Title: CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT
1CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT IN INDIAN
TELECOM SECTOR By Dr. A. Patrick Associate
Professor, Badruka College Post Graduate Centre
, Kachiguda, Hyderabad - 27
2BUSINESS IS ALL ABOUT CREATING A CUSTOMER,
SATISFYING A CUSTOMER AND RETAINING A CUSTOMER
PETER F. DRUCKER
3MOVING FROM CUSTOMER SERVICE TO DELIGHT
- 1980S CUSTOMER SERVICE FOCUS ON THE PRODUCT
- 1990S CUSTOMER SATISFACTION NOT CUSTOMER
EXPECTATION - Millennium CUSTOMER DELIGHT BEAT CUSTOMER
EXPECTATIONS - FUTURE CUSTOMER OBSESSION
4 g o o d s and s e r v i c e s
Goods - things you can touch - tangible Services
- things you cant touch - but you can see their
effect intangible services are not physical,
they are intangible
5Characteristics of Services
1. Intangibility - u cant touch this 2.
Production (or performing the service) and
Consumption (using the service) - happens at the
same time 3. Heterogeneity - services are not
always delivered the same way 4. Perishability -
cannot be put in inventory or stored for later
use
6The Services Marketing Triangle
Company (Management)
Internal Marketing
External Marketing
enabling promises
setting promises
Customers
Employees
Interactive Marketing
keeping promises
Source Adapted from Mary Jo Bitner,
Christian Gronroos, and Philip Kotler
7The Service Profit Chain
Source An exhibit from J. L. Heskett, T. O.
Jones, W. E. Sasser, Jr., and L. A. Schlesinger,
Putting the Service-Profit Chain to Work,
Harvard Business Review, March-April 1994, p. 166.
8Customers stop doing business with you because
- 1 Die
- 3 move away
- 5 seek alternatives or develop other business
relationships. - 9 begin doing business with the competitors
- 14 QUIT for pricing reasons
- 68 are upset with the treatment they have
received.
9REASONS FOR POOR SERVICE
- Uncaring employees
- Poor employee training
- Negative attitude of employees toward customers
- Differences in perception between what businesses
think customers want and what customers actually
want
10REASONS FOR POOR SERVICE
- Differences in perception between the product or
service businesses think they provide and what
customers think they receive. - Differences in perception between the way
businesses think customers want to be treated and
the way customers really want to be treated, or
are actually treated.
11Imminent Issues
- Fierce competition is requiring more and more
innovations to differentiate firms from one
another. - With technology available to everyone today, the
traditional features and cost advantages are no
longer relevant. - Emergence of VIGILANTE CUSTOMER, a new
generation of super consumers who are smart,
discriminating and vocal.
12Most Imminent Issue
- Customer churn in telecom industry
- In the telecommunications industry, churn is the
term used to describe customer attrition or loss.
There are different types of churn such as
voluntary, involuntary and internal. Churn is
measured in telecom industry in different ways.
Typically it is calculated by dividing
disconnects by the net subscriber base.
13Most Imminent Issue
- High cost of customer acquisition and customer
education require companies to make large upfront
investments in customers. Customer retention,
therefore, is becoming critical to customer
profitability. - However, with easy access to information and a
wide range of offerings, it has become easier for
customers to switch between service providers -
be it in the area of credit cards, mortgages,
telecom or insurance.
14SERVICE COMPANIES FACE THREE TASKS
- INCREASING COMPETITIVE DIFFRENTIATION
- SERVICE QUALITY
- PRODUCTIVITY
15DELIGHTED
C U S T O M E R EX P E R I ENC E
SATISFIED
LEGEND
DISSATISFIED
IRRITATED
NIGHTMARES
ANGRY
S E R V I C E P E R F O R M A N C E
16CUSTOMER SERVICE FACTS
- Technical Assistance Research Program (TARP)
- It costs six times more to attract a new customer
than it does to keep an old one. - A typical dissatisfied customer will tell 8-10
people about their problem. - Seven of ten complaining customers will do
business with you again if you resolve the
complaint in their favour.
17CUSTOMER SERVICE FACTS
- If a customer complaint was handled well, 95 of
the customers will return to do business with
your organisation. - Of those customers who quit, 68 do so because of
an attitude of indifference by the company of a
specific individual. - Word-of-mouth has a significant influence on
consumer decisionstwice as much as advertising
General Electric (GE) Survey. - Dissatisfied customers will complain to 10 to 20
friends and acquaintances three times more than
those with good experience.
18What 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. After
all, 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.
19CRM IS NOT A PROJECT NOR A ONE TIME ACTIVITY IT
IS A ONGOING PROCESS. IT IS A BUSINESS STRATEGY
TO UNDERSTAND, ANTICIPATE AND MANAGE THE NEEDS OF
THE PRESENT AND POTENTIAL CUSTOMERS.
