketing Service Provider Management
(MSP)
13
37. B-to-B Technology Industry Prospecting Databases:
A Comparative Analysis of Nine Data Suppliers
By Bernice Grossman and Ruth P. Stevens
July 2012
38. B-to-B Technology Industry Prospecting Databases: A Comparative Analysis of Nine Data Suppliers
B-to-B Technology Industry Prospecting Databases:
A Comparative Analysis of Nine Data Suppliers
By Bernice Grossman and Ruth P. Stevens
July 2012
Executive Summary
As part of ongoing research on B-to-B data sources available to marketers, this white paper evaluates the volume and accuracy of B-to-B data available to mar-
keters of information technology (IT) products and services. Nine database suppliers participated in this year’s study. Like the results from our analysis of com-
piled and response data sources in years past, data coverage and accuracy varied considerably among vendors. We conclude by urging marketers to source
tech-buyer data from multiple sources to gain maximum market coverage. We also suggest that marketers who order prospecting data ask very carefully about the
nature of the data sources and compilation methods involved. Finally, we recommend that marketers conduct a pre-test of the data to assess its applicability to
their particular marketing need.
Building on the general enthusiasm surrounding our past three studies on the We were very pleased that nine suppliers joined the study, and we extend our
accuracy and completeness of B-to-B compiled and response data, we decided gratitude to them. From those who declined, three reasons surfaced. As with
to conduct similar research on the data available in the large and active last year’s response data study, some managers of response databases felt that
technology marketing sector. only their list-owner clients could make the decision to participate, and the
We found a sizable quantity of suppliers offering compiled data, response data, complexity managing all those permissions was too great. Some database
or a combination, to marketers who are trying to reach technology buyers. owners felt that our methodology favors vendors with large volumes of data,
Invited to participate were: and the strengths of those that compete on quality versus quantity would not
be made evident in our study. We understand both of these lines of reasoning,
n ALC n InsideView and hope we can figure out refinements to our study that will overcome these
n Broadlook n Mardev-DM2 limitations in the future. In the case of a few other vendors, further discussion
n CardBrowser n MeritDirect MeritBase revealed that they do not offer data for rent or append, but instead make it
n D&B n NetProspex available through a proprietary platform—thus being ineligible for inclusion.
n Data.com n ReachForce
Demandbase One relatively unusual aspect of the world of technology marketing is the
n n Stirista
Discoverorg.com proliferation of specialty data providers who dig deep into the characteristics
n n TechTarget
Harte-Hanks of target accounts, particularly among very large enterprises with vast technol-
n n UBM
IDG ogy budgets. These vendors invest in capturing useful information like the
n n Worldata
Infogroup Targeting Solutions specifics of the account’s current installed technology, and their buying
n n ZoomInfo
processes, buying roles, budgets and purchase intentions. These vendors
1
39. B-to-B Technology Industry Prospecting Databases: A Comparative Analysis of Nine Data Suppliers
may not offer as many records as others, but each record is very richly detailed. As with our earlier data studies, we asked the vendors to provide company
Examples of such vendors are SalesQuest, iProfile.net, and InsideView. This counts in a selection of target industry sectors, plus contact counts for specific
kind of information is extremely valuable for key account planning. But is a companies, and complete records on individual business people.
considerably different animal from the prospecting databases studied here.
We specified the same ten industries as in prior studies, and asked the vendors
The nine participants who contributed information on their tech-buyer data are: to tell us how many companies they had in each of the ten, as indicated by SIC.
n Data.com n Infogroup n Stirista For the contact data, we made two changes from prior studies. First, we dou-
n D&B n Mardev-DM2 n Worldata bled the number of companies for whom contact counts were requested. While
n Harte-Hanks n NetProspex n ZoomInfo we used the same set of well-known large firms in each of the ten industries as
Our sincere thanks to them, and to everyone else who considered participating. in the 2010 and 2011 studies, we added another list of ten smaller firms, in the
same ten industries, to broaden the understanding of vendor data by company
The scope and intent of the study size. This change we made in response to requests by several readers of past
We followed the same approach as used in our earlier research on compiled studies who are interested in targeting small/medium businesses versus large
and response databases, to get answers to the concerns of business marketers enterprises.
about data volume, completeness and accuracy. By using a similar research
methodology, we also hoped to provide some apples-to-apples comparison Second, to get at the tech-buyer question, we specified that the contact counts
among the contents of response databases, compiled databases, and industry- be limited to IT professional contacts. We offered the participating vendors
specific databases, over time. the following list of technology professional titles, as examples of the types
of contacts we expected them to include in their counts.
