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The ABCs of CRM

What is CRM?

CRM stands for Customer Relationship Management. It is a strategy used to learn more about customers' needs and behaviors in order to develop stronger relationships with them. Good customer relationships are at the heart of business success. There are many technological components to CRM, but thinking about CRM in primarily technological terms is a mistake. The more useful way to think about CRM is as a strategic process that will help you better understand your customers’ needs and how you can meet those needs and enhance your bottom line at the same time. This strategy depends on bringing together lots of pieces of information about customers and market trends so you can sell and market your products and services more effectively.

What is the goal of CRM?

The idea of CRM is that it helps businesses use technology and human resources to gain insight into the behavior of customers and the value of those customers. With an effective CRM strategy, a business can increase revenues by:

  • providing services and products that are exactly what your customers want
  • offering better customer service
  • cross selling products more effectively
  • helping sales staff close deals faster
  • retaining existing customers and discovering new ones

That sounds rosy. How does it happen?

It doesn't happen by simply buying software and installing it. For CRM to be truly effective, an organization must first understand who its customers are and what their value is over a lifetime. The company must then determine what the needs of its customers are and how best to meet those needs. For example, many financial institutions keep track of customers' life stages in order to market appropriate banking products like mortgages or IRAs to them at the right time to fit their needs.

Next, the organization must look into all of the different ways information about customers comes into a business, where and how this data is stored and how it is currently used. One company, for instance, may interact with customers in a myriad of different ways including mail campaigns, Web sites, brick-and-mortar stores, call centers, mobile sales force staff and marketing and advertising efforts. CRM systems link up each of these points. This collected data flows between operational systems (like sales and inventory systems) and analytical systems that can help sort through these records for patterns. Company analysts can then comb through the data to obtain a holistic view of each customer and pinpoint areas where better services are needed. For example, if someone has a mortgage, a business loan, an IRA and a large commercial checking account with one bank, it behooves the bank to treat this person well each time it has any contact with him or her.

Are there any indications of the need for a CRM project?

You need CRM when it is clear you don’t have an accurate view of who your customers are and what their needs or desires are or will be at any given stage in their lives. If you are losing customers to a competitor, that’s a clear indication that you should improve your understanding of your customers.

How long will it take to get CRM in place?

It depends. If you decide to go with a hosted CRM solution from an application service provider and you are planning to use the software for a specific department like sales, the deployment should be relatively quick – perhaps 30-90 days. However, if you are deploying either a hosted application or an on-premise package (involving the purchase of software licenses upfront) on an enterprise-wide basis (that involves different departments like sales, marketing and operations), you should expect the implementation and training to take months, if not years. The time it takes to put together a well-conceived CRM project depends on the complexity of the project and its components and how well you manage the project.

How much does CRM cost?

Again it depends. A hosted sales automation application can cost between $65 and $150 a month for a basic sales automation package. If you want more sophisticated functionality and a greater level of support, you pay a lot more. An enterprise on-premise CRM package can cost anywhere between several thousand to several millions of dollars, depending again on how many functions you purchase and how many computers or “seats” have access to the software. For instance, one company or department might purchase an email marketing management application or a salesforce automation application, while a larger firm might want to purchase an integrated package that includes a database as well as applications for marketing, sales and customer service and support (via call centers and online). Obviously, the integrated software package is much more expensive.

What are advantages of hosted or on-demand CRM vs. on-premise and vice versa?

In the last few years, the market for on-demand CRM has soared particularly among small and mid-sized companies, largely because of fears about the expense and complexity of large-scale on-premise CRM implementations. And indeed, on-demand CRM is often a good choice for companies that want to implement standard CRM processes, are able to use out-of-the-box data structures, with little or no internal IT support, and don’t require complex or real-time integration with back office systems.

However, on-demand CRM software is not always as simple as the vendors would have you believe. For instance, customization can be problematic and hosted CRM vendors’ API tools cannot provide the degree of integration that is possible with on-site applications. Getting a hosted CRM system working shouldn’t take as long as a traditional software package, but larger and more complex rollouts can still take a year or more. And while the hosted option reduces the need for in-house technical support, upgrades can still sometimes be technically tricky. In addition, some companies with particularly sensitive customer data, such as those in financial services and health care, may not want to relinquish control of their data to a hosted third party for security reasons. As a result, AMR Research predicts that even by 2009, hosted CRM applications will account for only 12 percent of the total U.S. CRM market. [For more on on-demand vs on-premise, read "The Truth about On-Demand CRM."]

What are the keys to successful CRM implentation?