20What is the goal of CRM ?
- Build long term and profitable relationships with
chosen customers - Get closer to those customers at every point of
contact with them.
21(No Transcript)
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24- TYPES OF CRM
- WIN BACK OR SAVE
- PROSPECTING
- LOYALTY
- CROSS SELL / UP SELL
25The Customer Lifecycle
26The Customer Lifecycle
ACQUISITION
SATISFACTION
DISSATISFATION
RETENTION
LOYALTY
ATTRITION
DEFECTION
RE- ACQUSIATION
27- CUSTOMER ACQUISITION INPUTS
- SUSPECTS
- ENQUIRERS
- LAPSED CUSTOMERS
- FORMER CUSTOMERS
- COMPETITORS ENQUIRERS
- COMPETITORS LAPSED CUSTOMERS
- COMPETITORS FORMER CUSTOMERS
- REFFERALS
- EXISTING CUSTOMERS
28LOYALTY PROFITABILITY MATRIX
P O T E N T I A L P R O F I T A B I L I T Y
BUTTERFLIES
TRUE - FREINDS
HIGH
STRANGERS
BARNACLES
LOW
LOW
HIGH
POTENTIAL LOYALTY
29STEPS IN INDIVIDUAL BUYER BEHAVIOUR NEED
RECOGNITION INFORMATION SEARCH EVALUATION OF
ALTERNATIVES PURCHASE DECISION POST PURCHASE
EVALUATION(COGNITIVE DISSONANCE OR SATISFACTION)
30INDIVIDUAL CUSTOMER BUYING SITUATIONS
D I F F E R E N C E S B E T W E E N
B R A N D S
COMPLEX BUYING BEHAVIOUR
VARIETY SEEKING BEHAVIOUR
HIGH
HABITUAL BUYER BEHAVIOUR
DISSONANCEREDUCING BEHAVIOUR
LOW
LOW
HIGH
LEVEL OF INVOLVEMENT
31CUSTOMER LOYALTY LADDER
CUSTOMERS BY LOYALTY
CUSTOMERS BY INSISTENCE
CUSTOMERS BY REPEATATION
CUSTOMERS BY CHOICE
CUSTOMERS BY OCCASSION
CUSTOMERS BY CHANCE
32CRM PHASES
ASSESSING
PLANNING
EXECUTION
33- ESSENTIALS OF CRM IMPLEMENTATION
- STRATEGY(SEGMENTATION, PRICING, CHANNEL,
ADVERTISING, BRANDING) - SEGMENTATION
- TECHNOLOGY
- PROCESSESS
- ORGANIZATION
34Benefits of Customer Retention
- SAVINGS ON CUSTOMER ACQUISITION OR REPLACEMENT
COSTS - A GUARANTEE OF BASE PROFITS AS EXISTING CUSTOMERS
ARE LIKELY TO HAVE A MINIMUM SPEND PER PERIOD - GROWTH IN PER CUSTOMER REVENUE OVER TIME
- A REDUCTION IN RELATIVE OPERATING COSTS AS FIRMS
CAN SPREAD THE COST OVER MANY MORE CUSTOMERS AND
OVER A LONGER PERIOD - FREE OF CHARGE REFERRALS OF NEW CUSTOMERS FROM
EXISTING CUSTOMERS - PRICE PREMIUMS AS CURRENT CUSTOMERS USUALLY DO
NOT WAIT FOR PROMOTIONS OR PRICE REDUCTIONS
BEFORE THEY MAKE THEIR PURCHASE. - CERTAIN NON-ECONOMIC BENEFITS FROM CUSTOMER
RETENTION ARE INCREASED CUSTOMER TRUST,
COMMITMENT AND COOPERATION
35What are customers looking for?
- Staff friendliness
- Staff knowledge
- Efficiency of service
- Reliability
- Responsiveness
- Professionalism
- Value for money
- Accessibility
- Product range Appeal
- Outlet environment.
- PROPER MANAGEMENT OF FUD BY THE SERVICE PROVIDERS
(FEAR, UNCERTAINITY, DOUBTS)
36- The four Rs of Relationship marketing as per
James G. Barnes are - Relationships
- Retention
- Referrals
- Recovery
37Building Customer
Relationships
Leads to
Retention
Producing
Referrals
And easier
Recovery
38INTENTION Of a unique relationship
INTERACTION With customers
INTEGRATION Of customers
INFORMATION About customers
INVESTMENTS In customers
INDIVIDUALITY For customers.
The 6is of Relationship marketing By Diller
39Thank you one All!