
We’ve written a number of posts suggesting how telecom and cable providers can use reliable consumer credit data to improve acquisition, prospecting, retention and risk mitigation, but we haven’t yet covered collections. So here is the first in what will probably be several collections-related entries. Please let us know what you think. What’s in your data mix? As you know, the ranks of “skips” or delinquent accounts have grown considerably over the past few years. This phenomenon has compelled many telecom and cable companies to reevaluate the quality and use of their skip tracing data. What they’ve discovered is that contact data alone—current address, previous addresses, land line and cell phone numbers—may not be enough to recover lost payments. Which brings us to the missing ingredient. Reliable consumer credit data Combining fresh contact data AND reliable consumer credit data enables you to recapture more funds from more delinquent accounts. Adding credit history to the mix broadens your view of consumers’ overall financial health, allowing you easily distinguish between those who can pay and those who can’t. What the data can reveal Assuming your consumer credit data comes from a reputable, knowledgeable source, you’ll be able to immediately learn a lot about your customers’ behaviors and circumstances, including: Attempts to open a new account while they’re still overdue with you Recently declared bankruptcies Once delinquent customers who now have the ability to pay Tying in “triggers” Some communications providers use collection tools called “triggers.” When tied to a consumer credit report, triggers alert you to new information, including cell or landline number, address, employer, or changes in financial status, such as when bankcard funds become newly available. Quality credit data + tools like triggers + a reliable data partner = a surefire recipe for collections success. Collections not your focus? Check out the post on “Using Data Intelligence to Reduce Churn, Build Loyalty and Keep the Right Customers.”

By: Kristan Frend Imagine you’re on the #1 ranked relay swim team at the World Championships and you’re leading off. You finish your leg of the race with the team in first place. As your third teammate approaches the wall, your team is in first by a full body length. You’re on pace to set a new world record. Yet the anchor of your team is nowhere to be found, ultimately resulting in your team being disqualified. If only your fourth teammate would have made it to the blocks in time…. When you take a step back and look at your fraud risk management solutions, do you ever feel like you have all of the tools and processes available yet feel like the anchor is missing? Perhaps it’s time to reexamine your internal resources. You may have an assembly of sophisticated and robust online fraud detection tools from vendors, but you may be missing a critical piece if you’re not also effectively leveraging internal data. Through our work with clients, we’re found that it is not uncommon for organizations to manage the customer relationship through different departments or silos within the organization. All too often there is less than optimal coordination between these functional areas in taking advantage of their own internal negative data to combat application fraud. Additionally some organizations may have negative internal data but do not incorporate the check within their verification or risk based authentication tool, creating multiple steps and operational inefficiencies. One of the ways to overcome some of these issues is by incorporating internal negative data within an automated front-end check. Once loss data is loaded into a historical database, the next time that name, phone, address, driver’s license or SSN reappears on a new application, the data element is immediately identified as one associated with a previous loss. The negative data is securely stored for only your organization’s use and is not shared with users outside of your organization.

TRMA’s Spring Conference scheduled for February 22-23, 2011 As you probably already know, the mission of the Telecommunications Risk Management Association (TRMA) is to “drive positive change in order to reduce fraud and optimize risk for the benefit of the industry, individual members and paying customers.” As part of that mission, TRMA is committed to bringing together risk management professionals several times a year for information-sharing forums. The organization’s 2011 Spring Conference is scheduled for February 22-23, 2011 at the Treasure Island Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas. Experian representation at the TRMA Conference At Experian, we’re committed to investing in new technologies in order to offer our communications customers the most advanced fraud prevention and risk management tools. Being a part of TRMA helps us better understand how we can best respond to existing and emerging requirements to one of the key industries we serve. And it allows us to share what we see as up-and-coming trends as well as new developments in risk management. Experian Decision Analytics personnel are scheduled to present at TRMA’s 2011 Spring Conference, as follows: Jim Nowell, Business Consultant TRMA Learning Lab – The SimTel Business Game Tuesday, February 22, 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Jim’s lively Learning Lab will have several small teams of risk managers working together to solve problems for a fictitious Telco portfolio. The results of the game will be delivered on Wednesday morning at 10:45 AM. Linda Haran, Senior Director, Strategy and Marketing Economic Update Wednesday, February 23, 9:30 – 10:30 a.m. Linda serves as one-half of this panel, reviewing the historical linkages between credit conditions and the economy with an emphasis on how they relate to telecommunications. Greg Carmean, Program Manager, Small Business Credit Share Small Business Panel Wednesday, February 23, 11:15 a.m. – 12:15 p.m. Greg serves as one-half of this panel, discussing best practices for small business risk assessment, such as employing a blend of consumer and commercial data to combat fraud. Jeff Bernstein, Executive Strategic Consultant Leveraging Technology to Maximize Returns on Outsourced Collections Wednesday, February 23, 2:00 – 2:45 p.m. Jeff serves as one-half of this panel, discussing ways to avoid the “perfect storm” of rising delinquency rates, lower liquidation and staff drowning in the tidal wave of bad debt. We hope to see you there More details on each of these presentations will follow this post in the coming week. We look forward to seeing you at TRMA’s Spring Conference. If you can’t attend (or even if you can), be sure to follow us on Twitter for live conference updates, and check back here for post-conference blog posts.
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We’ve written a number of posts suggesting how telecom and cable providers can use reliable consumer credit data to improve acquisition, prospecting, retention and risk mitigation, but we haven’t yet covered collections. So here is the first in what will probably be several collections-related entries. Please let us know what you think. What’s in your data mix? As you know, the ranks of “skips” or delinquent accounts have grown considerably over the past few years. This phenomenon has compelled many telecom and cable companies to reevaluate the quality and use of their skip tracing data. What they’ve discovered is that contact data alone—current address, previous addresses, land line and cell phone numbers—may not be enough to recover lost payments. Which brings us to the missing ingredient. Reliable consumer credit data Combining fresh contact data AND reliable consumer credit data enables you to recapture more funds from more delinquent accounts. Adding credit history to the mix broadens your view of consumers’ overall financial health, allowing you easily distinguish between those who can pay and those who can’t. What the data can reveal Assuming your consumer credit data comes from a reputable, knowledgeable source, you’ll be able to immediately learn a lot about your customers’ behaviors and circumstances, including: Attempts to open a new account while they’re still overdue with you Recently declared bankruptcies Once delinquent customers who now have the ability to pay Tying in “triggers” Some communications providers use collection tools called “triggers.” When tied to a consumer credit report, triggers alert you to new information, including cell or landline number, address, employer, or changes in financial status, such as when bankcard funds become newly available. Quality credit data + tools like triggers + a reliable data partner = a surefire recipe for collections success. Collections not your focus? Check out the post on “Using Data Intelligence to Reduce Churn, Build Loyalty and Keep the Right Customers.”