 

  • Develop your customer-focused strategy first before considering what kind of technology you need.
  • Break your CRM project down into manageable pieces by setting up pilot programs and short-term milestones. Start with a pilot project that incorporates all the necessary departments but is small enough and flexible enough to allow tinkering along the way.
  • Make sure your CRM plans include a scalable architecture framework. Think carefully about what is best for your enterprise: a solution that ties together “best of breed” software from several vendors via Web Services or an integrated package of software from one vendor.
  • Don't underestimate how much data you might collect (there will be LOTS) and make sure that if you need to expand systems you'll be able to.
  • Be thoughtful about what data is collected and stored. The impulse will be to grab and then store EVERY piece of data you can, but there is often no reason to store data. Storing useless data wastes time and money.

Which division should run the CRM project?

The biggest returns come from aligning business, CRM and IT strategies across all departments and not just leaving it for one group to run. In fact, it’s best for the business departments who actually use the software to take ownership of the project, with IT and the CIO playing an important advisory role.

What causes CRM projects to fail?

Many things. From the beginning, lack of a communication between everyone in the customer relationship chain can lead to an incomplete picture of the customer. Poor communication can lead to technology being implemented without proper support or buy-in from users. For example, if the sales force isn't completely sold on the system's benefits, they may not input the kind of demographic data that is essential to the program's success. One Fortune 500 company is on its fourth try at a CRM implementation, because it did not do a good job at getting buy-in from its sale force beforehand and then training sales staff once the software was available.

What industries are leading the way in CRM implementations?

As in most leading-edge technology implementations, the financial services and telecommunications industries set the pace in CRM. Other industries are on the CRM bandwagon include consumer goods makers and retailers and high tech firms.

Which industry is behind the curve?

Heavy manufacturing. As a rule, the further an industry is away from the end customer, the less important CRM is.

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CIO Enterprise CRM

Don't have time to read? Listen to the audio version of this article. Download: The Truth About On-Demand CRM.

Strategic Directions: The ROI of CRM: Strategies for Measuring and Maximizing Customer Relationships

Gen X-ers and Gen Y-ers—-a.k.a. echo boomers—-as opposed to nearly 79 million baby boomers think differently and want significantly different things out of life than previous generations. And they are demanding new business models to give them the kinds of customer experiences they seek. Read the story>>

  • All That Data
    Smart CIOs are experimenting with new Web-based technologies to integrate their customer data applications without having to rip out their legacy systems. But before they plunge into the implementation, they need to craft a data management strategy.
    (August 1, 2006 - CIO)
  • The Top Ten  

    Consumer data integration and master data management products in alphabetical order. Read More

     

  • Answering the Call
    Everyone’s had a bad experience with a call center. But now companies are investing in advanced technologies and at-home agents to connect with customers, not put them on hold.
    (June 1, 2006 - CIO)
  • The Politics of Relationship Management

  • Finding a Good Home for Your Data

 

 

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DestinationCRM.com 

Magazines      
DestinationCRM.com CRM Daily CRMGuru eCRMGuide
IntelligentCRM IT Papers.com - CRM Whitepapers  
       
      CRM        August 2006
CRM        July 2006 CRM        June 2006 CRM        May 2006 CRM        April 2006
CRM      March 2006      

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Our topic centers break out and present the content and resources of both CRM Magazine and destinationCRM.com into 9 different areas of CRM. Whether you are looking for information on 'CRM in the Mid-Market', 'Sales Automation', or any of the other categories, we hope that you find these topic centers a useful resource.

 

 

Sales automation streamlines the sales process and helps salespeople and their supervisors manage both customers and the sales cycle through such applications as contact managers, opportunity or pipeline managers, configurators, and order entry. Click Here

 

 

Marketing automation is a set of applications that help marketers manage and simplify the marketing process. Applications include campaign management; email marketing, database marketing and data marts, and marketing encyclopedias. Click Here

 

 

Customer Service/Call Centers: Call centers are the primary conduits between consumers and corporations. Customer Service is the primary business process for creating customer loyalty, promoting customer retention, and ultimately increasing customer value while reducing cost of sales. Click Here

 

 

Analytics covers the process of extrapolating true business intelligence from disparate customer data sources in order to segment, analyze, and serve the consumer in the most efficient manner possible. Additionally, analytics is also getting predictive, empowering businesses to identify how a customer is likely to respond to different sales and marketing campaigns. Click Here

 

 

Channel Management is the process of extending an enterprise's internal knowledge resources and business processes to its suppliers and partners outside the company's intranet. Most typically channel management is used to describe the way a company interacts with its sales channel but its definition can also be extended to other partner relationships beyond the sales process. Applications and solutions are designed for streamlining and automating the back end/supply chain processes. Click Here

