Customer Relationship Management A Databased Approach
Strategic CRM
Topics Discussed
CRM Perspectives
The Components of Strategic CRM
Steps in developing a CRM strategy
CRM Perspectives
CRM at the Functional level
Set of processes to execute marketing functions like
sales force automation or mktg. campaign management
CRM at the Customer-facing level
Set of activities that provide a single-view of the customer across all contact channels Customer intelligence obtained is available across all customer-facing functions
CRM at the Organizational level - Strategic CRM
Knowledge about customers and their preferences have implications for the entire organization
Strategic CRM
Successful strategic CRM is a complex set of activities that together form the basis for a sustainable and hard-to-imitate competitive advantage Shapes interactions between company and customers to allow maximization of lifetime value of customers Recognizes differences between customers with respect to their economic value to the firm as well as their expectations from the firm
Components of CRM Strategy
1) Customer-Management Orientation
4) CRM Strategy Implementation
2) Integration and alignment of organizational processes
3) Information capture and alignment of technology
Customer Management Orientation
Defined as the set of organizational values, beliefs, and strategic actions that enable the implementation of customer management principles Characterized by a top management belief and commitment that the customer is at the center of activity Recognizes that customers are heterogeneous in needs and value to the firm and reflects a readiness to treat different customers differently Considers the fact that a longer-term view of revenues from customers needs to be taken into account
Integration and Alignment of Organizational Processes
Comprises organization wide creation and synchronization of processes, systems, and reward systems enabling implementation of customer management principles Strategic CRM works best for organizations that are organized around crossfunctional processes rather than functional silos
Firmly incorporates needs of the customer and goals of the firm into product and service delivery
Integration and Alignment of Organizational Processes (contd.)
Characterized by an understanding that value provided to target customers should be what drives all processes Individual processes work in sync with common goal of attracting and retaining target customers
Customer management compatible incentives drive employee and organizational goals simultaneously
Processes are designed in such a manner that they automate a feedback
Information Capture and Alignment of Technology
Comprises all the necessary technology and processes to collect, store, and process relevant and timely customer information Characterized by the capability of leveraging data to actionable information Makes customer management processes not only more efficient but also more effective Helps to create entirely new processes and channels based on online and mobile applications Firms that are able to generate intelligence and act on it will derive competitive advantage
CRM Implementation Matrix
Customer dimension
Acquisition stage Analytical CRM Growth and retention stage Decline and exit stage
Management Dimension
Operational CRM
Each cell in the matrix corresponds to a specific implementation activity or process Customer dimension: captures influence of changing phase of a customer-firm relationship Management dimension: constitutes analytical and operational aspects of CRM
Characteristics of Marketing-Driven CRM Implementation
Activities and processes that constitute analytical CRM Activities and processes that constitute operational CRM
A firms ability to understand the value of the customer to the firm and the variety of needs different customers have
An acquisition and retention process that continuously aligns the offering with customer needs and values An ability to continuously improve what the company offers by learning about its customers
Steps in Developing a CRM Strategy
Gain enterprise-wide commitment
Build a CRM project team
Analysis of business requirements
Define the CRM strategy
Step One: Gain Enterprise-wide Commitment
Top-down management commitment
Bottom-up buy-in from system users
Dedicated full-time project team
Budget allocation for the total solution
Step Two: Build A CRM Project Team
Obtain active representation from:
Management - Provide leadership, motivation and supervision Information services/ technical personnel - Ensure CRM system compatible with existing software applications
Sales, marketing and services groups - Evaluate usability of CRM system
based on effectiveness, efficiency and satisfaction
Financial staff - Provide critical analysis for assessment of increased sales
productivity, evaluation of operating costs, estimated cost of system
expansion and ROI projections External CRM expert - Provide a valuable source of objective information and feedback
Step Three-Analysis of Business Requirements
Gathering information to:
Identify the services and products that are being supported Map current workflows, interfaces, and inter-dependencies Review existing technologies, features and capabilities Discuss the vision for the business and the operational plan Define business requirements
Step Three (contd.)
