
Doug Borchard
General Manager
zapdata.com
dborchard@zapdata.com
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New Generation of Internet Tools Empowering the Sales Force
Making CRM, SFA applications meaningful
Not too long ago, sales-force-automation and customer-contact-management
software promised to revolutionize sales management and turn a pursuit that
usually was accompanied by functional fuzziness into a finely tuned
operation that could be professionally and quantitatively managed, sort of
like accounting. Continuously fed by real-time information provided by the
software on leads, meetings, proposals and follow-ups, sales executives
would be able to analyze and orchestrate the progress and movements of their
far-flung networks from the comfort of their office PCs, as easily as a
teenager sits behind a terminal and manipulates a video game.
Well, it hasn't quite worked out that way. The reality is that, all too
often, the implementation of sales-force-automation (SFA),
customer-relationship-management (CRM) and customer-contact-management
software
falls short of expectations in the corporate setting. Simply put,
they failed to win over the sales representative in the field. Thus, many
millions of precious dollars have gone down corporate drains in pursuit of
programs that didn't work for the managers who were intended to benefit and
certainly did nothing for reps.
At least the recognition of this problem has begun to lead sales executives
back to the heart of the matter: When it comes to omnibus management
systems, what matters most in the sales game is the reaction of
representatives in the field - not how their managers regard the system. In
a discipline that depends on motivation, dedication, independence, a results
focus and, often, spurts of creativity and hyper-achievement by its
practitioners, such overhauls must play well with them. And in that crucial
arena, many companies have come up way short when it comes to selecting and
deploying their SFA and CRM programs.
The reason is simple: Rank-and-file
sales reps often perceive this software
as making their jobs more difficult without offering much of a corresponding
benefit. They're the ones who must generate and transmit the extra data to
management. And then the information often is used to create tighter
accountability and place greater demands on reps by their managers. In the
meantime, while almost all SFA and CRM systems provide useful features that
help sales reps track, organize and access all the bits and pieces of
information surrounding their contacts with customers and prospects, that's
simply not enough for many reps. Most of them have long since been using
contact managers on their own such as Microsoft Outlook, Act, and Janna, and
- in the convenient confines of their own laptops and their own
lead-tracking systems - they work just fine.
So what's a manager to do? One answer lies in a new generation of
Internet-based information sources that offer top-quality data on customers
and potential customers for
sales professionals. It meets them where their
needs are. And when such programs - including Hoovers.com, zapdata.com,
Onesource.com and Digitalwork.com -- are linked dynamically with a
top-flight SFA or CRM program, they can create tremendous synergies that
benefit sales managers as well as reps and, in turn, the entire corporate
sales process. A new wellspring of reliable customer-intelligence
information then feeds and enhances an SFA or CRM program and delivers
decision-driving data to the people who need it, at whatever level they are,
when they need it and where they need it.
What kinds of information are we talking about here? Boatloads, some of it
sucked up from the Internet, but even more of it generated by the
proprietary access enjoyed only by the data-compiling company. zapdata.com,
for example, gets its reams of fresh "firmographic" data from 26 different
compilers, who in turn garner their information from thousands of their own
sources worldwide. The providers
include such brand-name information sources
as Harris InfoSource, Harte-Hanks and Cahners Publishing. Even if this
information otherwise would be available to sales representatives or their
managers, the cost of pursuing and purchasing the thousands of resulting
leads would be prohibitive. And in the meantime, as any sales rep worth his
or her salt will tell you, the number of unqualified, dead-end leads they
receive just seems to multiply. They get them from trade shows, from Web
sites, from a company's tele-qualifying staff that provides
less-than-thorough screening - from a wide variety of sources, and each
futile lead simply adds to the rep's frustrations.
Let's say a rep has just moved to a new territory, metro Boston, and needs
to understand as thoroughly and as quickly as possible where the prospects
are in that market. He sells 401k-administration programs to medium-sized
and large corporations in high-tech and other sorts of manufacturing
industries. So he grabs
the Boston telephone book and begins his search
looking for manufacturers in the area. It's nearly pointless? First of all,
Yellow Pages typically are better search vehicles for consumers than
business-to-business sales reps. Though manufacturers may be categorized
roughly by category of product, the listings provide only general phone
numbers, without the name of a true contract who can get you in the door.
They don't indicate anything about the size of a company or number of
employees. And they certainly don't tell this rep the information that is
most relevant to his task, which includes whether a company even has a
401(k) plan, how large it is, when it's up for renewal, and so on. But that
is exactly the kind of data that is available through these new services,
and it turns many, many unqualified leads into highly qualified,
top-priority leads - or helps the rep eliminate them and stop wasting his or
her time on wild goose chases.
Just as important though, is that these
services don't just provide raw data
- they help reps convert a cornucopia of relevant information into something
even better: workable intelligence. For one thing, they make it painlessly
accessible via the Internet, providing every rep as well as every manager
access to new leads - and in bunches as small as 10 or 15 at a time, making
them more digestible and more efficiently handled than the occasional major
dump of hundreds of new prospects that may come from the top down in the
rep's organization. So if he or she has just finished following up on the 11
leads from last week's trade show, but it is another two weeks yet until
corporate marketing plans on sending out a direct-mail piece that can be
expected to roust up some more leads, the rep can gain secure access to one
of these new-breed programs on the Internet, pursue the 25 best leads that
are presented - and be confident that the intelligence on each prospect is
completely fresh because it is continuously updated by the service.
Moreover,
these programs present a win-win-win situation: Reps have a bigger
quantity and much higher quality of leads; the rep's pursuit of those leads
is continuously fed into a compatible SFA or CRM software program, for the
benefit of managers who want to track performance and communicate with their
reps in the field; and the corporation gains because both its sales
executives and its sales representatives are benefiting from and are
motivated by the rewards of an integrated sales-management system that not
only tracks performance but also enhances it.
These new programs aren't a panacea for what has ailed sales-management
software. As long as sales reps, their managers and customers are human, no
sales-tracking and -management system ever will offer that! But by equipping
reps with the best and most up-to-date information possible on leads, and by
integrating his activities with the rest of the sales-management process,
such programs can make a big difference in the field. And
that's where
marketplace battles are won and lost.
About the Author
Douglas C. Borchard, co-founder of iMarket, Inc., serves as leader of
zapdata.com, and in this capacity will manage this new business unit. At
iMarket, Borchard most recently held the position of vice president of
product planning and development. Prior to co-founding iMarket in 1991, he
worked as group product manager for Lotus MarketPlace at Lotus Development
Corp. There he was responsible for product definition, market strategy, and
customer support and fulfillment. Before joining Lotus, he was a consultant
to the electronic information industry with Bain and Company, where he
provided strategic consulting to leading providers of business and consumer
marketing information. He also worked as a product marketing manager at
Apollo Computer. Before joining Apollo, Borchard managed a refugee camp in
the Sudan. He holds a master's degree in business administration from
Stanford Business School,
where he was an Arjay Miller Scholar, and a
bachelor's degree in mechanical and aerospace engineering from Princeton
University.
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