CRM Notes MBA 4th Semester
CRM Notes MBA 4th Semester
CRM Notes MBA 4th Semester
Chapter-1
Introduction to CRM
Developing close, cooperative relationship with customers is the requirement of modern
business organizations. In the current era of intense competition and demand oriented
markets, there is paradigm shift in the marketing strategies of business organizations,
which were earlier focused on product/service called as product/service centric approach
but
now
it
has
been
shifted
to
customer
centric
approach.
Due to this customer centric approach of marketing, Customer Relationship Management
(CRM) has attracted the attention of marketers in order to focus on cooperative and
collaborative relationship between the firm and its customers. This type of relationship is
necessary from both growth and customer loyalty perspective of organization. Now a
days CRM has become a globally recognized business practice
CRM means many different things to different people. It is possible to develop a greater
understanding of it by looking at its origins and the principles that drove its development.
In the marketing literature the term Customer Relationship Management is defined in
different manner by different market researchers and academicians
According to Shani and Chalasani(1992), defines Customer Relationship Management as
an integrated effort to identify, maintain and build up a network with individual
consumers and to continuously strengthen the network for mutual benefit of both sides,
through interactive, individualized and value added contacts over a long period of time
Another Narrow perspective of Vavra(1992), CRM is customer retention in which a
variety of after marketing tactics is used for customer bonding or staying in touch after
the sale is made.
According to Gronroos, CRM is marketing strategy to establish, maintain and enhance
relationship with customers and other partners, at a profit so that the objectives of the
parties involved are met. This is achieved by a mutual exchange and fulfillment of
promises.
We define CRM as Customer Relationship Management as a comprehensive marketing
strategy to improve marketing productivity which can be achieved by increasing
marketing efficiency and enhancing marketing effectiveness through a process of
acquiring, retaining and partnering with selective customers to create superior mutual
value for the parties involved.
As implied in the above definition, the objective of CRM is to create superior mutual
value for both the business organizations and the customers. This will help in improving
marketing productivity which is achieved by increasing marketing efficiency and by
enhancing marketing effectiveness. The aspects, marketing efficiency and effectiveness
have long term orientation for an organization as it is concerned with cooperative and
collaborative relationship between the firm and its customers and other marketing actors.
Emergence of CRM
Looking back at a snapshot history, we see the following clear developments and
progression in marketing strategies over the last four decades:
1960s: Era of Mass Marketing, is market coverage strategy in which a firm
decides to ignore market segment differences and go after the whole market with one
offer. It is type of marketing of a product/service to a wider audience. The idea is to
broadcast a message that will reach the largest number of people possible. Traditionally
mass marketing has focused on radio, television and newspapers as the medium used to
reach this broad audience. By reaching the largest audience possible exposure to the
product is maximized. In theory this would directly correlate with a larger number of
sales or buy in to the product. As the name says its mass so your trying to get your as
many as you can.
1970s: Era of Segmentation, Market segmentation divides a market for goods
or services into distinct subdivisions. It takes a vague undistinguished group of
consumers and uncovers those who have similar needs, those who make purchases or
use products or services in the same. A market segment is a subgroup of people sharing
similar consumer characteristics. And because each segment shares the same attitudes
and behaviors, they generally respond the same to a given marketing strategy.
1980s: Era of Niche Marketing, is a marketing strategy where a subset of the
market in which a specific product is focused with a price range, production quality and
the demographics aimed at specific market needs thereby intended to impact.
1990s: Era of Relationship Marketing, It is a strategy designed to foster
customer loyalty, interaction and long-term engagement. It is designed to develop strong
connections with customers by providing them with information directly suited to their
needs and interests and by promoting open communication. This approach often results
in increased word-of-mouth activity, repeat business and a willingness on the
customers part to provide information to the organization.
Year
1960
1970
1980
Era
The Era of Mass Marketing
The Era of Segmentation
The Era of Niche Marketing
1990
The
Era
Marketing
of
Apporach
Transactional Marketing
about building and maintaining the long term customer relationship, creating a sense of
loyalty by providing the value product and service for mutual benefit.
This figure shows that 4Ps which earlier took an important place in marketing strategies
has changed to Customer Centric approach which are based upon expectation,
satisfaction, delight and cooperation etc.
