What Does Your Credit-Card Company Know About You?

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What Does Your Credit-Card Company Know About You?

Whether it be debt collection or credit-card solicitation, those in the card industry know everything about you. They know where you shop; they know what you buy; and they know what each purchase means. The card industry has built psychological profiles to figure you out. And figure you out it has.

From the New York Times Magazine:

The exploration into cardholders’ minds hit a breakthrough in 2002, when J. P. Martin, a math-loving executive at Canadian Tire, decided to analyze almost every piece of information his company had collected from credit-card transactions the previous year. Canadian Tire’s stores sold electronics, sporting equipment, kitchen supplies and automotive goods and issued a credit card that could be used almost anywhere. Martin could often see precisely what cardholders were purchasing, and he discovered that the brands we buy are the windows into our souls — or at least into our willingness to make good on our debts. His data indicated, for instance, that people who bought cheap, generic automotive oil were much more likely to miss a credit-card payment than someone who got the expensive, name-brand stuff. People who bought carbon-monoxide monitors for their homes or those little felt pads that stop chair legs from scratching the floor almost never missed payments. Anyone who purchased a chrome-skull car accessory or a “Mega Thruster Exhaust System” was pretty likely to miss paying his bill eventually.

And this one:

Data-driven psychologists are now in high demand, and the industry is using them not only to screen out risky debtors but also to determine which cardholders need a phone call to persuade them to mail in a check. Most of the major credit-card companies have set up systems to comb through cardholders’ data for signs that someone is going to stop making payments. Are cardholders suddenly logging in at 1 in the morning? It might signal sleeplessness due to anxiety. Are they using their cards for groceries? It might mean they are trying to conserve their cash. Have they started using their cards for therapy sessions? Do they call the card company in the middle of the day, when they should be at work? What do they say when a customer-service representative asks how they’re feeling? Are their sighs long or short? Do they respond better to a comforting or bullying tone?

Enjoy the rest of the story here.

http://www.creditmattersblog.com/2009/05/what-does-your-cred...

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Your state your county. I

Your state your county. I see people get sued by their credit card companies and the suit is filed in the county they live. texas merchant accounts

2002?!? That's laughable.

Whoever wrote this article is a patsy. To claim data mining credit card information started in 2002 with some Canadian tire company is so laughable it's pathetic. The issuing banks themselves analyze purchasing/payment/web/customer service/etc behavior using much, much, much more insidious methods than what is described in this article. Prior to 2002 a bank I worked at was running data analytics on a supercomputer which would've made the Department of Energy blush. The database architect was Lockheed Martin. Things have progressed significantly from then.

The article makes no mention of data "overlays" from external sources. Sources such as the Post Office, the Census Bureau, and some other places you'd likely be very unhappy about. These overlays used to be done at the zip code or zip+4 level. Now some are done at the individual person level.

As someone who knows a great deal about how credit cards and banks work, here's what I've decided is best for me. One, credit cards are for emergencies only. I buy everything I possibly can with cash. Two, if it's humanly possible I pay off any charges BEFORE the end of the month. Credit card interest is calculated on the average of the beginning balance and the ending balance. If the ending balance is zero then they can't charge you any interest at all even though you've used their money for a few weeks. Three, never be in a position where it's necessary to reply to a "promotional offer" from a credit card company. There's just a laundry list of tricks they can pick from to bury in the offers.

Thank you

I think it's hilarious, we are in this category exactly: "People who bought carbon-monoxide monitors for their homes or those little felt pads that stop chair legs from scratching the floor almost never missed payments." We have the monitors AND the little felt pads! LOL!

But now that you bring this up, I'm thinking it's time we switch to cash.

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I love Dave Ramsey!

He's great! I read his Total Money Makeover and thought about getting rid of the cards then. We just use them for easy bookkeeping and Discover gives money back...so it's a question of desirable anonymity versus convenience.

Direct Link

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/17/magazine/17credit-t.html?p...

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