
Richard Smith
Vice-President of Delivery
Green Beacon Solutions
rsmith@greenbeacon.com
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The Seven Golden Rules for Successful CRM
Heard the word on the street? 75 percent of CRM projects fail within their
first year, resulting in lost productivity and wasted corporate investments
in software, services and time. The greatest irony of this statistic is that
most projects fail because the cornerstone of CRM - relationships - is
overlooked. Today's economic climate only intensifies the need for proven
solutions that actually improve the relationship between employees and
customers.
For CRM to truly be effective, solutions must be designed and customized to
fit with the unique business processes of each organization. Matching the
sales, marketing and customer care solutions to the business processes that
are already in place will help ensure that the solutions are used, and used
most effectively, in order to maximize the full benefits of the
implementation and realize the return that CRM promises.
What follows are the seven "golden rules" that CRM projects should follow to
guarantee successful
delivery. These rules have been developed through
conversations with companies who have successfully developed, deployed, and
maintained CRM solutions for four or more years.
- CRM = Relationships - CRM is ultimately about relationships
and not technology solutions. Improving data integrity, management level
reporting, and even employee productivity, while important, are secondary
benefits of a well thought out CRM process. Focusing on improving
relationships enables organizations to develop more prospects into repeat
customers, thereby increasing revenues, return on investment, and
productivity.
- Proactive Executive Empowerment - Management involvement is
critical for two key reasons. As company leaders, management sets the
overall strategic direction for CRM - including budget and delivery
parameters - and ensures that the culture of customer service is
incorporated in the organization from the top down. Equally critical is
managements' empowerment of employees to
both develop positive customer
relationships and the corresponding systems that support and enhance those
relationships.
- Know Your Business - No one builds without a blueprint, but
many organizations deploy CRM without understanding the business processes
in place in their organization. Discovering critical customer interactions
late in the project results in expensive redesigns, time delays, and at
worst could invalidate the selected CRM solution. Defining business
processes, understanding departmental interactions, and identifying
'bottlenecks' will help employees better manage customer relationships and
organizations select the CRM vendor whose product best meets employees and
customers needs.
- Know your Users - Many companies select a CRM product based
upon features rather than benefits to their users. As important as defining
business processes is knowing what features are truly required by your CRM
users - employees, partners, and customers (via a web portal).
For example,
implementing chat functionality will only reduce the cost of support
inquiries if customers use the functionality. Just as important is knowing
what functionality is critical to your internal employees - from integration
with email and calendaring applications, like Microsoft Outlook, to offline
capabilities and reporting.
- Product You Can Support - There is no sense in purchasing a
CRM solution if the internal staff can't support it. Select a product that
leverages the organization's existing technology platform. This will reduce
overall maintenance, software, and hardware costs. Next, ensure that the
internal IT staff can support the product's technology. Reducing the
learning curve and acceptance barriers from the IT staff will strengthen the
overall success of project.
- Small Successes -There are many benefits to deploying a
series of small projects rather than fewer larger ones. In most business
environments, change is difficult. It takes time for
employees to adjust to
new business processes and a new set of applications. Smaller deployments
enable employees and customers to adjust to new business processes and
tools. Smaller deployments can also reduce overall project risk and
complexity, and result in an ongoing pattern of success that motivates
employees to make the most of the tools. Finally, smaller deployments can
help prevent the "recreate the old system" syndrome. As users become more
familiar with the CRM toolset, they are more apt to let go of required
functionality from older systems. Over time they will begin focusing on the
how the new CRM tools can be used to improved their customer relationships
and overall productivity.
- Ongoing Evaluation - As with most things in life, a CRM
solution will only be successful if the organization is committed to long
term evaluation and maintenance. Develop a CRM steering committee
incorporating key users from across the organization. The committee should
be responsible
for evaluating ongoing business requirements, customer
requirements, and productivity enhancements that will enable the system to
support the ongoing needs of the business, and improve customer relations.
The ongoing evaluation ensures that the "relationship development" becomes a
core value of the organization, and empowers users to adjust the business
and their tools to the changing needs of customers.
Companies who have successfully implemented CRM solutions know that CRM is
at its core about relationships - between employees, partners, and
customers. Organizations that are committed to ensuring successful
relationships will find that the right CRM tools can increase customer
satisfaction, employee productivity, and overall revenues over time. 7nbsp;,br>
Richard Smith is the Vice-President of Delivery for Green Beacon Solutions,
a leading mid-market CRM consulting firm. He can be reached at
rsmith@greenbeacon.com.
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