Customer Relationship Management (CRM)
Customer Relationship Management (CRM)
Customer Relationship Management (CRM)
MODULE 1
From the Industrial Age to the Information Age, the customer-enterprise relationship has
changed
• Product oriented business – highly innovative and entrepreneurial and provides visionary
leadership, but customer voice missing, no customer research, assumptions made about
customer wants. They sometimes over specify, over engineer, too costly for customers to
buy, small segment of buyers (2.5 %). example: Apple, fashion houses.
• Customer centricity
• Relationship Management
Opening Case Discussion – Walmart used data and CRM to its advantage to learn and
implement findings to increase Customer and Business value propositions
• Traditional Marketing focuses on the four P’s for increasing market share through
increase in the number of customers.
• CRM focuses on using strategies, tools and technology for promoting the relationship
between the seller and the customer to increase revenue, profitability and customer
satisfaction/delight. The main aim is to increase share of wallet.
Improved Market share with traditional Marketing vs. Improved customer mix (increase
customer profitability with CRM)
MVCs (most valuable customers) are those who have high highest actual life-time values.
(Strategy – Retention)
STCs (Second tier customers) are those with highest unrealised potential. (Strategy – growth)
BZs (Below zero customers) are those who are detrimental to the organizations profitability
(Strategy – divest)
CRM is the core business strategy that integrates internal processes and functions, and
external networks, to create and deliver value to targeted customers at a profit. It is grounded
on high-quality customer data and enabled by IT. (Francis Buttle, 2004)
Definition explained:
• Back office functions such as finance & operations can also learn from & contribute to
customer related data
• Customer Related Data allows external networks eg suppliers, distributors, resellers etc
to also align their efforts with the focal company
• Data from social media is also useful in creating customer value propositions
OTHER DEFINITIONS
The primary goal of CRM is to improve long-term growth and profitability through a
better understanding of customer behaviour. CRM aims to provide more effective
feedback and improved integration to ensure better ROI in these areas.
Examples discussed in class: ING Bank, Amazon, Target, Starbucks, British Airways.
WHY CRM
Better decision making through data analysis (Need not go by the random opinions and
ideas)
CRM – retention costs 6 times lesser than acquisition, lifetime value of customer, share
of mind, heart, wallet rather than share of mkt etc.
Companies are looking for better processes to increase business performance - reduce
costs, increase revenues and profits and increase customer satisfaction, value, loyalty.
1. Strategic CRM
2. Operational CRM
Real time marketing- eg Google and Amazon use location and search behaviours
b. Salesforce automation – Sales force automation (SFA) was the original form of
operational CRM. SFA helps standardize and improve selling process. SFA applies
technology to company selling activities and selling process stages.
SFA involves opportunity management software that has lead management applications
and sales forecasting applications. Lead management applications enable users to qualify
leads and assign appropriate salesperson. Sales forecasting applications use transactional
histories and sales force estimates to generate future sales estimates.
Other applications are Contact mgt applications, quotation and proposal generation,
product configuration applications.
B2B service automation on field help technicians with diagnostics, repair manuals,
inventory mgt, job info.
3. Analytical CRM
A bottom–up perspective on CRM which focuses on the intelligent mining of customer data
for strategic or tactical purposes.
Customer related data can be found in enterprise wide repositories – sales data (purchase history)
financial data (payment history, credit score) marketing data (campaign response, loyalty scheme
response), service data etc.
External sources – geo demographic and lifestyle data from business intelligence organisations
are structured data sets held in relational data bases.
Big data – unstructured and in many forms example - text, audio, video, click streams, log files
example - Facebook, twitter, YouTube
All the above three types are interlinked. Operational CRM struggles to reach its full
effectiveness without Analytical information about the customers.
GOALS OF CRM
• Retain customers
• Providing enhanced customer value and experience and delight by customising offers
• Increase business opportunities by offering right offer at right time through the
right channel for each consumer
CRM Constituencies
• Companies – early adopters are airlines, hotels, banks and financial services, telecoms,
retail outlets
• Vendors of CRM systems – Oracle, IBM, SAS, SAP sell licenses and install CRM
software on company servers, train clients people
• Vendors of CRM software and hardware supply technology such as servers, computers,
hand held and mobile devices, call centre hardware and telephony systems
2. CRM is a marketing process – reality...CRM extends into selling, service and many
other functions. Example R&D, Operations etc
3. CRM is an IT issue –reality - IT is enabler .IT cannot compensate for bad processes,
inept people. Also not all CRM initiatives involve IT investments example: CRM
projects may involve developing relationships with customers through behavioural
changes in sales, customer service and call centre staff.
4. CRM is about loyalty schemes- not all CRM implementations are linked to loyalty
schemes
1. Continuity Marketing
3. Partnering/Co-Marketing
Continuity Marketing
The Aim of this is to increase retention and loyalty. Loyalty is achieved through long-term
special services that has a potential to increase mutual value through learning about each other.
Membership programs, loyalty card, privilege services, feedback, discounts on cross sells etc are
continuity marketing programs.
Cross-selling Coursera
One-to-One Marketing
Aimed at meeting and satisfying each customers need uniquely and individually
Is possible at low cost due to availability of scalable data warehouse and data mining
Interactive marketing , Permission marketing (Permission marketing is an approach to
selling goods and services in which a prospect explicitly agrees in advance to receive
marketing information). in order to develop relationship with high yielding customers are
one-to-one programs. Using personalization in marketing campaigns cuts through the clutter
and capture the attention of prospects and customers.
- Affinity – Partnering program: Marketers do not create new brand but use endorsement
strategies.
- Co- branding : Two marketers jointly offer advanced products & services to mass
market consumers example: Delta and American Express
At its inception, CRM focused on automating processes and trying to drive efficiencies
into the call center or the sales force with a heavy client/server and inflexible
architecture. These solutions are costly to deploy, costly to maintain, and have a low rate
of adoption.
Modern CRM software has challenged the early CRM software vendors by redefining the
space around a differentiated CRM solution that is based on an intelligent, open
architecture that operates across multiple channels in real time.
Traditional CRM
Focused primarily with only front end departments like sales, marketing and customer
service
Expensive to implement
With the movement of business application to the internet, CRM has enhanced an
organizations capability by providing access to its customers and supplier via the web.
This web experience and communication through the wireless web is called e-CRM or
Web enabled CRM
E-CRM provides the ability to capture, integrate, and distribute data gained at the
organization’s Web site throughout the enterprise.
click stream analysis, content analysis (customer call records, emails etc), social media
data etc. is captures through e-CRM
A successful e-CRM is the solution for the challenge of consolidating all customer-
related information into a single view.
e-CRM can enable companies of all sizes and across all industries to offer one-to-one
relationships to customers.
Identify – Relationships are possible only with individuals, not with segments or markets.
Therefore the first task is to identify the customers not with a product code but with a customer
code. Know the client by name, his family, basic details. Ability to recognize the customer when
he calls comes in person or visits online. Customer information is an asset.
Differentiate – Customers represent different levels of value to the enterprise and they have
different needs from the enterprise.
Differentiate the customers based on the value they bring to the enterprise. Differentiate
customers based on needs and behavior too.
Interact – Each successive interaction with the customer should take place in the light of the
previous interaction. Each interaction should result in gathering more information about the
customer. The learning relationship gets better with each interaction.
Customize the offer – The enterprise should adapt some aspect of its behavior towards the
customer based on the individuals need and value.