Title: Internet Marketing (MM 3841)
1Internet Marketing (MM 3841)
- Week 6 7
- Customer Relationship Management
2Contents
Building Customer Relationships Relationship
Marketing Defined CRM Building Blocks 1. CRM
Vision 2. CRM Strategy 3. Valued Customer
Experience 4. Organizational Collaboration 5.
CRM Processes 6. CRM Information 7. CRM
Technology
3Building Customer Relationships
- Relationship capital A firms ability to build
and maintain relationships with customers,
suppliers, and partners may be more important
than a firms land, property, and financial
assets. - A major shift in marketing practice
- from mass marketing to individualized marketing,
- from focusing on acquiring lots of new customers
to retaining old ones and building more business - from a whole market of customers to a smaller
base of loyal high-value customers.
4Building Customer Relationships
- Consumer services market and consumer packaged
goods are now considering how to build long-term
customer relationships. - Relationship marketing is about establishing,
maintaining, enhancing, and commercializing
customer relationships through promise
fulfillment.
5Relationship Marketing Defined
- Relationship marketing
- Involves two-way communication with individual
customers, one at a time (11). - Firm focuses on share of customer, rather than
share of market. - Firm differentiates individual customers based on
need rather than differentiating products for
target groups.
6Continuum from Mass Marketing to Relationship
Marketing
Mass marketing Relationship marketing
Discrete transactions Continuing transactions
Short-term emphasis Long-term emphasis
One-way communication Two-way communication /collaboration
Acquisition focus Retention focus
Share of market Share of customer
Product Differentiation Customer Differentiation
7Contents
Building Customer Relationships Relationship
Marketing Defined CRM Building Blocks 1. CRM
Vision 2. CRM Strategy 3. Valued Customer
Experience 4. Organizational Collaboration 5.
CRM Processes 6. CRM Information 7. CRM
Technology
81. CRM Vision
- Start With a vision that fits the company
culture and makes sense for the firms brands and
value propositions. - Integrate data from the Web site and
brick-and-mortar retail operations. - Success The CRM vision start at the top and
filter throughout the company to keep the firm
completely customer focused.
91. CRM Vision
- CRM is based on trust
- The information customers give companies on Web
forms, in e-mail, or in other ways will be used
responsibly. - Information is used to improve the relationship
by tailoring goods, services, and marketing
communications to meet individual needs. - It means allowing consumers to request removal of
their information from databases, to opt-out of
e-mail lists, not sharing information with
other companies unless permission is granted.
101. CRM Vision
- TRUSTe
- To help Web sites earn the trust of their users,
an independent, nonprofit privacy initiative
named TRUSTe provides its seal and logo to any
Web site meeting its philosophies - Adopting and implementing a privacy policy that
factors in the goals of your individual Web site
consumer anxiety over sharing personal
information online. - Posting notice and disclosure of collection and
use practices regarding personally identifiable
information via a posted privacy statement. - Giving users choice and consent over how their
personal information is used and shared. - Putting data security and quality, and access
measures in place to safeguard, update, and
correct personally identifiable information.
11 TRUSTe Builds User Trust Source www.truste.org
121. CRM Vision
- TRUSTe
- In addition, sites must publish the following
information on their sites to gain the TRUSTe
seal - What personal information is being gathered by
your site. - Who is collecting the information.
- How the information will be used.
- With whom the information will be shared.
- The choices available to users regarding
collection, use, and distribution of their
information. - The security procedures in place to protect
users collected information from loss, misuse,
or alteration. - How users can update or correct inaccuracies in
their pertinent information.
132. CRM Strategy
- E-marketers must determine what they want to
accomplish before buying CRM technology. - Goals for CRM projects
- Increase order size more effectively targeted
cross sell promotions. - Build customer loyalty and repeat sales
relevant and compelling offers. - Increase the variety of products and categories
that customers buy from you.
142. CRM Strategy
- Goals for CRM projects
- Move overstocks by knowing which customers will
buy them at list price to avoid deep discounting.
- Reduce costly returns by promoting products you
know your customers want. - Enable multi-channel coordination of field sales,
inside sales, e-commerce and direct mail through
consistent and relevant product recommendations
for each customer interaction.