1. Product
1. Customer Expectation
2. Price
2. Customer Satisfaction
3. Place
3. Customer Delight
4. Promotion
4. Customer Cooperation
5. Customer Retention
6. Customer TouchPoints
7. Customer Behaviour
8. Customer Collaboration
Principles of CRM
CRM in effect implies building long term relationship with customers and understanding
their needs and responding through multiple products and services through multiple
channels. CRM should finally enable a targeted mutually beneficial profitable
relationship with individuals and groups
Differentiate Customers
Differentiate Offerings
Keep Existing Customers
Maximize Lifetime Value
Increase Loyalty
1. Differentiating Customers: Most CRM systems allow for very little freedom to
customize to specific industry verticals. Since the customer needs emerge from
the products and offering of the industry, CRM system should respond to the
customer needs. Understandings each customer becomes particularly important.
And the same customer reactions to a cellular company operator may be quite
different as compared to a car dealer. Besides for the same product or a service
not all customers can be treated alike and CRM need to differentiate between a
high value and a low value customer.
Low value customer requiring with potential high value in near future.
The suspect represents the segment of the market who have the potential to become
prospective customers. Enquiries whether they are intentional or casual provide for a
focused approach in the process of acquisition. Proper responses to enquiries are likely to
result in customer acquisition.
The lapsed customers should not be neglected. They can be booked as new customers if
the reasons for lapses are rectified suitably. The reasons for lapses are dealt under the
recovery of lapsed customers. Once a customer has purchased something to fulfill a
specific need and has then stopped buying from an organization be become a lapsed
customer and he should be encouraged to become customer again, by marketing the
organizations new offerings to fulfill the customers emerging new needs and so on.
The competitors customers, competitors lapsed customers, competitors former
customers and competitors enquiries are major attractions for acquisitions. Customer
who always prefer more values for every time, are naturally inclined to opt for
alternatives. In the context the competing organizations can acquire the competitors
customers if the customers perceive that they would be rewarded with more value for
money.
Referrals play a significant role and provide a strong base for new customer acquisition.
It is likely that fresh customers will rely heavily on referrals rather than the organizations
own promotion efforts. Referrals may be from within the organizations or from anyone
outside connected to the organizations including suppliers, bankers, consultants etc.
Existing buyers may also be targeted for acquisition in the event of the organization
expanding its product line.
Process of Acquisition
The acquisition process constitutes the following stages:
1. Enquiry
2. Interaction
3. Exchange
4. Coordination
5. Adoption
In this stage, the prospective buyer undertake a detailed enquiry with regard to several
aspects pertaining to the organization, product, nature of transaction and all other
related aspects. Having stored the information he passes on to the interaction stage,
where the customer interacts with the organization and obtains additional information,
clarifies and ensures already connected information. Terms of exchange, mode of
delivery and other things related to exchange are settled at the exchange stage.
Further coordinated effort on either side would lead the customers moving to
adoption of the product or service concerned and that completes the acquisition
process.
Influences of Acquisition
The application of the acquisition process explained above is influenced by the following:
Type of buying
Type of product
Type of customer
Economic environment
Contextual operations
There are two different types of buying: one, the rational and the other, emotional. Rational
buying is a more systematic buying influenced by reason and logic. On the other hand, emotional
buying is influenced by the emotions of the buyer. It is likely that a customer involved in the
rational buying would move from one stage to another systematically, whereas in emotional
buying he may not do so.
Acquisition depends on the type of product, whether it is convenience, shopping or speciality
product. According, the significance of each stage of the acquisition process varies.
Further the significance depends on the type of customer whether the customer is an individual or
an organization. In contrast to the individual buyer an organization may have its own procedures
to adopt a product, policy and the related aspects. Also acquisition depends on whether the
acquisition is a first time experience or a repeated one.
The economic and environmental forces focus attention on the market conditions, the operations
of the competing forces, supply and demand, purchasing power etc. The acquisition process is
likely to differ under conditions of limited availability of product, with limited brand choice and
limited purchasing power as compared to unlimited availability of brands and purchasing power.
The context of operations refers to the prospective buyers intention, urgency, previous
experience, specific benefit expected, lifestyle of customer and so on. The acquisition process is
likely to differ as per the context of operation concerned.
Acquisition is the act of gaining new customers through various different methods with the
goal of turning potential customers into actual customers. This is a very difficult stage because
with so much competition around today, customers are inundated with choices meaning that
competition is fierce and customers are more informed. As a result of this people have become
more demanding as they know that they have the upper hand. However, this is a very important
step in marketing because for most businesses the only way they can grow is through the
acquisition of new customers. There are various methods of achieving this from finding
customers who weren't previously aware that the product was available to people who may not
have needed the product before maybe needing it now. For example pet food - someone who
didn't previously have a pet but then bought a cat would suddenly need to buy cat food.
