Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Five CRM Strategies That Cost Little to Nothing, but Will Generate Positive Results

Companies that fail to invest in CRM strategies because of the tough economic climate will delay perceived benefits by at least 12 months once the economy recovers, giving rivals an advantage in the market, according to Gartner Inc. Gartner analysts said that lesson learned from previous downturns indicate that 40 percent of companies will use the current economic slump as an opportunity to generate post-recovery growth via effective use of CRM strategies.

Gartner said in reality there is no such thing as true "zero cost strategy"-- as money has often already been spent on CRM systems and there are ongoing care and maintenance expenses -- CRM success can be secured without spending more money on technology. Many organizations have large investments in call centers, Web sites, marketing systems and sales force automation. With these pieces in place, companies can wrap effective strategies around these tools and generate real success from a customer standpoint.

Gartner has identified five strategies that companies can undertake now that cost very little or nothing, but which will generate positive results from a CRM strategy point of view.

Customer Communities - Gartner predicts that CRM of the future will be about creating online communities of customers via emerging social media, such as Facebook, Twitter and similar Web sites. The economic downturn provides a great opportunity to begin experimenting in this area, and Gartner advises companies to set up accounts on the various Web sites and learn what they do and don’t do, and how users interact.

Analytics - Once bought and installed, analytic tools can be put to good use during economic downturns. Many companies have more information than they know what to do with, and now they have the opportunity to put this to good use studying attrition models, looking at the next most likely to buy models, and figuring out channel usage patterns. While doing so, companies should bear in mind that customer behavior may change when the economy improves.

Segmentation - Many segmentation schemes are based on psycho-demographics, profitability or account attributes. However, a down economy provides companies with the opportunity to review their segmentation strategy and see if it really is the very best one that they could have.

Process Redesign - Process is often an overlooked part of CRM and in many cases all that CRM technologies have done is taken out old, broken processes and made them run more efficiently. Now is an excellent time to study customer processes with a view to redesigning them and creating a win/win situation for both the company -- which gets greater efficiency -- and the customer -- who gets a "partner" that interacts with them in a meaningful way.

Organizational Redesign - Organizational change is one of the most difficult areas of CRM strategy, but many companies need to make the move from product-centric to customer-centric. In a down economy, with fewer distractions, many companies will find that this is the perfect time to start to address some of the organizational issues that get in the way of serving the customer.

More information about CRM can be found at www.CRMindustry.com

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Gartner is spot-on about companies having more information than they know what to do with. Luckily that's left an opportunity for our company. Our latest product, EmcienMatch, takes advantage of data that isn't typically mined for value because tools for doing so didn't exist (until now). We look at sales data for buying patterns and then leverage that info at the time of sale to match customers to best-fit products. The algorithm that does this is complex, but the delivery is simple and streamlined so salespeople aren't bogged down when they're trying to build relationships and close the deal.

Great blog, by the way. The content is terrific.

Loraine
Emcien
blog.emcien.com