A firm that sells software services has been piloting a new product and has records of 500 customers who have either bought the services or decided not to. The target value is the estimated profit from each sale (excluding sales costs). The global mean is about $2500. However, the cost of the sales effort is not cheap—the company figures it comes to $2500 for each of the 500 customers (whether they buy or not). The firm developed a predictive model in hopes of being able to identify the top spenders in the future. The lift and decile charts for the validation set are shown below:
If the firm wants the average profit on each sale to roughly double the sales effort cost, and applies an appropriate cutoff with this predictive model to a new set of 1000 leads, how far down the new list of 1000 should it proceed (how many deciles)?
Still considering the new list of 1000 leads, if the company applies this predictive model with a lower cutoff of $2500, how far should it proceed down the ranked leads, in terms of deciles?
Why use this two-stage process for predicting sales—why not simply develop a model for predicting profit for the 1000 new leads?