There are several different methods of achieving customer acquisition such as mass marketing
which includes magazines and billboards and direct marketing such as telesales and through
the post.
The total cost of customer acquisition varies from situation to situation but has some of
the basic components, which includes:
1. Marketing cost
a. Online marketing cost
b. Offline marketing cost
2. Resources cost
a. Infrastructure
b. Manpower
c. Expenditure on office equipments and stationary
d. Electricity
e. Internet
3. Expenditure incurred on training and market research
Although winning new customers is extremely important customer retention is crucial
to the life of any business. As it costs considerably less to retain a customer than it does
to win new ones, focusing on a retention strategy makes perfect business sense. Studies
across a number of industries have revealed that the cost of retaining a customer is only
about 10 percent of the cost of acquiring a new one. The main aim of customer retention
is to prevent customers from swapping to competitors and to increase customer loyalty
and profitability.
Some of the many advantages of customer retention are that long - term customers are
less likely to stop using your product or switch to a competitor, they tend to be less price
sensitive, they may introduce new customers through referral, they're more likely to
purchase additional products, are less expensive to service because they are familiar with
the process and are consistent in their buying behaviour. CRM involves using software
applications that allow companies to manage every aspect of their relationship with a
customer and thus turning customer satisfaction into customer loyalty and building longer
lasting relationships.
2. Greater Volume: As you build relationships with your loyal customers, it will
become increasingly easy to sell to them in higher volumes. This may happen
naturally, or you may choose to incentivize the process for your customers. In any
case, higher volumes mean greater sales, which translates to higher overall profits.
3. Cross-selling Opportunities: Customers who exhibit brand loyalty have a
relationship with your business. They trust you to provide quality products and
customer service. This creates a great opportunity to fulfill more of your
customers' needs than the traditional ones you currently meet. What does this
mean? You can make sales to loyal customers across product lines and thus
increase your overall sales volume without needing to focus so much on attracting
new customers.
4. Protects You From the Competition: The more loyal your customers tend to be,
the safer you will be from the draw of the competition. Establishing strong brand
loyalty can make you practically immune to competitive forces. This is especially
important in places where new players enter the marketplace often.
5. Word-of-Mouth Marketing: Loyal customers can also bring you new customers.
Customers that have great relationships with businesses tend to talk about it.
Happy and satisfied customers who keep coming back to you are very likely to
refer others who may need your product and/or services.
6. Benefit of the Doubt: Let's face it; things go awry sometimes - even in the best
businesses. Sometimes we get an order wrong, don't meet a deadline, or aren't
able to deliver on promises made to customers. In today's economy, it's even
easier for little hiccups such as these an others to take place in business. These
types of mistakes can damage your business' reputation in the eyes of a new
customer. A scheduling error can make your firm seem disorganized and
unreliable. This is a very easy way to lose customers. The good news is, loyal
customers are much more likely to give you the benefit of the doubt and/or
overlook errors. If you maintain the level of customer service and quality that it
takes to achieve brand loyalty in the first place, your customers will be willing to
forgive you when bad things happen.
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3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
always saying yes. They couldnt be more wrong! Rather than agreeing to do
something that you cannot really do, be upfront with your customer. In most cases
your honesty will enhance your situation. Saying no upfront is a lot better than
saying yes and then not delivering.
Being pleasant counts for a lot: My Wife and I recently ate at our favorite
restaurant. Now the city where we live has dozens of restaurants. There are even
three other restaurants located in the same mall. So why this is our favourite?
a. The owner and employees greet by name and seem glad to us.
b. They remember our preferences. No lemon in your team mam
c. They remember details about our lives.
d. How kids are doing?
e. The food is good and the price is reasonable
Become the quality provider: I once tried purchasing my childrens clothing at
the cheapest possible price. However, after one very cheap little outfit that I
purchased for my daughter fell apart after she wore it only one time. I changed my
tactic. It dawned on me that quality is more cost effective in the end.
Be in constant touch with your customers and associate them in important
aspects like new product development and also keep them informed of your
new products and prices.
Reward the customer in appropriate manner for their loyalty.
Get to know the customer as much as you can. Simple gestures like sending
birthday cards can emotionally bond the customer with the organization.