Examples of IT Professional Titles
Architects Directors Technology Programmers Systems Analysts
Business Analysts Disaster Recovery Specialists Project Leaders Technology Systems Engineers
CIO's Help Desk Project Managers Technology Systems Managers
Computer Operations Managers Help Desk Managers Quality Assurance Systems Programmers
Computer Operators Infrastructure Analysts Quality Assurance Managers Technical Consultants
CTO's LAN Administrators Sales Support Engineers Technical Liaison
Data Modelers LAN Managers Security Specialists Technical Support
Database Administrators (DBA's) Network Administrators Software Developers Telecommunications
Database Analysts Network Directors Software Development Managers Telecommunications Managers
Database Managers Network Engineers Software Engineers VP's Technology
Datacommunications Network Managers Solution Engineers WAN Administrators
Datacommunications Managers Network Support Solutions / Services - Tech Sales Reps Web Developers
Datawarehouse Architects NOC Specialists Storage - SAN Administrators Web Masters
Desktop Support Managers NOC Team Leaders Systems Administrators Wireless Communications
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40. B-to-B Technology Industry Prospecting Databases: A Comparative Analysis of Nine Data Suppliers
We also recruited ten IT professionals Individual contacts in the study
in a variety of industries, who agreed Industry Name Title Company
to lend their names and contact infor- Communications Michael Green Sr. Manager, Database Marketing Level 3 Communications, LLC
mation. We are grateful for their gen- Electronics Al Logiodice Platform Manager, Store.Sony.com Development Sony Electronics
Financial Services Michael Spencer Director, Information Technology Barclays Capital
erous support of this study.
Healthcare Technology Arthur J Fisher Marketo & SalesLogix Marketing DBA GE Healthcare
We asked only one qualitative ques- Manufacturing Doug Lee Reporting Manager Pasternack Enterprises, Inc.
tion, inviting the vendors to explain Marketing Dan Spiegel Vice President of Engineering AdMarketplace
Not-for Profit Andrew Lazar Senior Technical Business Analyst/Database Developer American Institute of Chemical Engineers
their competitive positioning in the
Optical Equipment Jeff Harvey Director of IT Edmund Optics, Inc.
marketplace. Software Rick Graham President Dual Impact Inc.
Technology Dominic Dimascia VP, Technology Delivery Services GSI Commerce
The positioning statements
Here is how the vendors described themselves in response to the following ensure the accuracy of our data, vetting information through a rigorous quality
question: assurance process, and linking each contact to a unique company identifier, the
Provide a statement of no more than 150 words that describes your tech data D-U-N-S® Number. This connection between contact and company offers key
product/service, including how you are positioned, meaning your competitive insight – such as employee count and sales-- that puts a prospect's technology
differentiation. In short, this question is, “Who are you, and how are you dif- purchase in context. No one else offers this comprehensive view of contacts
ferent?” and the business they’re in.
Data.com Harte-Hanks
Launched in September 2011 at Dreamforce, Salesforce Data.com is democra- Harte-Hanks is the industry’s most trusted source for detailed information and
tizing data by delivering instant access to the business data companies need insight into today’s business technology buying market. Our flagship product,
right inside salesforce.com. We provide the data foundation customers need to the Ci Technology Database™ (CITDB), tracks technology installations, purchase
succeed as a social enterprise by helping them easily find new customers and plans and key decision makers at more than four million locations in 25 countries
clean their data right in the cloud. Data.com delivers the data foundation with in North America, Latin America and Europe. Detailed profiles include:
accurate crowd-sourced contact information and the leading company informa- n Technology purchase plans including budget, need, timing, preferred vendor
tion from Dun & Bradstreet. Data.com draws on a community of over 2 million and key decision-maker.
strong members which make over a million updates a month, all in real-time to n Installed technology and primary manufacturers for more than 45 products
address the pace of change in business data. Data.com stands alone as social, including computer hardware, software, networks, storage and telecommu-
transparent, collaborative and integrated directly in salesforce.com -- powering nications
marketers to grow their business with complete and quality business data. n Site and enterprise-level IT budgets and IT staffing estimates
D&B n Detailed contact information on IT and business decision-makers including
D&B Professional Contacts provides high-quality contact information – includ- functional responsibility.
ing email addresses and direct dials – on more than 60 million U.S. business n Plus, 65 descriptive fields including address, telephone, number of employ-
professionals. Our database includes 900+ standardized job titles spanning sole ees, annual revenue, industry classifications, DUNS number and fiscal year
proprietorships and multi-billion dollar enterprises. Customers selling into IT end. Put the power of the Ci Technology Database to work for you. Contact
organizations have access to IT contacts as well as other business stakeholders the technology experts at Harte-Hanks at 1-800-854-8409 or visit
who may be involved in the purchasing decision. D&B takes rigorous steps to www.citdb.com for more information.
