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Red Cross Customer Analysis Final Report December 2002. AGENDA. Project Goals 3 Methodology 4 Survey Information and Response Rates 5 Awareness 7 Consumer Resources 10 Budget/Decision Maker 11 Organization Value Drivers 12 Summary of Findings 14 Recommendations 15 Next Steps 16
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AGENDA • Project Goals 3 • Methodology 4 • Survey Information and Response Rates 5 • Awareness 7 • Consumer Resources 10 • Budget/Decision Maker 11 • Organization Value Drivers 12 • Summary of Findings 14 • Recommendations 15 • Next Steps 16 • Appendix 17
Project Goals • Identify companies or organizations that may be potential customers • Determine what makes an organization likely to purchase goods/services from the Red Cross • Pinpoint the factors that organizations use to evaluate partner relationships • Provide recommendations to improve sales in the Health and Safety Services division
Methodology • Conducted Telephone Surveys for in-depth data gathering and higher response rates • Coordinated with UMBS professors to ensure a valid random sample was achieved • Utilized Red Cross database of customers and prospects • Segmented Customers • Non-Customer (Cold Calls) • Red Cross Customer (Non-AED) • AED Customer • Determine Industries to be included in the surveys • Healthcare • Manufacturing • Service • Government • Schools
Survey Factors • Organization Demographics • Industry • Type of organization • Size • Important values to companies when purchasing health and safety products • Decision-maker for purchase of health and safety product • Current Awareness of Red Cross products and services • Annual Budget
Survey Response Rates Responses were from a wide variety of industries Approximately 400 total calls were made over a 3 week period in November
Awareness : Non-Customers • Extremely High awareness of the Red Cross and its mission to train individuals in First Aid/CPR • Medium awareness of AEDs • Low awareness that the Red Cross places AEDs • Extremely low market placement of AEDs
Awareness : Red Cross Customers • High awareness of the Red Cross and its mission to train individuals in First Aid/CPR • High awareness of AEDs • Medium awareness that the Red Cross places AEDs • Extremely low market placement of AEDs
Awareness : AED Customers • Nearly 75% of all purchasers of AEDs from the Red Cross became aware of AEDs through other Red Cross sponsored events or people trained by the Red Cross. AED Awareness Generation
Consumer Resources Potential Customers will use a variety of channels to research health and safety purchases • Contact the Red Cross • Influencer (EMT, Nurse, Friend or Relative with previous training) • Internet • Yellow Pages
Budget and Decision Makers • Small companies: Possible to communicate directly with the decision-maker. • Large companies: Necessary to navigate several levels of bureaucracy, often having to communicate with the corporate office in order to sell goods/services locally.
Value Drivers Consistently the most important factors named were the previous relationship an organization had with the Red Cross and a recommendation from a colleague, friend or relative.
Sample comments from selected surveys ‘We continue to do business with the Red Cross because they always provide quality training and we support the goals of their organization’ ‘We get recertified every year, and we never even think of getting training from another organization’ ‘Whenever we need any type of safety training, the first organization I think of is always the Red Cross’
Summary of Findings • The Red Cross’ brand recognition is extremely high. The majority of people are aware that the Red Cross offers First Aid/CPR training • Approximately 80% of survey respondents indicated that the Red Cross is the first and only organization they contact for First Aid/CPR training • Those who continue to purchase goods/services from the Red Cross do so because of their positive relationship with the Red Cross in the past • New customers purchase goods/services from the Red Cross because of general awareness of the products offered or based on the recommendation of an “influencer” • Consumers value the support that a Red Cross contact provides them, but they prefer not to be directly solicited
Recommendations • Continue to cross-market products at Red Cross training classes and events • Educate the influencers – build a pyramid of involvement with the Red Cross • Manage customer relationships to induce repeat purchases • Focus effort on retaining and mining current customers • Ensure potential customers have ready access to information about Red Cross products • Concentrate marketing efforts on partnering with local civic, religious, and employment organizations • Use Border’s as a case study in the proper way to approach large companies to sell goods/services • Continue to sell to U of M / EMU
Next Steps and Additional Projects • Revisit marketing contact strategy • Update database and actively contact companies to maintain a working relationship • Evaluate the current web positioning strategy • Identify influencers and organizations with which to partner • Initiate a study to increase retention ratios