If a valuable customer suffers any disadvantage due to an transaction with
you, compensate the customer
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Compare that to the Web version. The customer enters mini blinds in his favourite search
engine, which returns the web sites for several catalog window treatment firms. He
chooses a company, which displays a series of blind designs and prices per inch. The
customer chooses a design he likes, enters his window measurements and receives a price
online, including tax and shipping. Before purchasing be browses a couple of other
window ware websites for additional blind designs and prices, eventually placing his
order in less than an hour.
Benefits to organizations
1. Global Reach: INTERNET expands the marketplace to national and international
markets. With minimal capital outlay, a company can easily and quickly locate the
best suppliers, more customers and the most suitable business partners worldwide.
Expanding the base of customers and suppliers enables organizations to buy
cheaper and sell more.
2. Cost Reduction: INTERNET decrease the cost of creating, processing,
distributing, storing and retrieving paper based information. High printing and
mailing costs are lowered or eliminated.
3. Supply chain improvements: Supply chain inefficiencies such as excessive
inventories and delivery delays can be minimized with INTERNET. For example
by building autos to order instead of for dealers showrooms, the automotive
industry is expecting to save tens of billions of dollars annually just from
inventory reduction.
4. Extended Hours: The business is always open on the web, with no overtime and
no other extra costs.
5. Customization: Pull type production allows for inexpensive customization of
products and services and provides a competitive advantage for companies that
implement this strategy. A well known example of pull type production is that
used by Dell.
6. New Business Models: INTERNET allows for many innovative business models
that provide strategic advantages and/or increase profits. Combining group
purchasing with reverse auctions is one example of an innovative business model.
7. Vendors specialization: INTERNET allows for a high degree of specialization
that is not economically feasible in the physical world. For example a store that
sells only dog toys can operate in cyberspace but in the physical world such a
store would not have enough customers (dogtoys.com).
8. Rapid time to market: INTERNET reduces the time between the inception of an
idea and its commercialization due to improved communication and collaboration.
9. Lower communication costs: INTERNET lowers telecommunication costs-the
internet is much cheaper than VANs.
10. Efficient Procurement: INTERNET enables efficient e-procurement that can
reduce administrative costs by 80 percent or more reduce purchase price by 5 to
15% and reduce cycle by more than 50%.
11. Improved customer relations: INTERNET enables companies to interact more
closely with customers, even if though intermediaries. This allows for
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Benefits to consumers
1. Ubiquity: INTERNET allows consumers to shop or perform other transactions
year round, 24 hrs a day from almost any location.
2. More products and services: INTERNET provides consumers with more choices
they can select from many vendors and from more products.
3. Customized products and services: Dell customizes computers and sells them at
competitive prices. Customers can get an increased number of products and
services just the way they want them.
4. Cheaper products and services: INTERNET frequently provides consumers
with less expensive products and services by allowing them to shop in many
places and conduct quick comparisons.
5. Instant delivery: In the case of digitized products, INTERNET allows for fast
delivery.
6. Information Availability: Consumers can locate relevant and detailed product
information in seconds, rather than days or weeks. Also, multimedia support is
cheaper and better.
7. Participation in auctions: INTERNET makes it possible for consumers to
participate in virtual auctions. These allow sellers to sell things quickly and
buyers can locate collectors items bargains.
8. Electronic communities: INTERNET allows customers to interact with other
customers in electronic communities and exchange ideas as well as compare
experiences.
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3.
4.
5.
6.
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easily. Sales representatives can access such information through their mobile
PDAs or laptops anywhere, while on the move and accordingly tone their sales
pitch.
Features
Improve fulfillment response with full views of inventory and on-thespot ordering
1.
Benefits
2.
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3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
Get a real-time, accurate view of your sales organization at all times from
pipeline to year-end review. More data means better management across
the supply chain.
Accelerate Sales Cycles
From checking inventory availability to placing on-the-spot orders to
capturing a signature to close the deal, SMART speeds the sales cycle
from quote to billing.
Faster access to data
Sales professionals can access data in real-time, so it is always the most
current, up-to-date information available. If you need to know about a
client or lead, you can find what you need to know immediately via phone,
laptop, PDA, or other mobile device.
Central data center
A central data center allows you to access all the information all the time.
No one person has longer access to a file or case; you can look at it
simultaneously without slowing anything down. And if a client id shifted
to you suddenly, you have access to all their information in a matter of
minutes. Thus, mobile CRM is an extremely effective, efficient ancillary
to your normal CRM system.
