Customer Relationship Management (CRM) : Scott Hopper Monica Brooks Jessica Jetton

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Customer Relationship

Management (CRM)
Scott Hopper
Monica Brooks
Jessica Jetton
Case Studies:
United Parcel Service (UPS)
Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) Financial Group

Agenda
CRM Background & Industry Information
CRM In Action: Case Studies

United Parcel Service (UPS)


Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) Financial Group

Lessons Learned

Presentation Focus
Present overview information on
Customer Relationship Management
(CRM) and its impact on the way people
conduct business
Discuss real-life CRM implementations
Discuss Successes
Discuss Areas of Opportunity for
Improvement

Discuss industry leading CRM best


practices

What Is CRM?
CRM, or Customer Relationship Management is
a company wide business strategy designed to
reduce costs and increase profitability by
solidifying customer loyalty.
At its core, CRM is a simple, intuitively appealing
concept: attract new customers, know them
well, give them outstanding service, and
anticipate their wants and needs.

Source:
Goodhue, Dale L., Wixom, Barbara H., and Watson, Hugh., Realizing Business Benefits Through CRM: Hitting the Right Target
in the Right Way MIS Quarterly Executive Vol. 1, 2, 2002, pp.79-94.
www.destinationcrm.com/articles/, What is CRM?, viewed October 12th, 2004.

History
Mass Marketing
All customers treated as if they had same
needs and preferences

Target Marketing
Focused on market segments

Relationship Marketing
Each customers individual needs are
targeted by building relationships

Source:
Goodhue, Dale L., Wixom, Barbara H., and Watson, Hugh., Realizing Business Benefits Through CRM: Hitting the Right Target
in the Right Way MIS Quarterly Executive Vol. 1, 2, 2002, pp.79-94.

What Does CRM Do?


Sales
Up-sell and cross sell products more effectively
Help sales staff close deals faster

Marketing
Simplify marketing and sales processes
Discover new customers

Customer Service
Provide better customer service
Make call centers more efficient

Why Use CRM?

Customers

Enterprises
Satisfaction
Loyalty
Volume

Revenues
Costs

Goals
Make it easy for customers to do business
Focus on the end customer
Redesign front office and examine information
flows between the front and back office
Foster customer loyalty by becoming proactive
with customers
Build in measurable checks and balances to
continuously improve

Source:
Chen, Injazz J., and Popovich, Karen, Understanding customer relationship management (CRM) People, process and
technology Business Process Management Journal, Vol. 9, 5, 2003; ABI/INFORM Global, pages 672-688.

Who Uses CRM?


One survey of more than 1,500 companies by
The Data Warehousing Institute (TDWI) in 2000
found that 91 percent either have or plan to
deploy a CRM solution in the near future.
78 percent of companies said they were using
some form of CRM Bain & Company survey of
708 corporate executives 2002

Source:
Goodhue, Dale L., Wixom, Barbara H., and Watson, Hugh., Realizing Business Benefits Through CRM: Hitting the Right Target
in the Right Way MIS Quarterly Executive Vol. 1, 2, 2002, pp.79-94.
www2.cio.com/metrics/2003/metric544.html, The Right Tool, viewed November 1st, 2004.

Who uses CRM?


Cingular Wireless
Improved sales productivity by providing a
comprehensive view of the customer, improving lead
generation, and providing a full-functional wireless
solution to sales force.

Honeywell
Improved customer service by increasing after-market
spare parts revenue by 100%, improving service
request closure rate from 45% to 83%, and improved
customer satisfaction by 38%.

DHL
By providing a transparent view of the customer,
Siebel will help DHL to achieve an estimated 1%
increase in revenue by the end of 2005 Ulrik Topp
Global Sales Development Director DHL
Source:
www.siebel.com, customer case studies, viewed 11/9/04

CRM Budget Change for 2003

Companies surveyed by Aberdeen Group


in January 2003

Stay the
Same
31%

Increase
53%

Decrease
16%

Increase
Decrease
Stay the Same

Source:
Aberdeen Group, CRM Spending and Satisfaction Report, February 2003, pages 1-18.

