Courses 1-7
Courses 1-7
COURSE 1
Customer Relationship Management
MAIN TOPICS
1.Characteristics of a genuine business relationship
2.Factors which created customers-driven on of
relationship marketing
3.Evolution of relationship marketing
4.Customer-driven competition
5. Learning relationships
6. Relationships- forming building blocks
7. CRM approaches
8. CRM main functions
9. The major components for the successful
implementation of CRM
WHAT IS A RELATIONSHIP?
AN ENTERPRISE strives
To grow the
To keep that
To get a value of the
customer for
customer customer to
a lifetime
the enterprise
CHARACTERISTICS OF A GENUINE BUSINESS RELATIONSHIP
Mutual
Interactive
• The customer-strategy
enterprise treats the
customer base as its
Financial care primary asset
• The enterprise has to
of the customer manage carefully the
base investment it makes in
this asset
CUSTOMER-DRIVEN COMPETITION
•Enterprises must be
Production, capable of customizing
their offerings to the needs
logistics, and and preferences of each
service delivery individual customer.
CUSTOMER-DRIVEN COMPETITION
Marketing •Marketing
communications, communications and all
forms of customer
customer interaction and
service, and connectivity need to be
interaction combined into a unified
function
CUSTOMER-DRIVEN COMPETITION
•Disintermediation of the
Sales distribution network by
distribution and leaping over the
channel “middleman” is sometimes
one solution to selling to
management individual customers.
CUSTOMER-DRIVEN COMPETITION
Trust
Commitment Satisfaction
Uncertainty
and Fairness
dependence
Symmetry
RELATIONSHIP-FORMING BUILDING BLOCKS
•Calculative commitment -
results from an economic
analysis of the costs
Commitment •Affective commitment - is
positively related to trust and
supports relationship benefits
much longer in duration
RELATIONSHIP-FORMING BUILDING BLOCKS
1. Customer environment
2. Customer expectations
3. Customer experience
4. Customers emotions
5. Customer engagement
WHAT IS IT
CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP
MANAGEMENT?
CRM APPROACHES
CRM
Is an entire philosophy
CRM APPROACHES
CRM
It is a strategy, not a
tactic
CRM MAIN FUNCTIONS
• Integrates sales,
marketing and
service function
across media
A front office • Call centers
• People
• Stores
• internet
THE MAJOR COMPONENTS FOR THE SUCCESSFUL
IMPLEMENTATION OF CRM
•Enable customer
Measures of relationships to
performance continually improve
THE MAJOR COMPONENTS FOR THE SUCCESSFUL
IMPLEMENTATION OF CRM
COURSE 2
A review of the main concepts related
to customer relationship management
MAIN TOPICS
1.Characteristics of a genuine business relationship
2.Factors which created customers-driven on of
relationship marketing
3.Evolution of relationship marketing
4.Customer-driven competition
5. Learning relationships
6. Relationships- forming building blocks
7. CRM approaches
8. CRM main functions
9. The major components for the successful
implementation of CRM
WHAT IS A RELATIONSHIP?
AN ENTERPRISE strives
To grow the
To keep that
To get a value of the
customer for
customer customer to
a lifetime
the enterprise
CHARACTERISTICS OF A GENUINE BUSINESS RELATIONSHIP
Mutual
Interactive
• The customer-strategy
enterprise treats the
customer base as its
Financial care primary asset
• The enterprise has to
of the customer manage carefully the
base investment it makes in
this asset
CUSTOMER-DRIVEN COMPETITION
•Enterprises must be
Production, capable of customizing
their offerings to the needs
logistics, and and preferences of each
service delivery individual customer.
CUSTOMER-DRIVEN COMPETITION
Marketing •Marketing
communications, communications and all
forms of customer
customer interaction and
service, and connectivity need to be
interaction combined into a unified
function
CUSTOMER-DRIVEN COMPETITION
•Disintermediation of the
Sales distribution network by
distribution and leaping over the
channel “middleman” is sometimes
one solution to selling to
management individual customers.
CUSTOMER-DRIVEN COMPETITION
Trust
Commitment Satisfaction
Uncertainty
and Fairness
dependence
Symmetry
RELATIONSHIP-FORMING BUILDING BLOCKS
•Calculative commitment -
results from an economic
analysis of the costs
Commitment •Affective commitment - is
positively related to trust and
supports relationship benefits
much longer in duration
RELATIONSHIP-FORMING BUILDING BLOCKS
1. Customer environment
2. Customer expectations
3. Customer experience
4. Customers emotions
5. Customer engagement
WHAT IS IT
CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP
MANAGEMENT?