Leads stay hot and glide down the pipeline
Leads don''t get cold because there will always be someone to pick up the
slack. Mobile CRM also makes it easier to ensure the lead gets nudged
down the pipeline gently but effectively and ends up in the correct place.
Access to critical information anytime, anywhere
Mobile CRM allows you to access information in the central database
from anywhere in the world at any time, provided you have access to a
mobile device that works.
Easy to use
Mobile CRM is amazingly easy to use and takes much of the stress off of
professional sales people. It allows them to stay in touch and get new
updates.
Ideal for travel
Mobile CRM is especially conducive to sales professionals who travel a
large part of the time. Because you can use any mobile device, traveling
isn''t difficult, and it''s far less stressful. If you suddenly remember
something you have to find or look up, forget a client''s information, or
any other number of scenarios, mobile CRM can be the way you solve the
problem.
Usable online and offline
Mobile CRM can be used online and offline. If the internet doesn''t work
or the connection has failed, you can get on your mobile device; if you
lose your phone but have your laptop or PDA, you''re covered. Thus it
provides an almost fail safe way to get the information you need, when
you want it.
Competitive advantage
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servers
consumer as well as institutional markets. The business market comprises of all the
organizations that buy goods and services for use in the production of other products and
services that acquire end goods for the purpose of reselling or renting them to others at a
profit. In the business buying process, business buyers determine which products and
services their organizations need to purchase and then find, evaluate and choose among
alternative suppliers and brands. Fundamentally business markets also involve the same
factors as consumer markets do, there are some characteristics that make them unique.
These include:
1. Market structure and demand: In a consumer market, there are usually many
buyers i.e. individuals or households. However these buyers buy in less quantity.
On the other hand, a business market contains a few but large buyers who buy in
bulk. This increases the influence of these buyers on the market. For instance,
business markets are more geographically concentrated depending on where the
big buyers lie. To cite an example, chemical manufacturers are more concentrated
in the western part of India.
2. Nature of the buying unit: A business purchase usually involves more buyers
involved in the decision making process and a more professional purchasing
effort. There are many purchasing agents whose entire professional life is
dedicated towards buying in the business context. As the quantity of purchase and
its value increases, the number of people involved in the purchase also tends to
increase dramatically. The key players involved include technical experts,
management and business markets and finally well trained sales persons.
3. Type of decisions and the decision process: Business buyers have to make more
complex decisions than consumer buyers. This is because the volume and the
value of the purchases are quite high and they have to make complex economic
and technical considerations. In the buyers organization, interactions
continuously take place among many people across different levels with respect to
the purchase decisions. The business buying process is more formalized than the
consumer buying process because of the complexity involved. Decisions may be
made after due considerations of all the factors and this may involve considerable
time for deliberation. Finally in the business buying process, the buyer and the
seller are much more dependent on each other. Therefore, many a time the
business sellers directly work with their counterparts in the buying organizations.
They help them make decisions by identifying and defining the problem,
providing more information on the related products and informing them about the
customization that could be made.
4. Major Types of Buying situations in B2B contexts: There are many types of
buying situations in B2B context. They differ from each other with respect to the
kind of complexity associated with the decision making process. The amount of
work that the buyer needs to put in before considering these purchases also varies.
At one end of the spectrum is what is called the straight re-buy. This involves
the buyer reordering something from its past supplier without any modifications.
In modified re-buy, the buyer wants to modify the product specifications, prices,
terms or suppliers. This process involves more decision making efforts. When a
firm buys a service or a product for the first time then it is referred to as a new
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task situation. In this case, the cost or risk associated with the concerned
purchase is more than the usual. In many situations, buyers prefer to a packaged
solution from a single supplier instead of buying the component from various
suppliers and then integrating them and are called as systems buying.
5. Participants in the business buying process: In business organizations, major
buying decisions are made by users, influencers, buyers, deciders, gatekeepers.
6. The Business buying process: It is much more complex than the consumer
buying process. It usually consists of eight stages starting from problem
recognition, general need description, product specification, supplier search,
proposal solicitation, performance review before making any purchase.
Importance of CRM in B2B markets
1. Focusing on key customers and building strong relationship with them
2. Proactively generate high levels of customer satisfaction with every interaction
with the customer
3. Anticipate customers need by careful study of the environment, customer
processes and their behaviour. The firm then responds to these needs even before
the competition becomes aware of it.
4. Finally, creating a value perception for the customer. The customer must see the
relationship with the vendor as something that brings value and adds to their
competitive advantage. Otherwise the customer will take the business elsewhere.
