Abstract

Recommender systems (RSs) have become a familiar artifact in cyberspace as a vehicle for increasing revenues while deepening customer loyalty and satisfaction. Typically RS are developed in house by companies with a large product line and customer base. However, the structure of RS is often straightforward, and effective systems can be developed at relatively low cost, and thus offered as a marketing service. We discuss the anatomy of a specific recommender system designed for a telecommunication carrier which uses predictive analytics in the form of collaborative filtering techniques to recommend products to users. Collaborative filtering (CF) is based upon the premise that users who have purchased a particular product will have similar preferences to other users who also purchased the product. We discuss and compare three versions of a CF-based recommender system based upon customer purchase history, customer browsing history, and user segments respectively. The results in terms of increased sales suggest that RS offer substantial value as a mobile marketing service. We suggest ways in which RS can be generalized into RS generators for more rapid development and deployment. We then invert the RS perspective from product-centric to user-centric and suggest how this would work in customer targeting for mobile advertising campaigns. We conclude that RS in the largest sense are heavily model-feedback in nature and require increasingly sophisticated automated modeling and predictive analytics capabilities layered on a scalable big data infrastructure.

Highlights

  • A research domain of particular relevance to the confluence of computer science, information system, and marketing disciplines is the design of service systems for mobile applications

  • We have set out in this paper to introduce the concept of Recommender systems (RSs) as a valuable marketing service

  • We have presented a case study of a collaboration filtering-based recommender system, ReCo, for increasing revenues, customer satisfaction and customer loyalty for a large telecommunications carrier

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Summary

Introduction

A research domain of particular relevance to the confluence of computer science, information system, and marketing disciplines is the design of service systems for mobile applications. Much attention has been paid to numerous RS technologies and mobile applications, very little has appeared in the literature about deploying RS as a marketing service in and of itself. It appears that RSs are often very application-specific if not proprietary, and not typically designed for generalized usage across multiple domains. This unnecessarily limits their utility as service systems

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