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Glossary: Customer Tags

Customer Tags appear in a graph on the Customer Overview dashboard.


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Where do Customer Tags come from?

The customer tags are derived from an algorithm that analyzes purchases, customer records, partner databases, and also data from external databases, such as a gender categorization we set based on a customer's first name. Generally these tags are comparisions of how customers are performing against each other's buying patterns. Tags look at their overall habits, sees that we have enough data to make these comparisons and then aggregates the data. 

Each tag is associated with a customer when a certain criterion is met, and it is updated in real-time.

You may find some are more intuitive than others, so here's a simple explanation of each of them:

Purchase Tags

Classification Category Tags
eg. Likes Comedy

Customer who has attended more than a few events labeled with a certain category

Ticket Variants
e.g. student, retiree, or family

Customer who has bought most of their tickets with a matching variant 

Prefers Part Of Week

 e.g. weekdays or weekends

The two categories are weekdays (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday) and weekends (Friday, Saturday, and Sunday)

Customers who have attended a handful of events and the majority of them are happening at one of the categories mentioned above. 

Repeat Traveller

Customer who has attended at least a few events, where all trips have been out of town and the average distance needs to also be a considerable amount from the venue.

Returned Customer

Customer who has at least one purchase within the last months.

Customer who has not bought a ticket for a few years before the newest purchase

Going Inactive Customer who is within a year of going inactive
Inactive If a customer has no purchases within 3 years of today
Recent Buyer Customer who has purchased within the last few months
Second Time Buyer

Customer who has exactly two purchases

First Time Buyer

Customer who has exactly one purchase

Budget Buyer

Customer who has attended at least a few events

The spending average is a certain percentage below the average of all tickets being sold on your platform.

Bargain Hunter

Customer who has attended at least a few events and has bought products.

The spending average must be a certain % below the spending average of your customers

High-Value Customer

If a customer's total event purchases are above the vast majority of customer spending

Early Buyer

Customer who has attended a handful of events in the past but who has never bought a ticket within a few months of the show date

Impulse Buyer

A customer who has attended at least a few events and the majority of those tickets were bought within the last few weeks of the show date.

High-Frequency Buyer

Customer who has made several purchases per year for the last three years

Single Item Buyer

Customer who has bought a single ticket (non-zero price) to more than a few events

Invitee: (free ticket holder)

Customer who has at least a handful of purchases in the last year and zero spending for the whole period

Lapsed Buyer

Customer who has at least one purchase but none within the past year

Volume Buyer

Customer who has more than a handful of purchases with the required amount of tickets

We have three different volume categories, based on the number of tickets:
Volume buyer 6+: More than 6 tickets
Volume buyer 10+: More than 10 tickets
Volume buyer 20+: More than 20 tickets

Loyal Customer

If the number of non-zero purchases is greater than 3

Very loyal customer

If the number of non-zero purchases is greater than 6

High Value Customer

A High Value Customer has a much higher than average lifetime value accumulated over time.

High Value Buyer

A High Value Buyer spends more in single transactions than the average of a majority of other customers.

Premium Buyer

A Premium Buyer has bought multiple events and has significantly higher than average per ticket value than other customers purchasing tickets for the same event.Donation Tags

 

Donation Tags

Lapsed High-Value Donor Customer who has donated more than the vast majority of customers, but have not made a donation in the last year
Top Donor Customer who has donated more than the vast majority of customers and the donated amount is more than 100, within the last year
Lapsed Repeat Donor Customer who has more than one donation but none made in the last year
Repeat Donor Customer who has more than one donation and at least one made in the last year
Lapsed One Time Donor Customer who has have exactly one donation but it was made over a year ago
First Time Donor Customer who has have exactly one donation and it is made in the last year

 

Mixed Tags

Long Term Loyalty Customer who has at least one purchase or donation per year for the last 3/5/10 years

 

Because every client is different, using customer tags will allow you to filter your clients through a smaller lens, to identify their interest groups and how they buy tickets.