What is a Customer Data Platform (CDP)?
Learn how a customer data platform can collect, harmonize, and activate your data for unprecedented insight into your customers and campaigns.
Learn how a customer data platform can collect, harmonize, and activate your data for unprecedented insight into your customers and campaigns.
A customer data platform, or CDP, is technology that allows businesses to pull in customer data from any channel, system, or data stream to build a unified customer profile. These tools usually include a customer database and automation, as well as management resources for multichannel campaigns, real-time customer interactions, and connected data. A CDP combines all customer data in real -time for companies, allowing them to create personalised customer experiences.
CDPs are helpful as a central database for user-level data. They tie together databases that traditionally don’t share data, like marketing platforms, service software, and e-commerce engines. This gives you easy access to the insights you need to connect with customers.
In the 8th State of Marketing report, 78% of high performers used a CDP versus 58% of underperformers. In this article, we’ll explore customer data platforms' past, present, and future. Then, we'll discuss how this technology can power your customer relationship management (CRM) platform and other components of your tech stack to help you make magical real-time moments from your customer data.
Customer Data Platform Guide: Table of Contents
Customer data platforms focus on four primary tasks: collecting data, harmonising data, activating data, and pulling insights from data. Let’s take a deeper look at each one.
1. Collect Your Data
Your CDP is a centralised hub for all the customer data your company has. It’s where anyone from your business can find customer data organised in a single place.
To achieve this, your CDP needs to identify each individual customer by collecting and stitching together data from all of your company’s different CRM platforms, marketing systems, and data streams. Combining and unifying all this disparate data and identifying each customer based on their engagement history is called “customer resolution.”
2. Harmonise Your Data
After your CDP combines all your company’s data and creates customer identities, the next step is to resolve those identities across devices. This means linking identity information from your known customers (such as email addresses and phone numbers) with anonymous data they may have shared before they became customers (such as anonymous cookies and mobile device IDs).
The purpose of cross-device identity resolution is to help you understand the whole picture of your customers’ journeys. For example, you can look at a customer and see that their interaction began with an email campaign and continued on to your website before they shared their information and downloaded content or made a purchase.
3. Experience Your Data
Once your CDP creates and resolves fully unified customer profiles, it activates that data, making it available for your teams to personalise customer experiences in real time.
This personalisation is made possible by connecting the customer data in your CDP to all the different technology platforms you use to engage customers. This may include email send engines, automated workflows, real-time analytics, demand-side platforms, and content management systems.
4. Pull Insights from Data
With the unified customer profiles your CDP creates, it’s easy to see the entire catalogue of data each customer shares and to track their whole customer journey. You can also use this data to get insights about customers and segment them into groups, as well as create lookalike audiences and personas to help reach new audiences.
As your CDP collects and organises all your customer data in one place, it’s a great source for information proving your efforts' reach, revenue, and marketing ROI.
With so many different types of marketing technology out there — each one usually with its own three-letter acronym — you may wonder where CDPs come from.
Even though CDPs are among today’s most popular marketing tools, they’re not an entirely new idea. Instead, they’re the latest step in the evolution of how marketers manage customer data and customer relationships.
In the last decade or so, these updates to the CRM model also led to the creation of CDPs. As single sources of truth for marketing data, CDPs allow marketers to glean greater insights about their customers, allowing better segmentation across different brands. Before recent developments in AI, automation, and machine learning, this level of segmentation was impossible—but now it’s a best practise for everyone.
Previous customer data platforms on the market focus only on marketing and/or commerce and can take hours to sync. It’s impossible to give your customers the experiences they're looking for when basing your engagements on a delayed fraction of what your company knows about them. Customers expect every experience to be connected and updated in real time. When they aren’t, they’re disappointed.
With the capabilities of a customer data platform, marketers can see how a single customer interacts with the company’s different brands and identify opportunities for increased personalisation and cross-selling.
Of course, there’s much more to a CDP than personalisation. It’s also meant to be an easy-to-use platform for everyday needs, with user-friendly controls for analysing customer and prospect data, building segments, and identifying key audiences.
With Data Cloud, every company can turn data into customer magic, delivering seamless, highly personalised experiences across sales, service, marketing, and commerce that continuously adapt to changing customer information and needs in real-time. See how leading brands Ford and L’Oréal are utilizing Data Cloud to provide connected, real-time experiences.
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Beyond audience segmentation, there are three big reasons why your company might want a CDP: suppression, personalisation, and insights.
Account Suppression
One of the most interesting things businesses can do with data is identify customers not to target. This is called suppression, and it’s part of delivering truly personalised customer journeys.
When a customer’s unified profile in your CDP includes their marketing and purchase data, you can suppress ads to customers who’ve already purchased. They don't have to see ads that aren’t relevant to them, and you get to optimise your budget by directing ads to new audiences.