By: Kristan Frend Imagine you’re on the #1 ranked relay swim team at the World Championships and you’re leading off. You finish your leg of the race with the team in first place. As your third teammate approaches the wall, your team is in first by a full body length. You’re on pace to set a new world record. Yet the anchor of your team is nowhere to be found, ultimately resulting in your team being disqualified. If only your fourth teammate would have made it to the blocks in time…. When you take a step back and look at your fraud risk management solutions, do you ever feel like you have all of the tools and processes available yet feel like the anchor is missing? Perhaps it’s time to reexamine your internal resources. You may have an assembly of sophisticated and robust online fraud detection tools from vendors, but you may be missing a critical piece if you’re not also effectively leveraging internal data. Through our work with clients, we’re found that it is not uncommon for organizations to manage the customer relationship through different departments or silos within the organization. All too often there is less than optimal coordination between these functional areas in taking advantage of their own internal negative data to combat application fraud. Additionally some organizations may have negative internal data but do not incorporate the check within their verification or risk based authentication tool, creating multiple steps and operational inefficiencies. One of the ways to overcome some of these issues is by incorporating internal negative data within an automated front-end check. Once loss data is loaded into a historical database, the next time that name, phone, address, driver’s license or SSN reappears on a new application, the data element is immediately identified as one associated with a previous loss. The negative data is securely stored for only your organization’s use and is not shared with users outside of your organization.

TRMA’s Spring Conference scheduled for February 22-23, 2011 As you probably already know, the mission of the Telecommunications Risk Management Association (TRMA) is to “drive positive change in order to reduce fraud and optimize risk for the benefit of the industry, individual members and paying customers.” As part of that mission, TRMA is committed to bringing together risk management professionals several times a year for information-sharing forums. The organization’s 2011 Spring Conference is scheduled for February 22-23, 2011 at the Treasure Island Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas. Experian representation at the TRMA Conference At Experian, we’re committed to investing in new technologies in order to offer our communications customers the most advanced fraud prevention and risk management tools. Being a part of TRMA helps us better understand how we can best respond to existing and emerging requirements to one of the key industries we serve. And it allows us to share what we see as up-and-coming trends as well as new developments in risk management. Experian Decision Analytics personnel are scheduled to present at TRMA’s 2011 Spring Conference, as follows: Jim Nowell, Business Consultant TRMA Learning Lab – The SimTel Business Game Tuesday, February 22, 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Jim’s lively Learning Lab will have several small teams of risk managers working together to solve problems for a fictitious Telco portfolio. The results of the game will be delivered on Wednesday morning at 10:45 AM. Linda Haran, Senior Director, Strategy and Marketing Economic Update Wednesday, February 23, 9:30 – 10:30 a.m. Linda serves as one-half of this panel, reviewing the historical linkages between credit conditions and the economy with an emphasis on how they relate to telecommunications. Greg Carmean, Program Manager, Small Business Credit Share Small Business Panel Wednesday, February 23, 11:15 a.m. – 12:15 p.m. Greg serves as one-half of this panel, discussing best practices for small business risk assessment, such as employing a blend of consumer and commercial data to combat fraud. Jeff Bernstein, Executive Strategic Consultant Leveraging Technology to Maximize Returns on Outsourced Collections Wednesday, February 23, 2:00 – 2:45 p.m. Jeff serves as one-half of this panel, discussing ways to avoid the “perfect storm” of rising delinquency rates, lower liquidation and staff drowning in the tidal wave of bad debt. We hope to see you there More details on each of these presentations will follow this post in the coming week. We look forward to seeing you at TRMA’s Spring Conference. If you can’t attend (or even if you can), be sure to follow us on Twitter for live conference updates, and check back here for post-conference blog posts.