Analysis and estimation of customer survival Time in subscription-based businesses
Loading...
Date
2008
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of the Western Cape
Abstract
Subscription-based industries have seen a massive expansion in recent decades. In this type of industry the customer has to subscribe to be able to enjoy the service; there-fore, well-de ned start and end points of the customer relationship with the service provider are known. The length of this relationship, that is the time from subscription to service cancellation, is de ned as customer survival time. Unlike transaction-based businesses, where the emphasis is on the quality of a product and customer acquisition, subscription-based businesses focus on the customer and customer retention. A customer focus requires a new approach: managing according to customer equity (the value of a rm's customers) rather than brand equity (the value of a rm's brands). The concept of customer equity is attractive and straightforward, but the implementation and management of the customer equity approach do present some challenges. Amongst these challenges is that customer asset metric - customer lifetime value (the present value of all future pro ts generated from a customer) - depends upon assumptions about the expected survival time of the customer (Bell et al., 2002; Gupta and
Lehmann, 2003). In addition, managing and valuing customers as an asset require extensive data and complex modelling. The aim of this study is to illustrate, adapt and develop methods of survival analysis in analysing and estimating customer survival time in subscription-based businesses. Two particular objectives are studied. The fi rst objective is to rede ne the existing survival analysis techniques in business terms and to discuss their uses in order to understand various issues related to the customer-fi rm relationship. The lesson to be learnt here is the ability of survival analysis techniques
to extract important information on customers with regard to their loyalties, risk of cancellation of the service, and lifetime value. The ultimate outcome of this process of studying customer survival time will be to understand the dynamics and behaviour of customers with respect to their risk of cancellation, survival probability and lifetime value. The results of the estimates of customer mean survival time obtained from different nonparametric and parametric approaches; namely, the Kaplan-Meier method as well as exponential, Weibull and gamma regression models were found to vary greatly showing the importance of the assumption imposed on the distribution of the survival time. The second objective is to extrapolate the customer survival curve beyond the empirical distribution. The practical motivation for extrapolating the survival curve beyond the empirical distribution originates from two issues; that of calculating survival probabilities (retention rate) beyond the empirical data and of calculating the
conditional survival probability and conditional mean survival time at a speci c point in time and for a speci c time window in the future. The survival probabilties are the main components needed to calculate customer lifetime value and thereafter customer equity. In this regard, we propose a survivor function that can be used to extrapolate the survival probabilities beyond the last observed failure time; the estimation of parameters of the newly proposed extrapolation function is based completely on the Kaplan-Meier estimate of the survival probabilities. The proposed function has shown
a good mathematical accuracy. Furthermore, the standard error of the estimate of the extrapolation survival function has been derived. The function is ready to be used by business managers where the objective is to enhance customer retention and to emphasise a customer-centric approach. The extrapolation function can be applied and used beyond the customer survival time data to cover clinical trial applications. In general the survival analysis techniques were found to be valuable in understanding and managing a customer- rm relationship; yet, much still needs to be done in this
area of research to make these techniques that are traditionally used in medical studies more useful and applicable in business settings.
Description
Philosophiae Doctor - PhD
Keywords
Customer survival time, Subscription-based businesses, Survival analysis, Churn, Customer mean survival time, Customer-centric approach