CRM Market

AMR Research estimates that the


Customer Relationship Management
(CRM) market will grow to $10.8B in
2004, a $1B leap from 2003.

Source:
Preslan, Laura, Investment Priorities for CRM in 2004, AMR Research, Thursday, Jan. 8, 2004.

CRM Market

$18,000

US$ million

$17,000
$16,000
$15,000
$14,000
$13,000
$12,000
$11,000
$10,000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

Source:
Aberdeen Group, Worldwide CRM Spending, Market Analysis Service, June 2003,
pages 1-57.

2006

US$ million

CRM Spending by Region

$10,000
$9,000
$8,000
$7,000
$6,000
$5,000
$4,000
$3,000
$2,000
$1,000
$0

North
America
Europe
Latin
America
Asia/Pacific
Rim
Middle
East/Africa
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

Source:
Aberdeen Group, Worldwide CRM Spending, Market Analysis Service, June 2003,
pages 1-57.

US CRM Spending by Industry

$2,500

Manufacturing

US$ million

$2,000

Financial
Services

$1,500

Retail and
Distribution

$1,000

Business
Services

$500
$0

Government
and Education
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

Source:
Aberdeen Group, Worldwide CRM Spending, Market Analysis Service, June 2003,
pages 1-57.

Reasons for CRMs Increased Popularity


Easier to retain customers than attract new
customers
CRM has become more affordable and the
technology is more advanced
The definition of CRM is being expanded to
include initiatives like loyalty programs

Source:
www2.cio.com/metrics/2003/metric544.html, The Right Tool, viewed November 1st, 2004.

CRM Software Leaders

Top CRM Software Suppliers in 2002

Siebel 21.6%
SAP 12.4%
Oracle 5.7%
PeopleSoft 4.9%
Peregrine Systems 3.0%
Others 52.4%

Source:
Aberdeen Group, Worldwide CRM Spending, Market Analysis Service, June 2003,
pages 1-57.

Siebel

Market Cap - $4.86B


Revenue - $1.31B
NASDAQ: SEBL - $9.56 (11-13-04)
5000 employees
Founded: 1993
2.8 million employees at more than 4,000
organizations use Siebel products
Siebel Systems is the worlds leading provider of
customer relationship management (CRM) solutions
and a leading provider of applications for business
intelligence and standards-based integration.

Source:
www.siebel.com, viewed 11/9/04

SAP

Market Cap - $56.32B


Revenue - $9.28B
NYSE: SAP - $45.23 (11-13-04)
30,942 employees
Founded: 1972
mySAP Customer Relationship Management
is the only CRM solution that connects your
employees, partners, processes, and
technology in a closed-loop customer
interaction cycle.

Source:
www.sap.com, viewed 11/9/04

Oracle

Market Cap 68.67B


Revenue 10.30B
NASDAQ: ORCL 13.39 (11-13-04)
41,658 employees
Founded: 1977
Oracle's integrated CRM applications give
you information-driven sales, service, and
marketing because they're built on an open,
standards-based architecture that streamlines
business processes, improves data quality,
and allows all your key divisions to draw from
the same source of data.
Source:
www.oracle.com, viewed 11/9/04

Benefits Summary
CRM creates value through three key
levers:
Acquire increase number of profitable
customers
Develop increase profit from existing
customers
Retain extend duration of customer
relationship

Existing Customers #1 Priority


Cheaper to retain customers than to add new
customers
Retain customers mean sales volumes increase
per customer
Up-sell and cross-sell

It costs about five times more to gain a customer than to


keep one. And it is estimated to cost 10 times more to get
customers back if they are dissatisfied.

Source:
Massnick, Forler, Customer Service Can Kill You... Management Review, Mar 1997; 86, 3; ABI/INFORM Global
pages 33-35.