3
41. B-to-B Technology Industry Prospecting Databases: A Comparative Analysis of Nine Data Suppliers
Infogroup Targeting Solutions to deliver targeted prospect lists, data cleansing, and profiling analytics that
Infogroup Targeting Solutions helps companies increase sales and customer help to uncover data insight and optimize lead generation results. Voted Best
loyalty through analytically driven consumer and business data and database Lead Generation Solution by the SIIA, NetProspex maintains a deep database
marketing solutions. With exclusive access to the Data AxleTM, we build of millions of crowd-sourced business contacts verified by CleneStep™
multichannel solutions using contextually relevant information on 230MM technology. Thousands of B2B organizations rely on NetProspex to acquire
individuals and 24MM businesses. We incorporate the highest quality, most and maintain clean, accurate prospect information to fuel high-performing
accurate and comprehensive compiled and third-party information rich data. marketing campaigns. More information at www.netprospex.com or on
Our response generated data sources contain millions of records of leading IT Twitter @NetProspex.
executives and professional IT buyers within the US and Canada. Additionally,
Stirista
our B2B response driven powerful databases are rich in IT & technology Quite often the term 'social media' is used as a buzzword, but we rarely see
related buyer information. We provide solutions and services to support practical usage and integration of the data with actionable email addresses.
marketers’ and sales’ efforts throughout the entire marketing and sales cycles Stirista combines information from public profiles and websites and connects
by integrating cross-channel data from disparate sources to provide insights that information with an email database. This helps IT vendors identify exactly
that ultimately increase efficiency, productivity and target the most responsive what technologies and products the IT buyers interested in even before some-
customers and prospects to drive the highest ROI. one makes a pitch to them. By figuring out, for instance, that an IT department
Mardev-DM2 specializes in .NET and is part of an online discussion forum for .NET, one can
Mardevdm2 DecisionMaker® Databases are more than just a masterfile. They safely assume that a conference on Linux would not be of much interest to that
are custom built, multi-channel databases that start with all of our individual, individual. Stirista knows something beyond the fact that someone is an IT
high quality, direct response lists and end with custom built, single-source director and that makes the data exponentially more powerful. It not only
databases that provide marketers with both “deep data” selectivity and larger helps with enhanced targeting capabilities but also decreases the potential
volumes of names. Selectable by specific detailed title and level, buying of lost revenue and time due to incorrect messaging.
authority, software, hardware, number of PCs, laptops and printers as well as
Worldata
other IT related site data. It is this combination of depth, quality and coverage, Worldata is the leading data agency firm in the U.S. As the largest buyer and
that differentiates Decisionmaker from other masterfiles, improving marketing user of 3rd party permissioned email media, Worldata has unique abilities that
outcomes for our varied client-base. Partners include BuyerZone, CFE Media’s our clients leverage including: reduced costs, special data availability and
Consulting Specifying Engineer, Control Engineering, Plant Engineering, overall best practice knowledge. Our primary focus is with the Email, Direct
Financial Media Group, Ward’s Business Directory, IBIS, Lexis Nexis’s Mail and Telemarketing categories. We help marketers to execute prospect
Corporate Directories, Martindale Hubbell, Advertiser and Agency Redbooks, marketing programs, data hygiene initiatives and overall direct marketing
Reed Business Information, RS Means and many other highly reputable strategies. More than 800 customers worldwide from all types of businesses
controlled circulation and media partners. and organizations—from enterprise technology, publishing, and online
NetProspex education to business services, nonprofits, and associations—use Worldata
NetProspex is the only B2B data provider with a proprietary verification to leverage data assets, procure key datasets and find overall solutions to
process to ensure clean, accurate, and up-to-date contact information. customer and prospect data initiatives. For more information contact Jay
NetProspex drives customer acquisition by partnering with B2B marketers Schwedelson at 800.331.8102 x176 JayS@Worldata.com.
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