Develop enhanced business workflows and processes Identify gaps in technology functionality Map functionality to business processes Develop a new technology and functionality framework Develop a conceptual design and prototype plan
Step Four: Define the CRM Strategy
a. Value Proposition
b. Business case A Defined CRM Strategy ---------------> c. Customer strategy d. Enterprise transformation plan e. Other stakeholders
The Value Proposition
Multi-faceted package of product, service, process, price, communication, and interaction that customers experience in their relationships with a company
Areas to be addressed:
What the customers value what the company should focus on What the company says it offers the customers What the company actually offers the customers
Business Case
Directly link delivery of customer value with creation of shareholder value
Ensure acceptable ROI
Addresses: Planned increase in economic value of customers over the duration of their relationship with the company Reference and referral effects-increased investment in customer satisfaction resulting in increased customer acquisition
Impact of learning and innovation- reduce cost incurred through higher marketing effectiveness and improved products and services
Customer Strategy
Defines how the company will build and manage a portfolio of customers Covers:
Customer understanding - Customers benchmark expectations against past experience and best-in-class standards
Customer competitive context - awareness of competitors services and how to increase customer share Customer affiliation - primary factor affecting ability to both retain and extract greater value from customer through cross-sell and up-sell efforts
Customer management competencies - providing customized offers including customized products, services, communication, prices, etc
Enterprise Transformation Plan
Covers: Business process
Organization
Location and facilities Data flows
Application architecture
Technology infrastructure
Key Stakeholders of Strategic CRM
Customers Preferred Value Propositions Owners
Practice of Strategic CRM
Partners
Employees Managemen t
Suppliers
Other Stakeholders
Important stakeholders of a company : management, customers, suppliers, employees, and partners in addition to owners/stockholders Exceptions where the customer may not be the most important constituency:
In industries where customers derive satisfaction mostly by interacting with employees, such as airline and hotel industry, the most important constituency may be the internal customer the employee
For a company just entering a new market, the most important constituency may be distribution partners
Strategic CRM Framework
Customers Partners
Employees Suppliers
Practice of Strategic CRM
Managemen t Environment
Products
Competitor s
Suppliers
All those who contribute to a companys value chain, including suppliers of
Raw material Components Technologies Money
People
Knowledge
For total quality management, often strategic, long-term, and more interactive relationships with fewer suppliers
Suppliers (contd.)
Benefits of relationship-oriented supply chain management
Improved communication, quicker problem resolution and closer cooperation, suppliers more responsive to purchasing companies special needs Reduced purchase costs due to elimination of cost for search of new suppliers Reduced cost per transaction because of aligned information management system and simplified transaction process with strategic and long-term suppliers
More cooperation between companies and suppliers in terms of information sharing and development of new products
Owners/investors
Options to increase long-term oriented investors: Educate current investors Shift investor mix toward institutions that avoid investment churn Attract the right kind of core owner Take the company into private ownership
Employees
CRM Strategy is increasing employee satisfaction to increase customer satisfaction Internal Marketing (IM)-treating employees as if they were customers- involves:
Improving management style Improving recruitment practices Integrating all employees into the planning cycle Refocusing training on interactive and service skills
Open communication lines and empowerment of front-line staff
CRM Implementation at IBM
Objectives:
Share information and collaborate easily internally and across the entire value chain Focus on core capabilities while shedding less profitable or non-strategic business activities Build a fully integrated IT infrastructure to support the business vision and reduce the total cost of operations Streamline and integrate customer facing operations - sales, marketing and customer service Strengthen the brand image across all lines of business Offer full-scale solutions for the client, instead of multiple products
Implementation Stages
Initial Stages Opportunity management (1993-2000)
Development of in-house application Starting point- Opportunity management in customer acquisition phase of a sales cycle Company developed Virtual Machine-a host-driven IBM application Identification of opportunities, ways of tracking them and storing
information of winning conditions
Storage of data, such as pricing, inventory, and customer master record, provided by the Marketing department Customer segmentation based on size of the company and industry, and customer needs and geography Collected information used to drive marketing campaigns
Motivation of employees : E.g.: Training programs
Implementation Stages (contd.)
Siebel Implementation (2000 Today)
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
ibm.com Contact Centers Service and Support Business Partners Field Sales Marketing
The modules of Siebel CRM software that IBM has implemented and is planning to implement are Sales, Call Center, Marketing, Field Service, Service, e-Channel, e-Marketing, e-Service, and General e-Business
Summary
Strategic CRM focuses on shaping the interactions between the firm and its customers in a way that facilitates maximizing the lifetime value of the customer to the firm Business case for CRM determines whether an investment in CRM meets its expectations by linking the delivery of customer value with the creation of shareholder value, or ROI CRM strategy calls for a transformation in business process, organization, location and facilities, data flows, application architecture and technology infrastructure