 

 

Integration involves tying together CRM applications with other IT systems inside either a mid-market company or an enterprise environment. This can include integrating with current ERP systems, databases, Internet and intranet applications, human resources and employee management software and partner and supply chain systems. Click Here

 

 

SMB/Mid-market CRM covers strategies, products & Services targeted at businesses or a division within a corporation with $1 billion in revenue or less. Click Here

 

 

Enterprise CRM covers strategies, products & services primarily targeted at global organizations with over $1 billion in revenue such as the Global 3,500. Click Here

 

 

Industry News refers to corporate affairs of CRM vendors and the end user community such as executive promotions, financial results, acquisitions and other business and financial related moves. This also covers expansion plans, market research and partnerships. Click Here

 

 

Vertical CRM Solutions are software application modules or suites that are designed to serve one specific vertical market or industry, for example, financial services, healthcare, government, or manufacturing. Click Here
 

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How Sales Teams Should Use CRM
Different positions within a sales force require different functions from an SFA system, and tailoring to fit those functions is a big part of successful SFA strategies.

8 Email Marketing Tips
Experts provide commonsense advice about 'one of the most powerful and yet one of the most dangerous mediums of communication.'

CRM's High Wireless Act
Wireless immediacy allows enterprises to pursue CRM simplicity with powerful rewards for everyday functions.

11 Ways to Ensure CRM Success
We asked consultants to list some common CRM mistakes, and to then advise readers on how to avoid them.

The Quality Is Missing in Data Quality
Integration of marketing and sales data is still the biggest challenge facing businesses; a survey at DM Days reveals that companies have tuned out the breakdown-the-silos mantra.
 

The 2005 CRM Elite, Part 2
It is impressive when CRM vendors promise business performance improvements never before possible, but it is more impressive when their products actually deliver on those promises. The CRM Elite awards showcase six companies that have achieved significant returns on their technology investments that have either met or surpassed their expectations.

The 2005 CRM Market Leaders, Part 1
The CRM industry over the course of the year grappled with well-publicized mergers and acquisitions, executive turnover, and product line restructuring. Still, the industry's impact--especially in the small and medium business markets--is growing more pervasive across industries and within organizations. With an eye on ROI, companies are benefiting from lower startup costs, shorter implementation times, ease of use, and more robust analytics, from both the on-demand (hosted) delivery model and on-premise solutions. Spearheading these developments are the 2005 CRM Market Leaders--read on to see how they are driving the market and how they stack up against the competition.

CLICK HERE to view complete Market Leaders chart.

Click here to read Part 2.

12 Tips for Generating Rich Data
Here, a guide to uncovering the bounty buried in your data warehouse.

'Information at Your Fingertips'
These five business drivers will propel real-time CRM.

CRM's 7 Deadly Warning Bells
Between May 2004 and June 2005 CRM magazine checked in every two to three weeks with Churchill Downs Inc. to gauge the progress of the company's multiyear, multimillion CRM initiative. Vice President of CRM and Technology Solutions Atique Shah's CRM initiative diary shed light on the ups and downs that he and his team encountered during a hectic, and ultimately winning, year one. In the course of these discussions Shah regularly mentioned CRM's warning bells, some of which sounded, some of which remained blessedly silent. We return to the site of the Kentucky Derby's parent company to examine the seven warning bells and to flesh out year-one lessons that will help other CRM project managers improve their odds of success.

A Little Help From Your Friends
A new crop of services firms helps solve data-related frustrations.

100 Proven CRM Ideas, Part 1
...successful and disastrous: 90 bright ideas for your CRM strategy and 10 dim ones to avoid. Edited by David Myron

Barriers to CRM Success
Tech obstacles to CRM success can be considerable, but others include process and people concerns--read here about two companies' experiences.

BEST PRACTICES in SPEECH TECHNOLOGIES
for Contact Centers. Our Server

BEST PRACTICES in Web Self-Service. Our Server

 

 

        

What is CRM?

by Bob Thompson, CRMGuru.com

he concepts of customer relationship management have been in the air ever since one caveman had a choice of buying an arrowhead from either Og or Thag, but CRM as a term gained currency in the mid-1990s. Market analysts squabble over the exact figure, but all agree that in the next few years companies will pour billions of dollars into CRM solutions—software and services designed to help businesses more effectively manage customer relationships through any direct or indirect channel a customer opts to use.

So why, with the market for CRM technology exploding, is the most common question asked at CRMGuru.com "What is CRM?" Probably because if you ask three CRM experts, you'll get five different answers.

