Title: Customer Relationship Management
1Customer Relationship Management
2CRM Framework
Source Andersen Consulting
3Customer Relationship Management
Technology
Marketing
Direct, Interactive Dialog, Real time
Warehousing Online data store User tools
Analytics
Business Customer Financial
4(No Transcript)
5Buzzword Alert
- CRM Often used to describe any business or
marketing approach that claims to target
customers, not transactions. Sometimes confused
with Customer service, account management, sales
force automation, e-commerce, predictive
modeling, data mining, data warehousing, database
management, database marketing, direct marketing,
and wide variety of marketing activity. Used here
to describe a systematic business approach using
information and on-going dialogue to build long
lasting mutually beneficial customer
relationships. - Customer centric Sometimes used to refer to any
awareness that a business has of its customers.
Used here to describe an approach to business
that uses the customer (not the transaction) as
the building block of data management, reporting,
goal setting and measurement as well as business
and marketing strategy organization and technical
infrastructure, and corporate culture and values
over time and across sales, marketing, IT,
analysis, service, management and support
business units.
6CRM working definition
- CRM is the
- Systematic use of information
- To attract and keep customers
- Through on-going dialogue
- To build long lasting mutually beneficial
relationships
7Systematic Use of Information
- Database of customer information
- The customer is the base level of data for
storage,reporting,analysis and measurement - Analysis of customer data to predict likely
future behavior - Modeling uses past behavior to predict future
behavior and identifies other predictors as well.
- Identifying and evaluating each relationship
- CR are identified, evaluated reevaluated and
continually managed according to current
information
8To attract and keep customers
- Cost efficient customer acquisition
- Profiles used to select likely new customers and
offers for specific customer segments - Retention efforts focused on most profitable and
at risk customers - Continuous process of solidifying relationship
with profitable customers, converting less
profitable customers to more profitable and
attempting to convert at risk customers before
they are lost. - Shared information across channels for consistent
communications - Customer receives consistent offers, service and
messages across sales and service channels
9With or Without
- Without CRM
- Customer re-enters information about music
preferences every time at log-in - Customer re-identifies CI every time at CS
- Call center and stores have different pricing
from web site - Customer must return defective CD through the
delivery channel-cannot switch between electronic
channels and stores.
- CRM in practice
- Customer logs onto the Internet and finds
information on favorite music group,
advertisements featuring specials on new CDs and
dates with ticket offers to next concerts in
local area, plus emails telling them about new
groups with a similar style or from the same
record company. - Customer reads about CDs on the Internet, orders
through the CS,exchanges at a local record store
if CD is defective.
10Through on-going dialogue
- Continuous interaction with customers based on
analysis - Interactions,offers and messages are
planned,personalized and delivered according to
analytic insights - Real time response on the Internet
- Immediate changes in advertising, information,
recommendations, product features and even
pricing based on web or email behavior - Listening to create a sense of intimacy with the
customer - 11 dialogue through appropriate responses
delivered real time
11Web Telephony Integration
12Email Integration Capability
13To build long-lasting mutually beneficial
relationships
- Success measured in customers and customer value
- Goals, results even incentives measured in terms
of customers and customer value,not transactions - Continual reevaluation of customer relationships
- On-going measurement to identify profitable, at
risk and underserved customers - Continual learning about customer needs
- Satisfied customers make good business sense
14Customer Strategy should be defined and driven by
Customer needs
15At its simplest
- CRM refers to the use of information about a
customer to make decisions about how to treat the
customer.
16The Learning Loop
17At it is most complex CRM comprises an
interconnected web of sophisticated, high tech
hardware software, strategies and processes
designed to help business quickly, efficiently
and voluminously determine how to treat each
customer in order to create a valued experience
for both the business and the customer.
18Sales Force Automation
Analytics
Operations
Distribution Partner
Campaign Management
Call behavior analysis
Customer Valuation
Monitoring
Integrated Customer View
Quality of Service Analysis
Segmentation And profiling
Customer Service
Risk Analysis
Behavioral Modeling
Profitability analysis
Web Intelligence
Needs analysis
Sales analysis
Call Center
E-commerce Web
19A data warehouse builds a strong foundation for
CRM infrastructure
20Web Applications
Sales Force Automation
Call Center
Profitability
Legacy Systems
Prospect Lists
Data transformed and loaded in MD Information
from legacy sources normalized Into member and
household tables. Time series information kept
for historical analysis
Profiling/Segmentation Opportunity
Identification Campaign management Performance
measurement Predictive modeling Adhoc and DSS
reporting
Marketing Database
Real-time Database
Real time data feeds
Business Intelligence
Results from P, S DM, M loaded into MD and RT
DB To enable real time personalization and
decisioning. Single repository for Contact
History
Staging area for data Daily batch reporting Real
time campaign management Newsletters Personalizati
onDecisioning
Campaign Management
Real time data feeds
Site
Tracking Reporting
Log Files
Data Mining
Example of warehouse processes architected for CRM
21Customer data should be moved into the warehouse
in an consistent and efficient manner
Extract, Transfer, Load (ETL)
Extract data from legacy systems, other sources
Sources Surveys,response history,online behavior
Transform data into consistent, clean,
customer-level, knowledge according to
pre-set data definitions
Data dictionary designed during warehouse design
through enterprise-wide participation and made
available enterprise-wide
Load and manage data efficiently
Batch processing during off- hours,predefined
queries
Examples Standardize addresses set aside an
untouchable control group
Condition Data
22What Customers Want
- Treat me as an individual (not a number)
- Demonstrate that you can use information about
me in a way that makes working with you valuable - ( dont abuse my information)
- Show me that you really know me no matter
where I talk to you. - Care about my needs/try to anticipate them.
