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Introduction To CRM

The document provides an overview of customer relationship management (CRM) including its history from the 1960s to present. It discusses the goals and benefits of CRM, how it enables better customer service and sales. It also outlines the evolution of CRM through reporting, analyzing and predicting customer behavior phases and key success factors.

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thakkurnikita51
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
40 views25 pages

Introduction To CRM

The document provides an overview of customer relationship management (CRM) including its history from the 1960s to present. It discusses the goals and benefits of CRM, how it enables better customer service and sales. It also outlines the evolution of CRM through reporting, analyzing and predicting customer behavior phases and key success factors.

Uploaded by

thakkurnikita51
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 25

CRM- An Introduction

1
2
History of CRM
• 1960 :
– ERA OF MASS MARKETING

• 1970 :
– SEGMENTATION AND
CUSTOMISATION

3
4
1980 :
NICHE MARKETING AND
SFA

5
1990
:RELATIONSHIP MARKETING, TELEMARKETING AND
CALL CENTERS

6
Monopoly Market

• Single Seller
• Seller’s Market
• No Close Substitutes
• Barriers to Entry
• Firm and Industry are the same

7
Bits and bytes

• CRM – the hottest buzz word in business today


• Developing a personal and a professional profile about
each customer
– Basic and historical information
– Personal preferences
– Trends and habits
– Demographical information
• Building a CRM culture
• The power of integration
• Using emerging technology to get closer to the customer

8
Current facts… A Reality
Check
• Today customers are in charge – they make the rules
• Putting technology at the center stage
• Business intelligence is one of the most growing segment in the
marketplace
• Customer loyalty is very difficult to maintain due to
competition
• Customers want an excellent service and they want to feel
special
• Most companies think they are customer-focused however in reality they
are product-centric
• There is a need to formulate customer-focused firms which needs:
– CRM strategy
– Organizational change
– Corporate culture

9
Economics of customer retention

“Winning back a lost customer can cost up to 50-100 times as much as keeping
a
current one satisfied.”
Rob Yanker, Partner, McKinsey & Company

Understanding your customer is key to retention….. 10


Why CRM?

• It costs 6 times more to sell to a new customer than to sell


to an existing one
• A typically dissatisfied customer will tell 8 to 10 people about
his/her experience (mainly related to poor customer service)
• The odds of selling to a new customer is 15% versus 50%
to an existing customer
• 70% of the customers complaining will do business again
with the company if the complaints are quickly addressed
• 90% of existing companies do not have integrated CRM
tools
and platforms

11
Customer Relationships Today

Customer
Relationships

Branding Product

Pricing
Distribution

Building a customer-centric Community


Communication
approach to Internet
marketing by focusing on
customers

12
CRM Basics

• CRM is the timely delivery of excellent service


“customer relationship management”
• CRM is a combination of business process and
technology that seeks to understand a
company’s customers from a number of
perspectives including:
– Who they are?
– What they do?
– What do they like?

13
Age of the never-satisfied customer…
• CRM becomes a support tool in a time characterized by:
– Increased competition
– Globalization
– Growing cost of customer acquisition
– High customer turnover
• CRM is all about creating a better value proposition
to customers
• Information and communication technology is now
acting as a
catalyst for CRM
– Extended enterprise
– World wide web and the Internet

14
Defining
CRM
• CRM is an integrated sales, marketing and service strategy
that is based on a timely and accurate information
infrastructure and that depends on coordinated enterprise-
wide activities
– Example: tracking customers interactions with the firm
– Customer tracking includes steps in the selling and
customer service cycles
• CRM steps include
– Targeting
– Acquisition
– Retention
– Expansion

15
Defining
CRM
• Targeting
– Who do we target?
– What segments are most profitable?
– What segments match our value proposition?
– What is the best segmentation strategy for us/our
industry?
• Acquisition
– What is the best channel for each segment?
– What is the acquisition cost for a
channel/segment?
– Do certain channels deliver certain types of
customers?
– Cost effective acquisition?
16
Defining
CRM
• Retention
– How can we improve retention?
– What is our average customer relationship length?
– How can we hold customer for as long as possible?
– What is the most cost effective method of retention?

• Expansion
– How many products does our average customer buy?
– How can we induce our current base to buy more
products?
– Who are the prime targets for expansion?
– What is the cost of expansion?
17
Goals of
CRM

• Using existing relationship to grow revenue


• Using integrated information for excellent
service
• Introducing consistent, replicable channel
processes and procedures

18
CRM…

• CRM is a business strategy and not a product


• Putting CRM into practice requires developing a set
of integrated applications to address all aspects
related to the front-office needs
• CRM could be a major support platform for small and
medium-sized enterprises
• Cost of the information and communication
technology applications and infrastructure should be
calculated as opposed to the return-on-investment

19
CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT

• CRM enables an organization to:


– Provide better customer service
– Make call centers more efficient
– Cross sell products more effectively
– Help sales staff close deals faster
– Simplify marketing and sales processes
– Discover new customers
– Increase customer revenues

20
THE BENEFITS OF CRM

• Firms can find their most valuable customers by using


the RFM formula: recency, frequency, and monetary
value

• Organizations MUST track:


– How recently a customer purchased items
– How frequently a customer purchased items
– The monetary value of each customer purchase

21
11-21
EVOLUTION OF CRM

• There are three phases in the evolution of CRM:


– Reporting
– Analyzing
– Predicting

• CRM Reporting Technologies help organizations identify their


customers across other applications
• CRM Analysis Technologies help organizations segment their
customers into categories such as best and worst customers
• CRM Predicting Technologies help organizations predict
customer behavior, such as which customers are at risk of
leaving

22
11-21
The Evolution of CRM

• Three phases in the evolution of CRM include


reporting, analyzing, and predicting

23
The Evolution of CRM

24
CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT SUCCESS FACTORS

• CRM success factors include:


1. Clearly communicate the CRM strategy.
2. Define information needs and flows.
3. Build an integrated view of the customer.
4. Implement in iterations.
5. Scalability for organizational growth.

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11-25

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