We put the question to a panel of CRM experts—the "gurus" working with CRMGuru.com—to weed out idiosyncratic spin and whittle CRM down to its essence:

Customer relationship management (CRM) is a business strategy to acquire and manage the most valuable customer relationships. CRM requires a customer-centric business philosophy and culture to support effective marketing, sales and service processes. CRM applications can enable effective customer relationship management, provided that an enterprise has the right leadership, strategy and culture.

There you go. Simple question, simple answer, right? Ah, what is simple is not always easy. As many business executives and CRM project managers can attest, effective CRM is about as simple as the answer to how to lose weight—eat less and exercise more—and just as easy to do.


Customer-Centric: The Starting Point

Let's spread that definition of CRM out on the table here. How exactly does a company create a "customer-centric business philosophy and culture?" Hint: not with a software package.

CRM—at least the successful, useful and profitable kind—always starts with a business strategy, which then drives changes in the organization and work processes, which are in turn enabled by information technology. The reverse never works. Never. We'll send you a case of champagne for every company you can find that automated their way to a new business strategy.

Projects that focus first on technology, rather than business objectives, are destined for failure, according to both extensive best practices research and the sob stories at O'Malley's Happy Hour. A customer-centric business, however, is perfectly poised to reap significant benefits using CRM technology.

Now, the strategy part of CRM isn't new. Savvy business executives have always understood the importance of focusing on customers with the best potential for sales and profits and providing good service so they'll come back again and again. Notice that you need techno-toys for none of this. Consider a successful small business: The business owner and the staff work hard to provide personal, high-quality service, building a loyal customer base over time. Computers optional.

So why has CRM bulled its way to a billion-dollar industry? Bottom line: Power has shifted to customers, who stand astride three powerful currents:

  • The failure of enterprise resource (ERP) planning systems to bestow a lasting competitive advantage for companies. Your back office is fully automated? Nice. So?
     
  • The cycle of innovation-to-production-to-obsolescence has accelerated, leading to an abundance of options for customers and a shrinking market window for vendors.
     
  • Internet-surfing customers have a far easier time collecting information about competing suppliers and can switch to another vendor at the click of a mouse.

With product advantages reduced or neutralized in many industries because of increased "commoditization," the customer relationship, itself, is the focus of competitive advantage. For larger businesses, the neighborhood boutique approach is impractical. CRM technology enables a systematic way of managing customer relationships on a larger scale.


The Customer Relationship Lifecycle

Traditionally—defined as "before you realized what the Internet was all about"—enterprise employees were the primary users of applications designated "CRM." Then e-business or—a buzzword flavor of the month—"eCRM" applications were introduced to allow enterprises to interact directly with customers via corporate web sites, e-commerce storefronts and self-service applications. Starting in 1999, partner relationship management applications hit the market, designed to support channel partners and other intermediaries between an enterprise and its end customers.

These applications support the following business processes involved in the customer relationship lifecycle:

  • Marketing. Targeting prospects and acquiring new customers through data mining, campaign management and lead distribution. Remember, the emphasis here is on long-term relationship value, not quick hit.
     
  • Sales. Closing business with effective selling processes using proposal generators, configurators, knowledge management tools, contact managers and forecasting aids—all without uttering The Eight Words That Kill A Sale: "Let me get back to you on that."
     
  • E-commerce. In the Internet Age—welcome to it—selling processes should transfer seamlessly into purchasing transactions and be done quickly, conveniently and at the lowest cost. All customers should have one face with your company, no matter which touch-point they choose to use.
     
  • Service. Handling post-sales service and support issues with call center applications or web-based customer self-service options. We said "handling," not "sloughing off to an inadequate FAQ page."

CRM is a business strategy to create and sustain long-term, profitable customer relationships. Successful CRM initiatives start with a business philosophy that aligns company activities around customer needs. Only then can CRM technology be used as it should be used—as a critical enabling tool of the processes required to turn strategy into business results. •

 

Bob Thompson is CEO of CustomerThink Corporation, an independent Customer Management research and publishing firm. He is also founder of CRMGuru.com, the world's largest industry portal dedicated to helping business leaders improve customer management success. Since 1998, Mr. Thompson has researched the leading industry trends, including partner relationship management, customer value networks and customer experience management. In January 2000, he launched CRMGuru.com, which now serves 300,000 business leaders monthly through its web site and email newsletters. Mr. Thompson is a popular keynote speaker at conferences worldwide, and has written numerous articles and papers including his most recent report, Customer Experience Management: A Winning Business Strategy for a Flat World. Before starting CustomerThink, he had 15 years of experience in the IT industry, including positions as business unit executive and IT strategy consultant at IBM. You can contact Thompson at bob@crmguru.com.

