The good news is that your CRM system has a combination of applications that will assist you with easily managing the CRM business cycle (CRMBC) process and the information. A combination of marketing, sales, service, and customer satisfaction management applications will help your company address all of the areas outlined above. Once you establish a continuous feedback loop in these four process areas you will be moving towards your goal.
There are four major steps that you can take to achieve the goal of increasing your competitive advantage in the marketplace.
1. Develop a serious commitment to focusing the organization on the goal.
Once competitive advantage becomes a stated goal and is continuously reinforced by management, your company will shift towards increased market share and all of the related downstream benefits. Most organizations attempt to achieve this advantage in different areas, but few have a well thought-out, systematized strategy for achieving the desired results. However, by using the CRMBC to manage the process and organize your efforts and communications, and by communicating its message throughout your organization and to your customers, the downstream benefits will become a reality.
2. Structure your internal business processes to support your goal.
Before you install and implement your CRM system, have an idea about how your internal business processes will change. Think through the complete CRMBC cycle from marketing to sales, to service through to customer satisfaction management. Although you may focus more specifically in one area than others, you must consider the complete cycle when implementing your system. For example, even if you don’t have an “official” service center, someone within your organization is still performing that function. Even if it is the sales representatives that field the customer calls, they should be tracking the results of the calls and follow up by documenting the results. After that, they should be part of the customer satisfaction measurement process.
3. Accommodate those processes.
Each of the four CRMBC areas in your new system will have an associated application (or module). These modules will have configuration options that will allow you to tailor the module to your process flows. As you set these options, always keep in mind the ultimate goal: achieving competitive advantage.
4. Establish "Metrics" to make sure that the cycle is complete.
Once you map out a strategy for configuring your applications, you must establish measurement mechanisms, known as metrics, that will help you manage towards your goal. Metrics are simply criteria that are established in each CRMBC area to assess the effectiveness of your progress towards your goals.
In many situations the same metric can help you measure progress towards several goals. The key to effective use of metrics is to select a manageable set for each of the four components of the CRMBC. If you set up a relatively easy mechanism to capture data and convert it into the appropriate metrics, the results will become a byproduct of your regular daily operations.
Developing Metrics from Your Data
Once you have data for the metrics, you will need to establish standards and alert mechanisms to make sense of the results. Once again, the key here is manageability. Volumes of data that are difficult to manage and interpret will provide little value and even less actionable items. Some that you may wish to consider when measuring your progress towards achieving a competitive advantage are
Product quality control metrics
- Product returns
- Warranty service requests
- Initial service calls
- Customer complaints
- Sales force communication effectiveness
- Accuracy of forecasting
- Timely identification of competitor price changes
- Identification of new customers entering the market
- Capturing of competitive sales activities
- Identification of customer defections both to and from your company
- Identification of competitors’ marketing campaigns and strategies
Customer Service metrics
- Customers’ call in response time
- Identification of competitive service offerings and performance
- Continuous ownership of customer contacts until issue is resolved
Product innovation
- Identification of new competitive products entering the market
- Identification of potential new markets for existing products
- Tracking investment in new product development by your competitors
- Continuous measurement of customer satisfaction
- Gather feedback on your customers’ experiences with each department in your company
- Identify your level of penetration into your customers’ product line
- Track customers’ satisfaction with sales interaction
- Measurement of your products’ impact on your customers’ profitability
- Understanding of your competitors’ impact on your customers’ profitability
Capturing Information
Capturing information to monitor some of the metrics outlined above may not be as difficult as you first imagine. In many cases the information already exists within your organization. The challenge will be to find out where and how the data is captured (informal conversations, e-mails, sales notes, competitors brochures, published market surveys, internal operational statistics, Internet research, etc.).
Once you identify the metrics that your company will use to achieve your competitive advantage, make sure that they are communicated throughout the organization. Sales, call center staff, executive management, suppliers, and customers are all valuable sources of information. Your task will be to specifically identify the appropriate source(s) of data for each metric and then implement a recurring method for capturing the data such as meetings, sales call reports, call center logs, e-mail logs, supplier surveys, regular Internet research, customer inquiries, and informal discussions.
We can’t stress enough how important it is to spend time before jumping into your CRM implementation to establish goals, objectives, metrics, and measurement techniques that will help you obtain and achieve a competitive advantage in the marketplace. Taking this approach will entail some additional “upfront” work but will pay significant dividends down the road. Not many of your competitors will be taking such a systematic approach to continuous evaluation of their place in the market. Your efforts will prepare you for effectively developing marketing strategies and campaigns that are targeted towards meeting specific goals that will ultimately increase the profitability of your company.
Changing Your Organization
Companies contemplating implementing a CRM strategy must undergo the metamorphosis of becoming a customer centric organization. Move away from making disorganized, incoherent business decisions, or organizational objectives that are not customer-oriented. Your business exists to service the customer, to understand their needs, to respond to their demands, to give them things they haven’t even thought of, and to keep them informed.
Understanding “C-R-M”
Let’s break down the acronym, “CRM”.
Many companies are so focused on the bottom line, increasing their profit margin and making their income statement look more attractive to stockholders, that they forget the whole basis for the theory of supply and demand. Without demand, there is no supply. Without customers, there is no company, no products, no employees, and no highly paid executives. The first and most important word in CRM is customers. CRM is about understanding people, about finding out why customers behave the way they do, what motivates them, what needs they have for you to fulfill.
The word relationship implies more than one entity. This is the dynamic that binds a company to its customers. This association between the two is characteristic of all businesses, whether the customer is a direct consumer or a business-to-business (B2B) customer. It is a partnership that requires each side to share information. Customers must share their personal information such as addresses, tastes, or buying habits. The supplier must inform the customer about the product, what it can do for the customer, and how the customer can acquire the product.
Additionally, a relationship can suffer without careful management. CRM is about companies that nurture and support the relationship with their customers. Stale relationships that do not grow or take on new nuances can jeopardize a company’s CRM initiative and their bottom line. Careful planning and timely executions are key characteristics to good management, whether managing projects, personnel, or customer relationships.
Understanding this and the nature of your competition will help you gain the competitive edge.