English relations with management (nurmansyah permana 13209126/4ea03)
Customer relationship management (CRM) is a broadly recognized, widely-implemented strategy for
managing a company’s interactions with customers, clients and sales prospects.
It involves using technology to organize, automate, and synchronize business
processes—principally sales activities, but also those for marketing, customer
service, and technical support. The overall goals are to find, attract, and win
new clients, nurture and retain those the company already has, entice former
clients back into the fold, and reduce the costs of marketing and client
service.[1] Customer relationship management describes a
company-wide business strategy including customer-interface departments as well
as other departments.[2]
Related trends
Many CRM vendors offer Web-based tools (cloud computing) and
software as a service (SaaS), which are accessed via a secure Internet
connection and displayed in a Web browser. These applications are sold as
subscriptions, with customers not needing to invest in purchasing and
maintaining IT hardware, and subscription fees are a fraction of the cost of
purchasing software outright.
Phases
The three phases in which CRM support the relationship
between a business and its customers are to:
- Acquire: CRM can help a business acquire new customers through contact management, direct marketing, selling, and fulfillment.
- Enhance: web-enabled CRM combined with customer service tools offers customers service from a team of sales and service specialists, which offers customers the convenience of one-stop shopping.
- Retain: CRM software and databases enable a business to identify and reward its loyal customers and further develop its targeted marketing and relationship marketing initiatives.
Challenges
Tools and workflows can be complex, especially for large
businesses. Previously these tools were generally limited to contact
management: monitoring and recording interactions and communications. Software
solutions then expanded to embrace deal tracking, territories, opportunities,
and at the sales pipeline itself. Next came the advent of tools for other
client-interface business functions, as described below. These tools have been,
and still are, offered as on-premises software that companies purchase and run
on their own IT infrastructure.
Often, implementations are fragmented—isolated initiatives
by individual departments to address their own needs. Systems that start
disunited usually stay that way: siloed thinking and decision processes
frequently lead to separate and incompatible systems, and dysfunctional
processes.
Types/variations
Sales force automation
Sales force automation (SFA) involves using software to
streamline all phases of the sales process, minimizing the time that sales
representatives need to spend on each phase. This allows sales representatives
to pursue more clients in a shorter amount of time than would otherwise be
possible. At the heart of SFA is a contact management system for tracking and
recording every stage in the sales process for each prospective client, from
initial contact to final disposition. Many SFA applications also include
insights into opportunities, territories, sales forecasts and workflow
automation, quote generation, and product knowledge. Modules for Web 2.0
e-commerce and pricing are new, emerging interests in SFA.
Marketing
CRM systems for marketing help the enterprise identify and
target potential clients and generate leads for the sales team. A key marketing
capability is tracking and measuring multichannel campaigns, including email,
search, social media, telephone and direct mail. Metrics monitored include
clicks, responses, leads, deals, and revenue. This has been superseded by
marketing automation and Prospect Relationship Management (PRM) solutions which
track customer behaviour and nurture them from first contact to sale, often
cutting out the active sales process altogether.
Customer service and support
Recognizing that service is an important factor in
attracting and retaining customers, organizations are increasingly turning to
technology to help them improve their clients’ experience while aiming to
increase efficiency and minimize costs. Even so, a 2009 study revealed that
only 39% of corporate executives believe their employees have the right tools
and authority to solve client problems.“. The core for these applications has
been and still is comprehensive call center solutions, including such features
as intelligent call routing, computer telephone integration (CTI), and
escalation capabilities.
Analytics
Relevant analytics capabilities are often interwoven into
applications for sales, marketing, and service. These features can be
complemented and augmented with links to separate, purpose-built applications
for analytics and business intelligence. Sales analytics let companies monitor
and understand client actions and preferences, through sales forecasting and
data quality.
Marketing applications generally come with predictive
analytics to improve segmentation and targeting, and features for measuring the
effectiveness of online, offline, and search marketing campaign. Web analytics
have evolved significantly from their starting point of merely tracking mouse
clicks on Web sites. By evaluating “buy signals,” marketers can see which
prospects are most likely to transact and also identify those who are bogged
down in a sales process and need assistance. Marketing and finance personnel
also use analytics to assess the value of multi-faceted programs as a whole.
These types of analytics are increasing in popularity as
companies demand greater visibility into the performance of call centers and
other service and support channels, in order to correct problems before they
affect satisfaction levels. Support-focused applications typically include
dashboards similar to those for sales, plus capabilities to measure and analyze
response times, service quality, agent performance, and the frequency of
various issues.
Integrated/Collaborative
Departments within enterprises — especially large
enterprises — tend to function with little collaboration. More recently, the
development and adoption of these tools and services have fostered greater
fluidity and cooperation among sales, service, and marketing. This finds
expression in the concept of collaborative systems which uses technology to
build bridges between departments. For example, feedback from a technical
support center can enlighten marketers about specific services and product
features clients are asking for. Reps, in their turn, want to be able to pursue
these opportunities without the burden of re-entering records and contact data
into a separate SFA system. Owing to these factors, many of the top-rated and
most popular products come as integrated suites.
Small business
For small business, basic client service can be accomplished
by a contact manager system: an integrated solution that lets organizations and
individuals efficiently track and record interactions, including emails,
documents, jobs, faxes, scheduling, and more. These tools usually focus on accounts
rather than on individual contacts. They also generally include opportunity
insight for tracking sales pipelines plus added functionality for marketing and
service. As with larger enterprises, small businesses are finding value in
online solutions, especially for mobile and telecommuting workers.