Read other articles and interviews by Bob Thompson >>

 

 

    

Too Many Metrics Can Spoil Your Strategy


By Olga Botero, C&S Customers and Strategy

A good customer strategy needs to be measured.

How many times have we all heard that? Every time we read a new book on marketing or customer management, we see a different metric. Customer satisfaction, income, frequency, ARPU, churn, new customers, ROI, ROC, number of customer complaints, average number of complaints per customer. I could fill pages and pages of acronyms and metrics. On top of everything, we have all the management and marketing gurus telling us we need to measure. Peter Drucker told us many years ago, "If you can't measure it, you can't manage it."

He is right. Part of defining a good customer strategy is defining how we measure if it is working. And to know if it is working, we need to know the objectives of the customer strategy, so we can measure against them. But most companies make it almost impossible. They measure too many things. The multitude of metrics used makes it impossible for a company to act on them.

During the past eight years, I lead the customer management group at a leading telecommunications company in Colombia, where I reviewed and work with a set of metrics that allowed us to take fast and knowledgeable decisions in a very competitive market. We became obsessed with having information to see the results of our customer centric strategy. Measuring was just a part of life. Measuring important things, that is. Not measuring anything and everything.

At first, we all proposed around 180 customer centric KPIs, including average revenue per customer, total revenue per customer, average margin per customer, total margin per customer, average domestic long distance revenue per customer, average international long distance per customer, average number of complaints per customer, average income increase per customer per month, anything average per customer and everything total per customer. The list was just unimaginable. Then we realized that we needed to measure only three things : profitability, loyalty and satisfaction. One type of measurement for each of the three, measured consistently over time.

Obsession
Being obsessed with measuring what was important contributed to three improvements: working toward operational excellence; getting positive numbers after the second year in business (and three years before our original business plan; and getting 37 percent market share in less than five years. The results in customer satisfaction and retention were also great. We were leaders among all long-distance and mobile companies in Colombia. They are amazing results. We used measuring as "the gear" for the strategy.

Why do we need to measure? We need to measure to have focus, to have direction and to be coherent. Even to justify our budgets. We need to document real results compared to what we thought we were going to have.

A good set of metrics should be many things:
  • It should be simple.
     
  • It should be a small set that can be easily processed and understood, avoiding overload. (At Gartner's 2006 CRM Summit, analysts recommended having five to 12 metrics.)
     
  • It should be measured by the person who can act on it and can control its results.
     
  • It should include positive things, not just such negative ones as the number of complaints a customer has made.
     
  • It should be collected in a cost-efficient manner.
     
  • And it should be used—not just presented on a report one reads once and keeps in a file.
     

Customer-centricity
What do we need to measure in a customer-centric strategy? A customer-centric strategy is focused basically on two things: customers and money. That is, satisfying the customer with the experience the company provides and positively affecting the company's profitability. Remember that the experience is a combination of rational and emotional aspects. It includes the way a customer feels about the brand and about the company and what the customer thinks every time he or she interacts with the company. It is the consistency between brand and execution, between what the company says it is and what it does.

Having a positive impact on the company's profitability means incrementing income or diminishing costs associated with providing a satisfactory experience to customers. We all know that it can be done by acquiring more customers, or retaining and growing high-valued customers. Measuring your strategy should take both elements into account. It should measure customer satisfaction with the experience, and it should measure the impact on profitability.

Measuring customer satisfaction with the experience is not just conducting a satisfaction survey or collecting customer feedback on specific processes. It is understanding what drives the customer behavior. It is understanding what the customer thinks, feels and says about the brand and if that is consistent with the company's deliveries. Metrics such as customer satisfaction in general or customer satisfaction at specific processes are important. But they need to be congruent with brand metrics such as brand equity, top on mind or top of heart. Customer retention metrics cannot be forgotten. Measuring buying frequency, contact frequency, churn are also important.

Measuring the impact on the company's profitability includes many customer value metrics. Metrics such as average revenue per user, customer lifetime value, share of customer's wallet and a customer's EBITDA ("earnings before all the bad stuff) are all very important. What a company has to do is select just a few of them and track them consistently over time, so the company can act on them.

A customer-centric strategy needs to be measured. Remember those wise words: If you do not measure it, you cannot manage it. Just make it simple and practical. Think customer and money. Focus on satisfaction with the experience and impact on profitability. Measure those metrics you choose and act on them. Do not just let them sit in your office begging you to use them.
 

 

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