CRM APPROACHES
CRM
Is an entire philosophy
CRM APPROACHES
CRM
It is a strategy, not a
tactic
CRM MAIN FUNCTIONS
• Integrates sales,
marketing and
service function
across media
A front office • Call centers
• People
• Stores
• internet
THE MAJOR COMPONENTS FOR THE SUCCESSFUL
IMPLEMENTATION OF CRM
•Enable customer
Measures of relationships to
performance continually improve
THE MAJOR COMPONENTS FOR THE SUCCESSFUL
IMPLEMENTATION OF CRM
COURSE 3
CRM Processes and Key Elements
Misunderstandings about CRM
• Strategic
CRM and operational CRM can be
implemented in any company.
CRM is based on customer data – if these
• Analytical
data are missing then analytical CRM cannot be
implemented
CRM Levels
STRATEGIC CRM
OPERATIONAL CRM
ANALYTICAL CRM
5- process model of CRM
5- process model of CRM
• Five core processes in CRM
Performance assessment
process
Information management ANALYTICAL
CRM
process
Strategic CRM
Strategic
CRM is focused on the
development of a customer-centric
business culture
Leadership
Customer intimacy
Network development
Appliestechnology to marketing
processes
Capabilities:
1. Customer segmentation
2. Campaign management
3. Event-based management
Marketing automation (MA)
• Improved salesperson
productivity
Sales managers • Improved customer
relationships
Call centers
Help desks
Field desks
Service automation - benefits
Multinational strategy
Transnational strategy
Global strategy
Overview of international strategic
theory
Home replication strategy
Resource deployment
Synergy
Components of strategy for cross-
border operations
4. Synergy
Firms that are engaged in a CRM environment want to
maximize profitability via cross-selling to its existing
customer base
Itis more expensive to attract new customers, than it is
to sell complementary products and services to the
existing customers
CRM across national boundaries
Economic environment
the
majority of CRM applications have been
undertaken in developed countries of the world
International
trade and urbanization levels can also
impact the success of global CRM strategies
CRM across national boundaries
Technology
The levels of infrastructure development worldwide are
very different
These differences could:
make the costs associated with data collection very
high
impact the quantity and quality of the information
available
It is very difficult to employ a customer orientation
worldwide on a standardized basis
CRM across national boundaries
Cultural differences
companies with a global CRM strategy may need to
consider different marketing approaches depending
on where they are conducting business
Western people tend to value more individuality, self-
interest, and immediate gratification
Asian
people tend to resemble delayed gratification,
and a more collective viewpoint
CRM across national boundaries
Customer
orientation
Customer
satisfaction
Customer
retention
There
is a close relationship between customer
commitment and profit level.
Theprofit per customer increases with the growing
duration of a customer’s relationship to a company.
The pitfalls of CRM implementation
Ineffective change management
FACTORS
Firm-level Internal to
differences the firm
FACTORS AFFECTING CRM ACROSS NATIONAL
BOUNDARIES/CULTURES
Customer-level
differences
Differences in:
Differences in:
customer expectations
• the competitive environments
drivers of satisfaction
• technological infrastructure,
loyalty, profitability,
political systems, regulatory
customer value across
variations
countries or cultures
FACTORS AFFECTING CRM ACROSS NATIONAL
BOUNDARIES/CULTURES
Carrefour, the French retail chain, led Wal-Mart in China in
identifying and dealing with the local economy’s desired buying
experience
The Japanese Web users trusted a local Web site least, were least
satisfied, and were least loyal as compared to the users from USA,
Canada and Germany
Customers could be classified in: “privacy fundamentalist”, “ privacy
pragmatist” and “privacy unconcerned”, related their privacy needs.
FACTORS AFFECTING CRM ACROSS NATIONAL
BOUNDARIES/CULTURES
There are important differences in the drivers of repeat purchase
such as cost, value, quality, and service in the four regions of Asia,
Latin America, Northern Europe, and Southern Europe
There is a stronger link between the human elements of service and sales
representatives on repeat purchase intentions for collectivistic cultures
compared to the more individualistic cultures
Preferential treatment is not effective in USA, Belgium and the
Netherlands – interpersonal communications and tangible rewards are
effective in all three countries
FACTORS AFFECTING CRM ACROSS NATIONAL
BOUNDARIES/CULTURES
Firm-level
differences
Technological
Economic and
Challenges
market
Social and
cultural
Political, legal
and regulatory
GCRM ENVIRONMENT: CHALLENGES AND CONSIDERATIONS
TECHNOLOGICAL
Industrial structure
Firm resources
Market
.