Social media
Social media sites like Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook are
amplifying the voice of people in the marketplace and are having profound and
far-reaching effects on the ways in which people buy. Customers can now
research companies online and then ask for recommendations through social media
channels, making their buying decision without contacting the company.
People also use social media to share opinions and
experiences on companies, products and services. As social media is not as
widely moderated or censored as mainstream media, individuals can say anything
they want about a company or brand, positive or negative.
Increasingly, companies are looking to gain access to these
conversations and take part in the dialogue. More than a few systems are now
integrating to social networking sites. Social media promoters cite a number of
business advantages, such as using online communities as a source of
high-quality leads and a vehicle for crowd sourcing solutions to client-support
problems. Companies can also leverage client stated habits and preferences to
personalize and even “hyper-target” their sales and marketing communications.
Some analysts take the view that business-to-business
marketers should proceed cautiously when weaving social media into their
business processes. These observers recommend careful market research to
determine if and where the phenomenon can provide measurable benefits for
client interactions, sales and support. It is stated that
people feel their interactions are peer-to-peer between them and their
contacts, and resent company involvement, sometimes responding with negatives
about that company.
Non-profit and membership-based
Systems for non-profit and membership-based organizations
help track constituents and their involvement in the organization. Capabilities
typically include tracking the following: fund-raising, demographics,
membership levels, membership directories, volunteering and communications with
individuals.
Many include tools for identifying potential donors based on
previous donations and participation. In light of the growth of social
networking tools, there may be some overlap between social/community driven
tools and non-profit/membership tools.
Strategy
For larger-scale enterprises, a complete and detailed plan
is required to obtain the funding, resources, and company-wide support that can
make the initiative of choosing and implementing a system successful. Benefits
must be defined, risks assessed, and cost quantified in three general areas:
- Processes: Though these systems have many technological components, business processes lie at its core. It can be seen as a more client-centric way of doing business, enabled by technology that consolidates and intelligently distributes pertinent information about clients, sales, marketing effectiveness, responsiveness, and market trends. Therefore, a company must analyze its business workflows and processes before choosing a technology platform; some will likely need re-engineering to better serve the overall goal of winning and satisfying clients. Moreover, planners need to determine the types of client information that are most relevant, and how best to employ them.
- People: For an initiative to be effective, an organization must convince its staff that the new technology and workflows will benefit employees as well as clients. Senior executives need to be strong and visible advocates who can clearly state and support the case for change. Collaboration, teamwork, and two-way communication should be encouraged across hierarchical boundaries, especially with respect to process improvement.
- Technology: In evaluating technology, key factors include alignment with the company’s business process strategy and goals, including the ability to deliver the right data to the right employees and sufficient ease of adoption and use. Platform selection is best undertaken by a carefully chosen group of executives who understand the business processes to be automated as well as the software issues. Depending upon the size of the company and the breadth of data, choosing an application can take anywhere from a few weeks to a year or more.
Implementation
Implementation issues
Increases in revenue, higher rates of client satisfaction,
and significant savings in operating costs are some of the benefits to an
enterprise. Proponents emphasize that technology should be implemented only in
the context of careful strategic and operational planning. Implementations
almost invariably fall short when one or more facets of this prescription are
ignored:
- Poor planning: Initiatives can easily fail when efforts are limited to choosing and deploying software, without an accompanying rationale, context, and support for the workforce. In other instances, enterprises simply automate flawed client-facing processes rather than redesign them according to best practices.
- Poor integration: For many companies, integrations are piecemeal initiatives that address a glaring need: improving a particular client-facing process or two or automating a favored sales or client support channel. Such “point solutions” offer little or no integration or alignment with a company’s overall strategy. They offer a less than complete client view and often lead to unsatisfactory user experiences.
- Toward a solution: overcoming siloed thinking. Experts advise organizations to recognize the immense value of integrating their client-facing operations. In this view, internally-focused, department-centric views should be discarded in favor of reorienting processes toward information-sharing across marketing, sales, and service. For example, sales representatives need to know about current issues and relevant marketing promotions before attempting to cross-sell to a specific client. Marketing staff should be able to leverage client information from sales and service to better target campaigns and offers. And support agents require quick and complete access to a client’s sales and service history.
Adoption issues
Historically, the landscape is littered with instances of
low adoption rates. In 2003, a Gartner report estimated that more than $1
billion had been spent on software that was not being used. More recent
research indicates that the problem, while perhaps less severe, is a long way
from being solved. According to CSO Insights, less than 40 percent of 1,275
participating companies had end-user adoption rates above 90 percent.
In a 2007 survey from the U.K., four-fifths of senior
executives reported that their biggest challenge is getting their staff to use
the systems they had installed. Further, 43 percent of respondents said they
use less than half the functionality of their existing system; 72 percent
indicated they would trade functionality for ease of use; 51 percent cited data
synchronization as a major issue; and 67 percent said that finding time to
evaluate systems was a major problem.[15] With expenditures expected
to exceed $11 billion in 2010,[15] enterprises need to address and
overcome persistent adoption challenges. Specialists offer these
recommendations[14] for boosting adoptions rates and coaxing users
to blend these tools into their daily workflow:
- Choose a system that is easy to use: All solutions are not created equal. Some vendors offer more user-friendly applications than others, and simplicity should be as important a decision factor as functionality.
- Choose the right capabilities: Employees need to know that time invested in learning and usage will yield personal advantages. If not, they will work around or ignore the system.
- Provide training: Changing the way people work is no small task, and help is usually a requirement. Even with today’s more usable systems, many staffers still need assistance with learning and adoption
Lead by example: Showing employees that upper management
fully supports the use of a new application by using the application themselves
may increase the likelihood that employees will adopt the application.
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