152. CRM Strategy
- Relationship marketing is practiced on 3 levels
- Build a financial bond with customers by using
pricing strategies. Price promotions are used to
build share of customer BUT easily imitated. - Stimulate social interaction with customers. This
involves ongoing personal communication with
individual customers and may include aggressive
pricing strategies as well. - Relies on creating structural solutions to
customer problems. Structural bonds are formed
when firms add value by making structural changes
that facilitate the relationship.
163. Valued Customer Experience
- Being a consumer is difficult because of constant
bombardment by marketing communications and
unlimited product choices. - From a consumers perspective, the basic
principle of CRM is choice reduction. - Consumers want to patronize the same Web site,
mall, and service providers because doing so is
efficient. - Consumers are loyalty prone, searching for the
right product or service and then sticking with
it as long as the promises are more or less
fulfilled.
173. Valued Customer Experience
- Customer Preferences Vary
- Customers might want
- To call and speak with a live representative
about an account problem, - To go to a Web site to research product
information, - To use e-mail to complain about a service
problem, and so forth. - These options cover many technologies, using both
automated and human intervention for both
synchronous (simultaneous) and asynchronous
communication. - The Internet must create valued customer
experiences and firms must put the focus on
customers and their preferences, not the
companys capabilities.
18Relationships Over Multiple Communication Channels
Automated Human
Synchronous Web self service Online transactions Telephone routing Telephone Online Chat Collaboration tools
Asynchronous Automated e-mail Short Message Services (SMS) Web forms FAX on demand E-mail response Snail mail (mail delivered by a postal system)
193. Valued Customer Experience
- Community-Building Principles
- An important way to forge relationships
strengthen loyalty. - Building a successful online community is not as
simple as putting a link on a Web site and hoping
folks will drop by. - As with most e-business strategies, research and
planning precede success. - 9 critical success factors following good CRM
principles.
20Define the communitys purpose Construct a mission statement, identify the target market, and create a strong site personality Organize and promote cyclic events Hold regular, hosted, themed events, conduct community surveys, and hold contests that reinforce the purpose
Create extensible gathering places Provide a good system overview or map, include rich communications features, and allow members to extend the environment Provide a range of roles Offer newcomers a controlled experience, offer increased privileges to regulars, and recruit leaders and mentors from within
Create evolving member profiles Communicate the benefits of membership, make profile creation as easy and fun as possible, and keep the profiles up-to-date and evolving Facilitate member-created subgroups Provide features that facilitate small groups and create events and contests for groups
Promote effective leadership and hosting Set up your program to grow, build some flexibility into the house rules, and set reasonable expectations for online support Integrate with the real world Celebrate events that reinforce social identity, acknowledge important personal events, and encourage real-life meetings (when appropriate)
Define a clear yet flexible code of conduct Create and enforce your code of conduct and dont try to stifle all conflict
9 Community-Building Design Principles Source
Adapted from Kim (2000) at www.naima.com/articles/
webtechniques.html
214. Organizational Collaboration
- E-marketers collaborate both within and outside
of the organization - Within the firm Cross functional teams focus on
customer satisfaction. - Outside the firm When 2 or more companies join
forces, the results often exceed what each firm
might have accomplished alone. - This is true in the distribution channel or a
non-transactional type collaboration. - Todays marketplace consists of supply chain
competition, not individual firm competition.
224. Organizational Collaboration
- CRM-SCM Integration
- CRM usually refers to front-end operations
firms work to create satisfying experiences at
all customer touch points in-person visits to
stores, e-mail contact, and so forth. - This is challenging because different employees /
computer systems collect various information, and
it must be integrated into appropriate customer
records. - The entire supply chain can work together to
single-mindedly focus on meeting consumer needs
and make higher profits in the process.
234. Organizational Collaboration
- Imagine that a customer orders a particular shirt
from a clothing retailers Web site - If the shirt is out of stock, the customer might
see a Web screen with that message. - With an integrated CRM-SCM system, the system can
instantly check inventory levels at the retailer,
the wholesaler or manufacturer to determine
availability. - Then the system notify the customer and offer
options. Wait two weeks for delivery from the
manufacturer or consider a similar shirt
currently in stock.