GCRM ENVIRONMENT: CHALLENGES AND CONSIDERATIONS
.
GCRM ENVIRONMENT: CHALLENGES AND CONSIDERATIONS
.
GCRM ENVIRONMENT: CHALLENGES AND CONSIDERATIONS
CUSTOMER PORTFOLIO
MANAGEMENT
Customer portfolio management
Market segmentation
Sales forecasting
Activity-based costing
Data mining
Market segmentation
Identifyrelevant segmentation
variables
Quantitative methods
o customer surveys
Qualitative methods
o sales team estimates
Time-series methods
o moving average
o exponential smoothing
o time-series decomposition
Causal methods
o leading indicators
o regression models
Sales forecasting
Quantitative methods
Qualitative methods
Time-series methods
o Movingaverage
oExponential smoothing
oTime-series decomposition
Sales forecasting
Time-series methods
o Moving average = takes sales in a number
of previous periods and averages them
oIs computed on successive periods of
data, moving on one period at a time,
Sales forecasting
Time-series methods
oExponential smoothing = weight the more
recent periods more heavily
o more recent periods are better predictors
Sales forecasting using moving averages
Sales forecasting
Time-series methods
oThe decomposition method=is applied when
there is evidence of cyclical or seasonal patterns
in the historical data
oSeparates out four components of the time series:
trend factor, cyclical factor, seasonal factor and random
factor
The trend factor = the long-term direction of the trend
after the other three elements are removed
Sales forecasting
Causal methods
o
Leading indicators
Regression methods
Sales forecasting
Causal methods
o Leading indicators – contemporary
activity or event that indicates that
another activity or event will happen
in the future.
Sales forecasting
Causal methods
oRegression models - work by
employing data on a number of
predictor variables to estimate future
demand.
Activity-based costing
Benchmark customers
Inspirations
Door openers
Strategically significant customers
CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE
Understanding value
Mass customization =
customized value
propositions to Craft customization
individual customers on = customized offers, but
a massive scale not at mass-market
level
Customization
• Customization can be applied to any part of the offer
Product Solvay Interox, a chemicals company, customizes its hydrogen
peroxide product for textile industry customers
•influences customer’s
perceptions of value
Total customer and service quality
experience and affects
customer loyalty
What is customer experience?
CX is significantly influenced by
customer interactions with company’s:
- people
- processes Core elements
- technologies of CRM strategy
Customer experience concepts
Touchpoints
Moment of truth
Customer engagement
Customer experience concepts
Touchpoints
are found wherever customers comes into virtual or concrete
contact with company’s products, services, communications,
places, people, processes or technologies.
include:
• Websites
• Social media
• Service centers
• Warehouses
• Call and contact centers
• Events, exhibitions,
• Direct mail, email
• Retail stores, etc
Customer experience concepts
Moment of truth
any occasion the customer interacts with, or is
exposed to, any organizational output that leads to the
formation of an impression of the organization
occurs during customer interactions at touchpoints
Customers generally have expectations of what
should happen during moments of truth, and if
those expectations are underperformed,
dissatisfaction will result
Customer experience concepts
Customer engagement
Engaged consumers tend to have a higher
connection to a brand or organization
They feel a strong sense of identification, based on
their experiences of the firm’s offerings, activities
and reputation
Traditionalmeasures of satisfaction do not
perform well as measures of engagement
Customer experience concepts
Customer engagement - measures
COGNITIVE - Does the customer know our brand
values? Does the customer know about our sustainability
awards?
EMOTIONAL - Does the customer like the experience
offered by our firm? Does the customer prefer our
offerings to our major competitors’?
BEHAVIOURAL - How often does the customer visit our
website?
SOCIAL - Does the customer ‘like’ our Facebook page?
Does the customer join our Twitter conversation?
The 4 Is of customer engagement
Involvement
Interaction
Intimacy
Influence
The 4 Is of customer engagement
INVOLVEMENT – measures:
Unique site visitors
Advertising impressions
Website page views
Time spent per session
Time spent per page
In-store visits
Newsletter subsciptions
The 4 Is of customer engagement
INTERACTION – measures:
First time purchases
Videos played
Community contributions
Warranty registrations
Loyalty card registration
Request for free samples
Comments in social media
Clock-through on banner ads
Photos uploaded
The 4 Is of customer engagement
INTIMACY – measures:
Satisfaction scores
Sentiment in blogs and social media posts
Call-center feedback
Focus group contributions
The 4 Is of customer engagement
INFLUENCE – measures:
Content forwarded
Friends invited to join online communities
Word-of-mouth