| What do different Business Models mean? |
Predictive modelsPredictive models analyse past performance to assess how likely a customer is to exhibit a specific behavior in the future in order to improve marketing effectiveness. This category also encompasses models that seek out subtle data patterns to answer questions about customer performance, such as fraud detection models. Predictive models often perform calculations during live transactions, for example, to evaluate the risk or opportunity of a given customer or transaction, in order to guide a decision. Descriptive modelsDescriptive models quantify relationships in data in a way that is often used to classify customers or prospects into groups. Unlike predictive models that focus on predicting a single customer behavior (such as credit risk), descriptive models identify many different relationships between customers or products. Descriptive models do not rank-order customers by their likelihood of taking a particular action the way predictive models do. Descriptive models can be used, for example, to categorise customers by their product preferences and life stage. Descriptive modeling tools can be utilised to develop further models that can simulate large number of individualised agents and make predictions.
Decision modelsDecision models describe the relationship between all the elements of a decision — the known data (including results of predictive models), the decision and the forecast results of the decision — in order to predict the results of decisions involving many variables. These models can be used in optimisation, maximising certain outcomes while minimising others. Decision models are generally used to develop decision logic or a set of business rules that will produce the desired action for every customer or circumstance.
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