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Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Selling: Managing Customer Relationships 3e by Peter Rix Slides prepared by Mark Vincent 11−1 Chapter 11 Customer relationship management
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11−2 Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Selling: Managing Customer Relationships 3e by Peter Rix Slides prepared by Mark Vincent Customer relationship management The development of new customers Principles of customer relationship management Customer relationships defined Customer relationship needs perspective Organisational supply planning perspective Reduce or withdraw supply. Increase sales for improved account viability. Reduce costs of supply (economic order quantity, communication methods). Increase prices.
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11−3 Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Selling: Managing Customer Relationships 3e by Peter Rix Slides prepared by Mark Vincent Customer relationship management cont. The development of new customers Defining CRM Relationship marketing, loyalty marketing, customer metrics A business concept that recognises the need to treat each customer differently A management approach for systematically managing relationships between a company and its customers A computer-based process to: identify each customer’s actual or potential needs and preferences measure the profitability of the relationship with each customer encourage each customer to continue with mutually beneficial trade dissuade customers from unprofitable trade arrangements
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11−4 Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Selling: Managing Customer Relationships 3e by Peter Rix Slides prepared by Mark Vincent Customer relationship management cont. The development of new customers CRM functions in the organisation
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11−5 Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Selling: Managing Customer Relationships 3e by Peter Rix Slides prepared by Mark Vincent Customer relationship management cont. The development of new customers CRM system generic objectives Better understand each customer’s characteristics and needs Identify profitable and potentially profitable customers Improve customer satisfaction Build customer loyalty Increase profitable sales Reduce unprofitable sales and other exchanges
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11−6 Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Selling: Managing Customer Relationships 3e by Peter Rix Slides prepared by Mark Vincent Customer relationship management cont. The development of new customers CRM tasks
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11−7 Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Selling: Managing Customer Relationships 3e by Peter Rix Slides prepared by Mark Vincent Benefits and limits of CRM The development of new customers Assumptions of CRM Past purchase is the best predictor of future purchase behaviour. Customers are consistent in the quality and price balance that they seek. Establishing better relationships with customers will reduce the rate of customer turnover (also known as churning). Are these all valid assumptions? Under what conditions are these assumptions generally accurate and when are they clearly invalid? Discuss.
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11−8 Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Selling: Managing Customer Relationships 3e by Peter Rix Slides prepared by Mark Vincent Benefits and limits of CRM cont. The development of new customers Stakeholder aspects of CRM Company management benefits challenges Company front line staff benefits challenges Customers benefits challenges
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11−9 Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Selling: Managing Customer Relationships 3e by Peter Rix Slides prepared by Mark Vincent Customer loyalty The development of new customers How to measure loyalty Clear demonstrations of customer loyalty Continued patronage over an extended period of time or after a change in circumstances such as moved location Continued patronage despite a better alternative offer from competitors Continued patronage despite being let down by some aspect of our organisation (support, product design, quantity etc.) Continued referrals and recommendations to friends or business colleagues
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11−10 Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Selling: Managing Customer Relationships 3e by Peter Rix Slides prepared by Mark Vincent Customer loyalty cont. The development of new customers How to build loyalty Manage customer expectations. Be consistenty at all contact points. Manage privacy issues. Focus on value. Reduce attractiveness of brand switching. Develop proprietary systems/distribution/product accessories that are valuable but not transferable to other suppliers. Common examples include : shelves that hold our product but not others free memory cards that only fit our product subsidised print cartridges that work only with our brand
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11−11 Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Selling: Managing Customer Relationships 3e by Peter Rix Slides prepared by Mark Vincent Developing a CRM strategy cont. The development of new customers Rationale Customer analysis Customer value proposition Distribution strategy Information strategy Measurement alignment with strategic, customer and operational objectives
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11−12 Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Selling: Managing Customer Relationships 3e by Peter Rix Slides prepared by Mark Vincent Appendix to Chapter 11 Implementing customer contact programs Four tiers of CRM functionality scalability flexibility cost
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11−13 Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Selling: Managing Customer Relationships 3e by Peter Rix Slides prepared by Mark Vincent Appendix to Chapter 11 cont. Implementing customer contact programs Four tiers of CRM
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11−14 Copyright 2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Selling: Managing Customer Relationships 3e by Peter Rix Slides prepared by Mark Vincent Appendix to Chapter 11 Implementing customer contact programs Types of information useful for CRM
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