As suppliers companies have realized the need to foster more productive between
themselves and their channel partners, dealers and resellers. As with SRM, the Web
provides these partners with automated access to centralized information and support
resources, enabling them to deliver more accurate product information and better
services to their customers.
Partner relationship management is a subset of CRM that allows companies to ensure
partner satisfaction. This usually means providing sales partners and resellers with the
tools and information they need to
Access up-to-date product information, including release dates, defect data
and marketing materials.
Communicate with support resources and offer online assistance with products
and services
Reduce paperwork by obtaining online knowledge management resources
such pricing revisions and sales contracts
Access a companys supply chain network to check inventory, outstanding
shipments and other order details.
Download customizable sales presentations and other product marketing
literature.
Some PRM products also help companies qualify and recruit new sales partners. Products
like these help companies establish desirable partner attributes and allow them to assign
partner categories that might limit partners to specific product assignments or sales
strategies. PRM tools also provide partner profiles that enable a company not only to
understand a business partners characteristics from their head quarters address to which
competitive products the partner might be selling but also to track the partners overall
success and contribution. Companies can use this information to further improve their
partner relationships with additional training or joint marketing activities. Perhaps the
highest impact use of PRM is its facility for automating lead distribution to the best
partner. By providing analysis and reporting capabilities, companies can match partners
with key sales leads based on their skills, geography, or areas of specialty. When a
companys marketing department receives a lead it can use a PRM tool to score the lead,
allocate the lead to the best partner and subsequently track the lead through to its close.
This results in efficiencies, lowering costs, triggering down towards pricing and higher
customer profitability thereby giving rise to faster time to market having higher degree of
customer satisfaction at the end of line.
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Step-6
Measurement
Evaluate metrics
CRM Implementation Checklist----For Failure
Failure to define a CRM strategy :
Failure to improve business: The proverbial mistake of paving the growth applies
here: CRM should not simply overlay archaic corporate policies. It should instead
formalize and automate nimble customer focused business processes. Processes
should be defined from the customers perspective and not the technology.
CRM Roadblocks
CRM roadblocks are the obstacles occur during the business planning or
requirements gathering which do not allow the CRM to set right thing at right time
Four Ps of CRM roadblocks
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1. Process: Many companies make the mistake of purchasing a CRM tool that supports
repeatable processes only to discover that their business processes are not defined well
enough to be repeatable. Some companies are slow or unwilling to modify their business
processes to support better customer relationship
2. Perception: After CRM has been deployed business people should be able to accomplish
the same work in less time or be able to perform new tasks that ultimately make their jobs
easier and at the same time enhance customer relationships. And customer perception,
after all a customer perception of the company is the basis for whether she will return to
your web site or store. CRM can either deliver or destroy a customers high opinion of
your company and its offerings.
3. Privacy: Consumers are more likely to share their personal information with your
company if they receive something valuable in return. Incorporate this into your CRM
planning to ensue that customers are sufficiently motivated to continue interacting with
you at every touchpoint. Understand permission marketing and the trade offs between
asking customers to opt in versus opt out. Customer can log on to a secure website and
actually change their own profiles benefiting both parties. Appoint a chief privacy officer
to enforce a corporate privacy policy and communicate then both internally and
externally.
4. Politics: It involves the development of a data warehouse or other CRM related
technology solution and labeling it CRM without defining a clear CRM strategy, planned
process improvements, organizational changes or business participation. Declaring an
activity or technology project to be CRM does not make it so and risk tampering the high
impact business message of any bonafide CRM project awaiting approval. CRM in a
vaccum simply does not work long term and can actually delay or destroy an entire CRM
program.
Future of CRM
1. The customer as Subject Matters Expert(SME)
a. Companies asking customers how to plan their CRM strategies
b. Rendering customers as subject matters expert
c. Leveraging customers to improve business process and recording the feedback of
customers who have taken the time to participate
d. Customers helps in prioritizing the tasks
2. The Rise of intermediaries
a. Intermediaries act to simplify the purchase process by acting as one stop
information resources.
b. Companies try to keep pace with their customers purchases and feedback
intermediaries triangulate a two way interaction between company and customers
c. Intermediaries help identify purchases and feedback as part of customers overall
profile.
3. Digital and Broadband Revolutionize Advertising
a. Enable advertisers to send personalized commercials to households that fit a
certain desired customer profile
b. Allow companies to target market in real time
c. Supports mass marketing with customized manner
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