24CRMSCM Integration
254. Organizational Collaboration
- Connecting customers with supply chain businesses
provides several advantages - All firms will share transaction data
inventories can be kept low. Producers /
wholesalers receive data about consumer orders
can produce goods in a timely manner. - Upstream firms can use the data to design
products that better meet consumer needs. - If customer service representatives have
up-to-the-minute information about product
inventories, they will be able to better help
consumers immediately.
264. Organizational Collaboration
- Extranet
- Extranets are two or more intranet networks that
are joined for the purpose of sharing
information. - Extranets are proprietary to the organizations
involved. - It is the use of extranets that allows CRM-SCM
integration. - Electronic Data Systems (EDS) a firm that
provides enterprise-wide computer desktop
services from procurement to network management
for large clients.
275. CRM Processes
- CRM involves an understanding of the customer
care life cycle. - Firms monitor and attract customers, both online
and offline, as they progress through the stages
target, acquire, transact, service, retain, and
grow. - Beginning
- When companies select target markets in the
e-marketing plan. - When opportunities often arise when a new target
group appears.
285. CRM Processes
- Identifying Customers
- Firms obtain prospect, business customer, and end
consumer information through - Personal disclosure,
- Automated tracking through the sales force,
- Customer service encounters,
- Bar code scanners at retailers,
- Web site activity.
- Every piece of user information goes into a
database that helps firms identify the best
customers. - Best highest value, longest loyalty, highest
frequency of purchase, and so on.
295. CRM Processes
- Differentiating Customers
- Customers have different needs.
- With the Internet, firms can collect information
to identify various benefit segments and
individual similarities/differences use this
information to increase profits. - One very important way to differentiate is by
customer value Not all customers have equal
value to a firm. - 20 of the customers provide 80 of the
businesss profits. - CRM allows marketers to leverage their resources
by investing more in the most important
customers. - Technology allows firms to identify high-value
customers respond with offers in real time over
the Internet.
305. CRM Processes
- Differentiating Customers
- How can firms identify their high-value
customers? - By mining and profiling in customer databases,
using real-time / real-space data collection
techniques. - Firms use analysis (recency, frequency, monetary)
to mine databases for customers who spend the
most money, buy frequently and recently. - Firms evaluate sales growth per customer over
time and determine service costs for individual
customers.
315. CRM Processes
- Customizing the Marketing Mix
- When a firm has identified prospects
differentiated customers according to
characteristics, behavior, needs, or value, - It can customize offerings to various segments or
individuals. - Customization occurs throughout the marketing
mix, not just in the product offerings. - Marketing communication messages can be tailored
to individuals and delivered over the Internet in
a timely manner. - Through customization firms can satisfy the
precise needs of each customer, and build
long-term, profitable relationships. - Personalization marketing Web pages that greet
users by name or e-mail that is automatically
sent to individuals with personal account
information.
325. CRM Processes
- Interaction
- Interaction with customers allows
- Firms to collect the data necessary for
identification and differentiation, - Firms to evaluate the resulting customization
effectiveness on a continuous basis. - The more information a firm has, the better value
it can provide to each customer and prospect in
terms of more accurate, timely, and relevant
offerings. - Information technology allows companies to move
beyond the traditional segment profiling to
detailed profiles of individuals.
336. CRM Information
- Software tracks a users movement from page to
page, indicating - How much time was spent on each page,
- Whether the user made a purchase,
- The type of computer and operating system, and
more.
346. CRM Information
- Firms can track which sites users visited before
and after theirs, - They use this information to guess which
competitive products are under consideration,
learn what about users interests. - Tracking user behavior is useful to both users
and companies, but it has its critics because of
privacy considerations. - Retailers gather information from each channel
filter it into a common database. - A customer can telephone the customer service
representative to discuss a product purchased in
the brick-and-mortar store last week, and refer
to an e-mail sent yesterday, because the data are
all in the database under one customer record
356. CRM Information
- 8 critical success factors for building
successful e-business relationships with
customers - Target the right customers identify the best
prospects and customers and learn as much about
them as possible. - Own the customers total experience the
customer share of mind. - Streamline business processes that impact the
customer accomplished through CRM-SCM
integration and customer focus. - Provide a 360-degree view of the customer
relationship this means that everyone in the
firm who touches the customer should understand
all aspects of her relationship with the company.