Difficult to Acquire New Customers


Annual Credit Card Acquisition Mail Volume (in Billions)

Percent Response to Credit Card Direct Mail Offers


4.0%

3.0%
2.8%

2.0%

2.2%
1.6%

1.0%

1.4%

1.4%

1.3%

1.2%
1.0%
0.6%

0.0%
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000

Source: BAI Global, Inc., Mail Monitor, $Q02, Synovate.

Keys to Success
Top Management Commitment
Project Teams with representatives from all
departments
Project Champion
Company data must be shared enterprise-wide
Vision and communication

Reasons for Failure


Not understanding the needs of the end user
Considered an IT project rather than a
business strategy
Accessibility - Not training users to effectively
use the solution
Inability to integrate different data sources in
to a single system
Understanding expectations

Success and Failure Rate of CRM Projects


Some 80% of the responding marketing,
customer-service and sales execs at 96
companies characterize their organizations CRM
efforts as very successful or somewhat
successful.
Fifty-five percent of all customer relationship
management (CRM) programs fail, according to
Stamford, Conn.-based Gartner Inc.

Source:
Yu, Larry, Successful Customer-Relationship Management MIT Sloan Management Review, Vol. 42, No. 4, pp18-19.
Melymuka, Kathleen, You Can Avoid CRMs Pitfalls Computerworld, Feb 11, 2002; 36, 7; ABI/INFORM, page 30.

CRM In Action: Case Studies

United Parcel Service (UPS)

UPS
Worlds Largest Package
Delivery Company
Leading global provider
of specialized
transportation and
logistics services
Founded in 1907 in
Washington
$33.5 billion in revenue
in 2003
357,000 employees
worldwide

Source:
http://www.ups.com/content/us/en/about/history/index.html, viewed 10/28/04

UPS Products and Services

SonicAir
Next Day Air
2nd Day Air
3 Day Select
Ground
Worldwide Express
Worldwide Expedited
Standard to Canada

Source:
http://ups.com/content/us/en/resources/select/index.html , viewed 10/28/04

UPS IT Environment
Kenneth W Lacy- Senior Vice President and
CIO
$1 billion a year on technology infrastructure
4,700 technology employees
14 mainframes, 6100 servers, 120000 PCs
115 million hits and 9.1 million tracking
requests per business day

Source:
http://ups.com/content/us/en/about/facts/technology.html, viewed 10/28

UPS Technology Awards


Winters Corp. 2003 Top Ten Grand Prize
Winner
Computerworld 100 Best Places to Work in IT,
2003
CIO 20/20 Vision Award, 2002
CIO 100 Enterprise Integration Award, 2002
Computerworld Premier 100 IT Leaders, 2002

Source:
http://.ups.com/pressroom/us/awards/ecommerce

UPS Financial Performance

Source:
http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=UPS, viewed 11/3/04/

UPS TEAMS - Seibel Implementation


Next generation in UPS sales force automation
Total enterprise account management system
Provides integrated tools to help the sales
force do the job more effectively and efficiently
Supports opportunity and account
management with increased capabilities for
planning and documenting sales calls

Source:
UPS, Overview of UPS TEAMS, 2004

Why UPS Changed from Link to Teams


UPS deployed Link in 1999- technology has
improved dramatically since then
TEAMS can be used across the entire UPS
sales enterprise
Future phases of TEAMS will have increased
flexibility to enable UPS to integrate the core
UPS sales force with the sales forces from
other business units in order to establish one
coordinated sales effort
TEAMS has the flexibility to support
enhancements such as wireless capability

Source:
UPS, Overview of UPS TEAMS, 2004

UPS Sales Enterprise

UPS Sales Enterprise

Domestic and
International

Core UPS

Additional Business Units

Other Sales Business Units

Other Sales Business Units

E-Commerce

Supply Chain Solutions

UPS Capital

UPS TEAMS
Interacted with
Michael Carey,
Project Manager CRM
Technology, October
14,2004

