Churn prediction in online gambling
This work addresses customer retention for online gambling businesses, but it is incremental as it applies existing neural network methods to a new domain-specific dataset.
The paper tackles churn prediction in online gambling by formalizing it as a binary classification task and proposing a recurrent neural network-based algorithm, finding that specific architectures (nBRC, LSTM, GRU) optimize different metrics like precision, recall, and accuracy, and that model performance remains stable over time but varies with one-off events.
In business retention, churn prevention has always been a major concern. This work contributes to this domain by formalizing the problem of churn prediction in the context of online gambling as a binary classification task. We also propose an algorithmic answer to this problem based on recurrent neural network. This algorithm is tested with online gambling data that have the form of time series, which can be efficiently processed by recurrent neural networks. To evaluate the performances of the trained models, standard machine learning metrics were used, such as accuracy, precision and recall. For this problem in particular, the conducted experiments allowed to assess that the choice of a specific architecture depends on the metric which is given the greatest importance. Architectures using nBRC favour precision, those using LSTM give better recall, while GRU-based architectures allow a higher accuracy and balance two other metrics. Moreover, further experiments showed that using only the more recent time-series histories to train the networks decreases the quality of the results. We also study the performances of models learned at a specific instant $t$, at other times $t^{\prime} > t$. The results show that the performances of the models learned at time $t$ remain good at the following instants $t^{\prime} > t$, suggesting that there is no need to refresh the models at a high rate. However, the performances of the models were subject to noticeable variance due to one-off events impacting the data.