366. CRM Information
- Let customers help themselves provide Web sites
and other electronic means for customers to find
things they need quickly and conveniently, 24/7. - Help customers do their jobs if a firm provides
products and services to help customers perform
well in their businesses, they will be loyal and
pay a premium for the help. - Deliver personalized service customer
profiling, privacy safekeeping, and marketing mix
customizing all aid in delivering personalized
services electronically. - Foster community encouraging customers to join
in communities of interest that relate to a
firms products is one important way to build
loyalty.
377. CRM Technology
- Important tools that aid firms in customizing
products to groups of customers or individuals
include push strategies that reside on the
companys Web and e-mail servers, and pull
strategies that are initiated by Internet users.
38Selected E-Marketing Push Customization Tools
Company-Side Tools (push) Description
Cookies Cookies are small files written to the users hard drive after visiting a Web site. When the user returns to the site, the companys server looks for the cookie file and uses it to personalize the site.
Web log analysis Every time a user accesses a Web site, the visit is recorded in the Web servers log file. This file keeps track of which pages the user visits, how long he stays, and whether he purchases or not.
Data mining Data mining involves the extraction of hidden predictive information in large databases through statistical analysis.
Real-time profiling Real-time profiling occurs when special software tracks a users movements through a Web site, then compiles and reports on the data at a moments notice.
Collaborative filtering Collaborative filtering software gathers opinions of like-minded users and returns those opinions to the individual in real-time.
Outgoing e-mail Distributed E-Mail Marketers use e-mail databases to build relationships by keeping in touch with useful and timely information. E-mail can be sent to individuals or sent en masse using a distributed e-mail list.
Chats Bulletin Boards A firm may listen to users and build community by providing a space for user conversation on the Web site
iPOS terminals Interactive Point of Sale terminals are located on a retailers counter, and used to capture data and present targeted communication.
397. CRM Technology
- Company-Side Tools (PUSH)
- There are important e-marketing tools used by
firms to push customized information to users. - Users are unaware that marketers are collecting
data using these technologies to customize
offerings. - Cookies
- Cookie files are the reason that customers
returning to Amazon.com get a greeting by name
users dont have to remember passwords to every
site for which they are registered. - Cookie files allow ad-server firms to see the
path users take from site to site and, serve
advertising banners relevant to user interests. - Cookies keep track of shopping baskets and other
tasks so that users can quit in the middle and
return to the task later.
407. CRM Technology
- Web Site Log
- By performing Web log analysis, firms can do many
things, (customize Web pages based on visitor
behavior). - Software can also tell which sites the users
visited immediately before arriving what key
words they typed in at search engines to find the
site user domains, and much more. - Data Mining
- Marketers dont need a priori hypotheses to find
value in databases, but use software to find
patterns of interest. - Real-Time Profiling
- Customer profiling uses data warehouse
information to help marketers understand the
characteristics and behavior of specific target
groups.
417. CRM Technology
- Collaborative Filtering
- In the offline world, individuals often seek the
advice of others before making decisions. - Collaborative filtering software gathers the
recommendations of an entire group of people
presents the results to a like-minded individual. - BOL.com, an international media and entertainment
store uses collaborative filtering software to
observe how users browse and buy music, software,
games, at its site. - The more time a user spends at the site, the more
it will learn about her behavior/preferences
the better able it will be to present relevant
products. - BOL.com notes that it realized increased revenues
from using this software, and achieved a positive
ROI within months.
427. CRM Technology
- Outgoing E-Mail
- E-mail is used to communicate with individuals or
lists of individuals (distributed e-mail) to
increase their purchases, satisfaction, and
loyalty. - Many companies maintain e-mail distribution lists
for customers and other stakeholders. - Permission marketing dictates that customers will
be pleased to receive e-mail for which they have
opted-in. - MyPoints rewards consumers with points and gift
certificates, all for reading targeted e-mail ads
and shopping at selected sites. - MyPoints client companies pay a fee for these
e-mails, some of which go directly to customers
as points. - MyPoints advertises responsible e-mail
messaging consumers agree to receive commercial
messages within their e-mails.
43MyPoints Rewards Members for Time Spent
Online Source www.mypoints.com
447. CRM Technology
- Outgoing E-Mail
- Spam does not build relationships but instead
focuses on customer acquisition. - The Internet provides the technology for
marketers to send 500,000 or more e-mails at the
click of a mouse for less than the cost of 1
postage stamp. - Relationship-building e-mail requires
- Sending e-mails that are valuable to users,
- Sending them as often as users require,
- Offering users the chance to be taken off the
list at any time.