Time and Budget


Challenges
Advantages
Lessons Learned

Time and Budget


Project was on time and on budget- not at
liberty to share the specific budget
Beta Test in Central Pennsylvania, Sweden and
Austria, May 2004
Project Roll Out: June 15th September 17th,
2004 for US, Sweden and Austria employees
Future releases will cover additional countries
and the rest of the UPS sales force (i.e. ECommerce, Supply Chain Solutions, UPS
Professional Services, etc.)

Challenges
Aligning the arrival of new Laptops, new Sales
Applications, new Operating System, new
wireless cards, and new training documents
Seibel Application Training
Coordinating the trainers
Gathering the right training resources (e.g. ability to
speak multiple languages, etc.)
Scheduling employees for training classes

Advantages of UPS TEAMS

Home Page
Calendar
Opportunities
Queries
Data Synchronization
Team Selling

Advantages of UPS TEAMS


Home Page
Quick look at
daily calendar,
Slim leads and
opportunities
Helps prioritize
the sales persons
time and keep the
focus on accounts
that need
attention

Source:
UPS, Overview of UPS TEAMS, 2004

Advantages of UPS TEAMS


Calendar
Automatically
integrated with
activities
Immediately
populates events such
as adding and/or
updating activities,
eliminating dual entry

Source:
UPS, Overview of UPS TEAMS, 2004

Advantages to UPS TEAMS


Opportunities
Provides flexibility to
create a single
product opportunity
or a multi-product
(portfolio) opportunity
Provides the ability to
link an opportunity to
more than one
marketing initiative

Source:
UPS, Overview of UPS TEAMS, 2004

Advantages of UPS TEAMS


Queries
Query Assistant
allows for filtering
data quickly and
easily
Provides capabilities
for pre-defined
queries and
personalized queries

Source:
UPS, Overview of UPS TEAMS, 2004

Advantages of UPS TEAMS


Data Synchronization
Occurs automatically and instantaneously each time
the sales person accesses the system and is
connected to the LAN
No need to remember to exchange data daily in
order to send changes from the sales persons laptop
and receive up-to-date information from the UPS
mainframe

Source:
UPS, Overview of UPS TEAMS, 2004

Advantages of UPS TEAMS


Team Selling
Provides information for all of the sales
people associated with a particular
opportunity or account
Enables a cohesive, unified sales effort
and contributes to sales success

Source:
UPS, Overview of UPS TEAMS, 2004

Areas of Improvement
Duplicate data entry still required on some
screens (i.e. Time & date of activities, etc.)
Non-optimal Account Name retrieval
Account search capability is exact match

Insufficient back-end integration


Appropriate databases not synched

UPS TEAMS Successful?


Best Project
Management
Practices

YES

Business Solutions Drive


Technology Selection

Secure Top Management


ACTIVE Support

X
X

Involve Knowledgeable
Users
Buy-in Outside Expertise
to Transfer Learning

Implement Incrementally

Dont Judge Success


Solely Based on Time to
Budget
Customer-Oriented Focus

Source:
Lacity,M, Management of IT- Enabled Business Projects, 2004

NO

X
X

Standish Group CHAOS Report IT Projects Classification


Type I: Success: on time, on budget, promised
functionality
Type II: Challenged: over-budget, over-time
and or missing functionality
Type III: Failed: Severely impaired projects;
cancelled projects

Source:
Lacity,M, Management of IT Enabled Business Projects, 2004

Standish Group CHAOS Report


IT Projects Classification

UPS TEAMS Project: Type I- Success


On time
On Budget
Promised Functionality

CRM In Action: Case Studies

Royal Bank of Canada (RBC)


Financial Group

RBC Financial Group

Largest Canadian financial institution


12 million clients worldwide
700 products
60,000 employees
C$270 billion in assets
1.6 billion spent on IT in 2003
CIO: Marty Lippert

Source:
www.rbc.com/aboutus/fastfacts.html

5 Major Business Lines


RBC Banking
personal and commercial
banking
RBC Insurance
insurance
RBC Investments
wealth management
RBC Capital Markets
corporate and
investment banking
RBC Global Services
transaction
processing

Source:
Brem, Lisa, and Narayanan V.G., Customer Profitability and Customer Relationship Management at RBC Financial Group, Harvard Business
School Case #9-102-043. March 25, 2002.