23Creating the CRM organization
24Buzzword Alert
- Politics
- The result of opposing business priorities across
different units that compete for a finite pool of
resources - Change Management
- Guiding an organization and its members through
significant alterations in organizational
direction and individual responsibilities as
quickly and effectively possible - Organizational design
- Managing human systems and hierarchies, with
supporting technical and process infrastructure,
in order to most effectively deliver on the
mission of the enterprise
25Organizing around the Customer
- Who thinks about the customer?
- Who advocates the customer?
- Who doesnt think about the customer?
Competing Distribution
Competing Products
Competing Sales Territories
Competing Channels
Competing Business Units
26- Everyone in an organization needs to think about
the customer. To achieve this, an organization
must encourage change by providing the tools to
make the changes steadily and surely
27Customer Centric Metrics
Volume Metrics
Customer Centric Metrics
- Call Duration
- Encourages TSRs to make calls as short as
possible, keep costs low - Creates dissatisfaction
- Customer Retention
- Encourages TSRs to satisfy customers
- Creates loyalty
- Sales Volume
- Encourages cannibalization
- Encourages short term product pushes instead of
long term CR
- Customer Value Impact
- Increases customer value following interaction
- Includes additional information gathered which is
useful for future campaigns
28Changing Processes
- There are several ways to change processes
without creating fear within an organization - Pilot projects Enable teams to test processes in
an atmosphere that fosters innovation and
resourcefulness. - Business rules
- Privacy Do not share names with third parties
- Fatigue Do not call customers more frequently
than n times. - Channel preference Do not force a customer to a
channel - Dialogue Record every question that a customer
answers and do not ask the same question more
than once every two years - The business case
- Through questions and expectations, it is
possible to drive existing organizational units
to use customer data in decision making
29Evolutionary Not Revolutionary
- Why not just reorganize everyone from Marketing,
IT and other teams contributing resources to the
CRM effort? - Why the evolutionary small step approach?
- Why not revolution?
- Power may continue to reside in areas without the
data, without the metrics or even without the C - Focus on bureaucratic issues detracts from C focus
30- Gives time to build infrastructure for
- Centralized data
- Tools that make data easy to access
- Skilled analysts who can mine the data
- Metrics that validate C centric programs
- Training to bring staff up to speed
- Setting senior management expectations and
educating them - Winning kudos for early successes
- Creating external enthusiasm rather than
resistance.
31Changing Structure
- To maintain the momentum of a CRM initiative
- Continually demonstrate value to all stakeholders
- Create a hunger among senior managers for
customer centric and customer value information - Use input from anyone thinking about the
customer.
32Forms follows Function
- Let structure experts worry about structure which
CRM specialists focus on cross functional
initiatives. - Constructing data centers from pilot databases
to an enterprise-wide data warehouse - The data warehouse is accessible and easy to
use across organization - Fielding campaigns that includes tests and data
mining - Sharing results across channels,units and
levels of management - Creating more and more complex campaigns
involving more and more areas of the enterprise. - Monitoring and reporting results all along the
way.
33E-channels
- E-channels both complicate and simplify CRM
execution
Complicate
Simplify
- - Loyalty
- - Information
- - Real time
- - Cost saving
- - Interactive
- - Profit driver
- - Convenience
- - Customer tracking
- - Services
- - Transaction/sales tracking
- Stability - Maintenance - Real time -
Personalization - Collaborative filtering - BM
to the web - Branding - E-strategy - Competing
channels - Privacy - Security
34Are we there yet?
- You know you have a CRM culture when
- Everyone in the organization thinks about the C
- Everyone in the organization listens to the
customer - Reliable service is delivered to C consistently
across all channels - Success is measured in terms of C relationships (
Value, duration, acquisition )
35Where Are You on the Road to CRM?
Short term goals
Long term goals
- Think like a customer
- Be a customer
- Build infrastructure to centralize data
- Analyze customer data
- Determine C centric program goals and strategies
- Educate senior management and set expectations
- Identify bottlenecks
- Have owners over customers
- Have centralized customer centric business rules
- Listen to the customer
- Track C behavior across all channels
- Show consistent reliable service across all
channels - Assign value to each customer
- Create loyalty programs
- Have established C centric incentives
Organizations Transitioning to CRM culture
- Think like a C
- Listen to the C
- Provide consistent reliable service across all
channels - Track C behavior across all channels
- Assign value to each C relationship
- Create loyalty programs
- Reduce bottlenecks
- Have owners over customers
- Real-time personalized dialogue with customers
- Anticipate customer needs
- Measure success of each relationship
- Share C information with all areas of the
enterprise - Build and maintain long term profitable
relationships with C
Organizations With existing CRM culture
36Summary
- Organizational change is an evolutionary process,
not a revolution. - Choose the parts of the organization that can be
changed to focus on first. - Implementing CRM program also means changing
thinking, processes, structure and engraining a
customer centric culture in an organization. - Depending on where your organization stands,
there are short and long term steps to take to
transition to a CRM company.
37Long Term Planning
- Develop a two year plan for making your company
more customer centric. - Include measurable deliverables every three to
six months. - Change from product centric to customer centric
metrics. - Create cross functional teams to develop and
manage customer strategy. - Implement tools that allow people from all areas
to access the same CI.
38Obstacles
- Getting participation from all areas
- Technical problems centralizing data in a data
warehouse - Inter-unit conflict (Marketing-IT)
- Managing anxiety and resistance in an environment
change - Focusing resources on new developments and
existing responsibilities.