457. CRM Technology
- Chat and Bulletin Boards
- Firms build community learn about customers and
products through real-time chat and bulletin
board/newsgroup e-mail postings at its Web site. - Analysis of these exchanges is used in the
aggregate to design marketing mixes that meet
user needs. - iPOS Terminals
- Small customer facing machines near the
brick-and-mortar cash register, used to record a
buyers signature for a credit card transaction. - They can gather survey and other data present
individually targeted advertising and promotions
as well.
46Selected E-Marketing Pull Customization Tools
Client-Side Tools (pull) Description
Agents Agents are programs that perform functions on behalf of the user, such as search engines and shopping agents.
Experiential marketing Experiential marketing gets the consumer involved in the product to create a memorable experience, offline or online.
Individualized Web portals Personalized Web pages users easily configure at Web sites such as MyYahoo! and many others.
Wireless data services Wireless Web portals send data to customer cell phones, pagers, and PDAs, such as the PalmPilot.
Web forms Web form (or HTML form) is the technical term for a form on a Web page that has designated places for the user to type information for submission.
FAX-on-demand With FAX-on-demand, customers telephone a firm, listen to an automated voice menu, and select options to request a FAX be sent on a particular topic.
Incoming e-mail E-mail queries, complaints, or compliments initiated by customers or prospects comprise incoming e-mail, and is the fodder for customer service.
477. CRM Technology
- Client-Side Tools (PULL)
- Based on a users action at her computer or
handheld device. - The customer pull that initiates the customized
response. - Agents
- Shopping agents and search engines match user
input to databases and return customized
information. - Agent software often relies on more than one
interaction. - A user might type in computer on the Dell site
and then be presented with either laptop or
desktop options to narrow the search.
487. CRM Technology
- Experiential Marketing
- On the Internet, Calvin Klein developed an
interactive, experience-based campaign to promote
CK One, the unisex fragrance. - The advertising included 3 characters, each with
social dilemmas representative of those in the
target market. - The advertising invited viewers to e-mail
campaign characters, and each e-mail received
standard replies that developed the characters a
bit more. - This type of offline/online integration, when
combined with customized experiences, builds
positive relationships between customers and
brands.
497. CRM Technology
- Individualized Web Portals
- The Wall Street Journals online edition allows
individual customers to create a personalized Web
page based on keywords of interest. - Helpful for business readers who want to monitor
stories about their competitors. - A structural bond is created with individual
customers boost loyalty. - Individualized Web portals are more often used to
build relationships in the B2B market than the
B2C market. - Allow supply chains access inventory and account
information, and track various operations. - A huge improvement over the previous method,
where buyers searched through piles of brochures,
catalogs, and price lists that included many
products not carried by channel partners and were
constantly out-of-date.
507. CRM Technology
- Wireless Data Services
- They are included as a separate tool because of
their rapid growth and distinctive features. - Wireless users only want text data due to the
screen size of wireless devices and download time
for graphics. - As users customize this information, they give
serving firms a better idea of how to better
serve them and, build relationship.
517. CRM Technology
- Web Forms
- Many corporate Web sites use Web forms for a
multitude of purposes from site registration and
survey research to product purchase. - Many sites strive to build the number of
registered users as a prelude to transactions. - FAX-on-Demand
- In the B2B market, firms often want information
sent via FAX machine. - Services such as eFax.com allow Internet users to
send and receive FAX transmissions at their Web
sites. - Why would a user use this service as opposed to
an e-mail attachment? - When the document is not in digital form, a
signature is needed, or Internet access is not
available so the document cannot be sent as an
e-mail attachment.
527. CRM Technology
- Incoming E-Mail
- Post-transaction customer service is an important
part of the customer care life cycle. - The Web online channel a feedback button or
form that delivers an e-mail message to the
corporation. - Often an automated customer service program
acknowledges the message via e-mail and indicates
that a representative will be responding shortly.
- Research shows that firms are getting much better
at responding to incoming e-mail. - Companies should include feedback options online
only if they have staff in place to respond
E-mail addresses on a Web site imply a promise to
reply.