RBC Banking
Capital
Markets
17%

Global
S ervices
6%

Investment
15%

Insurance
8%

Banking
Insurance
Investme nt
Capital Marke ts

Banking
54%

54% of Net
income
1300 branches
4800 ABMs
1.4 million
online
customers
300 offices in 30
countries
Greatest
opportunity for
improvement

Global Se rvice s

Source:
Brem, Lisa, and Narayanan V.G., Customer Profitability and Customer Relationship Management at RBC Financial Group, Harvard Business
School Case #9-102-043. March 25, 2002.

Change in the Industry


Pre-1990s 6 largest Banks enjoyed friendly
competition
Internet banking
Lowering of domestic protections
Oligopoly ended
increased competition
How to stay competitive?
1997 study to determine image perceptions

Source:
Brem, Lisa, and Narayanan V.G., Customer Profitability and Customer Relationship Management at RBC Financial Group, Harvard Business
School Case #9-102-043. March 25, 2002.

1997 Study
Major Finding
CUSTOMER INTIMACY -MOST important FACTOR to the
customer.
Definition - trust, reassurance, a feeling that the bank knows
them, understands their needs, recognizes who they are and
value their business

This finding identified a whole new era for RBC


- A shift to differentiation based on customer needs

Source:
Brem, Lisa, and Narayanan V.G., Customer Profitability and Customer Relationship Management at RBC Financial Group, Harvard Business
School Case #9-102-043. March 25, 2002.

1997 Study Results


HIGH

Importance to
Client

LOW

Mutual benefits
Reciprocity
Trust
Reassurance
Comfort
Understanding

Convenient Hours
ATM access
1-800 Number
Internet Banking
Short Lines

Financial Institutions
Proficiency at Delivering

HIGH

Source:
Brem, Lisa, and Narayanan V.G., Customer Profitability and Customer Relationship Management at RBC Financial Group, Harvard Business
School Case #9-102-043. March 25, 2002.

Focus on Customer: CRM


CRM Vision: Bring together in one place a view of all
contacts, transactions, accounts, and interactions with
each customer.
CRM system would provide the following info to
personal bankers (PBs):
-Address, age, account balances
-Contacts customer has had with company
-Level of service customer qualified for based on current and
future profitability
-What products customer was targeted and approved for
-How customer responded to direct marketing

Source:
Brem, Lisa, and Narayanan V.G., Customer Profitability and Customer Relationship Management at RBC Financial Group, Harvard Business
School Case #9-102-043. March 25, 2002.

Reorganization Around CRM


VP of Marketing and Info ManagementRichard McLaughlin
-Responsible

for CRM infrastructure, info


management, alliance banking, internet
banking, and privacy

Source:
Brem, Lisa, and Narayanan V.G., Customer Profitability and Customer Relationship Management at RBC Financial Group, Harvard Business
School Case #9-102-043. March 25, 2002.

Customer Segments
3 Primary Customer Segments & 9 Total Segments
A. Key markets:
1. Youth
2. Nexus
3. Small business
4. Farming and lifestyle agriculture
B. Growth markets:
5. Building
6. Business
7. Agriculture
C. Prime markets:
8. Accumulating
9. Preserving

Lockie, Anne, RBC Banking: The Customer Experience, powerpoint slides at rbc.com

Product & Segment Management


Product

Segment

Structured to sell a
specific product to
everyone
Multiple people selling
to same customer
PRODUCTS
C
B
D
A

Structured to satisfy all


needs with all products
- Employees concerned
with meeting needs
not selling a specific
product
SEGMENT

CUSTOMER
CUSTOMERS
Source:
Brem, Lisa, and Narayanan V.G., Customer Profitability and Customer Relationship Management at RBC Financial Group, Harvard Business
School Case #9-102-043. March 25, 2002.

