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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 11 Copyright (c) 2006 Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved. Copyright 2007 Thomson Publishing: All Rights Reserved Chapter 2: Functional CRM Customer Relationship Management: A People, Process, and Technology Approach William Wagner and Michael Zubey
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 2 Objectives Explain the use of Sales Force Automation (SFA) technologies Describe the areas of operational excellence and supporting technologies within support centers List and describe the marketing automation tools that have optimized the performance of many marketing organizations Describe the impact of the Internet on CRM
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 3 CRM in Action CRM at Brother International Manufacturer of office products for home and work; includes printers, faxes, multi-function devices. 2001 revenue of about $1B from US Good projected growth for home offices and the “value” niche Sells mainly through retailers but maintains the after sale service functions National Service Division handles returns, service, parts, and customer contact center
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 4 CRM in Action (cont.) Ex. of Brother International Implemented SAP ERP in 1994 Goal was to integrate all depts. in one system MySAP CRM in 2000 Campaign Management, Interaction Center, and Customer Self-Service goal to improve accuracy and speed of orders Still wanted single, integrated system Wanted to leverage ERP experience, training Recently released new products so had a high number of service calls web-based customer service application also reduced number of service calls
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 5 CRM in Action (cont.) KPIs to measure progress toward “total customer satisfaction” Error Free Order Processing On-time deliveries Measure: orders with deliveries on time % Volume Accuracy Measure: orders with correct volumes % Product Return Rate Measure: returns among sales order lines Speed of Order Processing Sales Order Cycle Time Measure: cycle time goods issue Measure: cycle time invoicing
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 6 CRM in Action (cont.) Ex. of Brother International Analyzed business requirements with various channel partners Convert these into flow charts and scope documents Began data migration from legacy systems and R/3 Customer, material and pricing master data from R/3 Some transaction and product registration data in Lotus Notes Solution files created from flat files and FAQ files Data warehouse created as definitive repository for CRM processes Important for reporting on CSFs Important for campaign management and segmenting
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 8 CRM in Action Results Ex. of Brother International Reported 129% ROI Led to expanding CRM functionality Internet sales catalog site Telesales and telemarketing implemented Call center scripting Integrated web-based lead generation
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 9 Three Main Functional Areas of CRM Sales Force Automation (SFA) Call or Service Center Operations Marketing Automation *These are impacted by integration with other systems such as ERP, DW, analytics, e- Commerce, legacy, etc.
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 10 Sales Force Automation Was the first area for CRM Started as a sales log or journal Expanded to manage sales leads, email, wireless, create sales forecasts Can link sales documents Can generate revenue forecasts Can be tailored with sales process best practices Integration of global customer data (ex. Customer service calls)
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 11 Sample SFA Screen
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 12 Sales and Sales Management Sales roles may differ widely depending on the sales channel involved Could include: Reseller partners retail outlets catalog sales e-commerce websites direct sales (possibly through web site) Users of SFA could be sales force, sales support, sales management Fat vs. light or “thin” client SFA technologies
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 13 Common SFA Scenarios Lead Management Order processing Contract processing Territory creation Campaign execution Tour planning Customer visit logs Integrated sales planning for key accounts
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 16 Support Centers Centralized call or service centers popular model Tied to 800 numbers, warranty cards, web sites, email, etc. Can be used to collect data, generate leads, up- sell, cross-sell, etc. In-bound vs. outbound personnel Usually levels of expertise involved
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 17 Sample Screen for Service Representative
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 18 Call Center Metrics Call resolution time First call resolution rate
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 22 Call Center Scenarios Lead qualification Inbound/outbound telesales Help desk Customer service Complaints processing Contract maintenance Returns processing Internet self service Service confirmation Service processing with contract level agreements
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 24 Marketing Automation More strategic in terms of monitoring marketing plans, performance, trends Includes: Marketing Plan creation Campaign management Lead management Target group creation Product proposals Predicting customer behavior Customer profitability analysis
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 25 Marketing Roles Marketing Research Analyze target markets May require primary and secondary data Marketing Communications Produces collateral documents and graphics for products and services in market Product or Program Marketing Set product strategy for pricing, partners, value propositions, and competitive positioning
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 26 Summary In this chapter you learned: About the three functional areas that make up CRM SFA Call or Support Centers Marketing Automation How people, processes and technologies enable these three areas The importance of best practices How the Internet has impacted CRM
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Customer Relationship Management Wagner & Zubey (2007) 27 Questions?
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