We’ve all seen it happen: Sometimes, a customer visits your website, looks at a few products, and then leaves. A CDP can add that visit to the customer’s unified profile, allowing you to follow up with personalised offers via their favourite channels, whether that’s email or a push notification.
Customers who see content tailored to their interests are five times more likely to engage with a brand, so personalisation through a CDP can bring significant rewards.
Customer Insights
A CDP brings all your company’s customer data and analytics together and makes it available to all of your teams, breaking down silos and creating opportunities for shared insights. With a view of every customer’s interactions linked to e-commerce data, website visits, and more, everyone across marketing, sales, service, and all your other teams can understand more about each customer and deliver more personalised, relevant engagement.
CDPs can help companies address the root causes of many of their biggest day-to-day marketing problems. In particular, there are three main challenges that CDPs can help solve.
Disorganised data
When your data is disconnected, it’s more difficult to understand your customers and create meaningful connections with them. As the number of data sources companies use continues to increase, it’s more important than ever to have a CDP as a single source of truth to bring it all together. Integrating your disparate data sources through a CDP makes it simple to surface customer insights anytime.
Customer identification
Only one in three marketers say they’re satisfied with their ability to link customer identities across all their different data sources. As a centralised hub for your customer data, CDPs can easily solve customer identification issues, bringing together data from multiple sources to create unified profiles for each customer.
Simple segmentation
Organising your data and unifying customer identity profiles are the first steps toward better segmentation and targeting. From there, a good CDP will automatically surface shared traits among customers that make it simple to segment your audiences and deliver personalised engagement to one and all.
CDPs are an evolution of customer relationship management (CRM) solutions, dedicated to the real-time, highly personalised needs of today’s digital-first teams, while CRMs are a log of known customer data.
However, Data Cloud offers real-time CDP capabilities that power the Customer 360, making it the world's first real-time CRM. By harmonising data that’s updated every millisecond, it enables your teams to meet your customers right where they are like never before.
Purpose and Focus
Data Collection and Unification
Scope of Information
There are hundreds of different CDP solutions on the market, but the differences between most really boils down to two key focus areas: insights and engagement.
An insights CDP software solution integrates and manages customer data from your company’s different systems and ultimately provides analytics and activation to deliver a single view of each customer.
An engagement CDP software solution uses customer data to power real-time personalisation and engagement on digital platforms such as websites and mobile apps.
Data Cloud was created to be the best of both worlds, with real-time CDP capabilities built directly into the core platform.
To choose a CDP, your company’s stakeholders should consider whether an insights CDP or an engagement CDP would be best for your needs and research the few CDP options that include both.
Considering these questions to narrow down the best software selection may also be helpful.
Because CDPs make it easy to manage customer data, they can increase marketing success in countless ways.
For example, a Midwestern comfort food and convenience store chain wanted to deliver more personalised digital experiences to its customers. The company knew its customers wanted more relevant engagement and that it was important to showcase how friendly and relatable its brand and staff were.
After launching a loyalty programme and reaching 2.5 million active customers, the business started using a CDP to manage customer data more easily. Before a CDP was added to the mix, engaging lapsed customers and suppressing nonrelevant email communications was difficult. However, these previously difficult tasks became easy once all the data was brought together with a CDP.
With customer data in its CDP, the business was able to personalise the hero images in each marketing email with a customer’s most recently purchased pizza — a simple adjustment that led to a 16% increase in conversion rates on pizza alone.
Moving forward, customer data platforms must enable all your teams—across sales, service, marketing, commerce, and more—in real-time. This is imperative to your brand’s ability to act instantly while providing a new level of customer interaction.
Enter Data Cloud. By harmonising updated data every millisecond, a Data Cloud enables marketing teams to meet customers right where they are, like never before.
With a Data Cloud solution, the entire suite of CRM products is now powered with real-time CDP capabilities. This means your customer data is continuously updating with data from any of their touchpoints faster than ever.
Data Cloud solutions support marketing, sales, service, commerce, integration platforms, and more. For example, solutions like Tableau can process more than 100 billion customer records a day.
Data Cloud's constantly updated data, massive scale, and unified profiles also enable:
Today’s businesses need data management solutions that make complicated amounts of data easy to use and understand. That’s why customer data platforms are constantly innovating and here to stay.
Now and into the future, it’s essential for digital-first companies to have an intuitive real-time customer data platform with a powerful single source of truth to help guide every customer interaction. With the ability to truly know your customers and personalise real-time customer experiences everywhere, a CDP is an essential part of the modern business’s toolkit.
By unlocking the true power of customer data (and making it easy to access and manage), you can keep customer experience at the centre of all you do across your entire organisation — in marketing and beyond.
See how customer data helps grow your audience — and your business.