Timeline: CRM Capabilities


1997
McLaughlin
hired as VP of
Marketing and
Info
Management

1998
1997 study
creates a
platform for
CRM

Software
selection to
facilitate
CRM

1999
Info changes
focus to
profitable/
potentially
profitable
customers

2000
CRM
software and
practices
continue to be
modified
based on
internal &
external
customer
feedback

Source:
Brem, Lisa, and Narayanan V.G., Customer Profitability and Customer Relationship Management at RBC Financial Group, Harvard Business
School Case #9-102-043. March 25, 2002.

CRM: The Results


Satisfying customer needs
Important to stay competitive and keep current
customers

Creating efficiencies
Not only invest in satisfying customer needs but
also save money while doing it

Source:
Brem, Lisa, and Narayanan V.G., Customer Profitability and Customer Relationship Management at RBC Financial Group, Harvard Business
School Case #9-102-043. March 25, 2002.

Satisfying Customer Needs


Focus on customer needs: ensures right
products at right time
More efficient use of customer data
-Customized marketing
-Levels of service
-Product design and pricing

Increased profitability

Source:
Brem, Lisa, and Narayanan V.G., Customer Profitability and Customer Relationship Management at RBC Financial Group, Harvard Business
School Case #9-102-043. March 25, 2002.

RBC Financial Group Net Income


Net Income by Year
(in millions)

$2,898
$2,208
$1,772

$1,725

1998

1999

Source:
www.rbc.com/investorrelations/ar_03.html

2000

$2,435

2002

2003

Creating Efficiencies
Better Customer Identification
Before CRM:
A, B, or C customers
Vague and not beneficial
After CRM:
Customers can both be profitable and have
the potential to be profitable

Source:
Brem, Lisa, and Narayanan V.G., Customer Profitability and Customer Relationship Management at RBC Financial Group, Harvard Business
School Case #9-102-043. March 25, 2002.

More Efficiencies
Centrally Generated Sales Leads
Before CRM:
Every branch had a different way of generating
sales leads
Low quality, not consistent
After CRM:
Generated centrally
Accessible to everyone
Reminder to call and offer products

Source:
Brem, Lisa, and Narayanan V.G., Customer Profitability and Customer Relationship Management at RBC Financial Group, Harvard Business
School Case #9-102-043. March 25, 2002.

Future Plans for CRM


Preference and Choice:
Use info about customers preferences to design
packages of services at certain points in their
life

Source:
Brem, Lisa, and Narayanan V.G., Customer Profitability and Customer Relationship Management at RBC Financial Group, Harvard Business
School Case #9-102-043. March 25, 2002.

Life Stages and Segments


KEY

GROWTH

Getting Started

Building

Saving for
Retirement
Saving to
buy a home

Graduation

PRIME
Accumulating

Preserving

Retirement

Buying a home

Transfer of
Wealth/Succession
Planning Planning

Source:
Sutherland, Anne, How RBC is taking its CRM strategy to the next level to accelerate profitable revenue growth, presented to American Bankers
Association. 2004.

Summary of Lessons Learned

Identify the key


stakeholders who touch
the application directly
and/or indirectly at the
very beginning of the
project
Gain buy-in from these key
stakeholders that that their
input and support is critical
to the overall success of
the project
More robust Beta Test

Always keep client front and


centerthrough process and
implementation
Manage change with
communication and vision
Integrate CRM into business
strategy
Continually reevaluate, test,
learn, and improve strategies

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