CRM - February 2009 - (Page 10) THE Recession ISSUE CUSTOMER CENTRICITY BY IAN JACOBS An Opportunity in Chaos Customer retention is the best use of a bad situation T H E A R C H I T E C T, futurist, and philosopher R. Buckminster Fuller has been widely quoted as saying, “Don’t fight forces, use them.” Bucky was a smart guy; sometimes very strange, but usually very smart. And his admonition from the 1930s applies as much to CRM amid economic turmoil as it does to the architectural benefits of his beloved geodesic domes. “Oh no,” I can hear you moan. “Not another lecture about how there is opportunity in chaos.” Well, sorry, but yes. This will be a period when almost every company attempts to (wait for it!) do more with less. Most will succeed only in failing at that goal. Theoretically, this presents great opportunities for companies willing to expand their technological investments to improve capabilities and attract new customers. Here’s the rub: Attempting to gain some competitive differentiation through increased spending means taking a very large risk. That’s something most companies are simply not willing to do at this time. That would be fighting the forces and not using them. So, keeping Fuller’s words in mind, how do companies use the forces of a recessionary environment for CRM? One clear way: by turning inward and focusing on customer EMPLOYEE SATISFACTION SHOULD BE PART OF ANY CUSTOMER RETENTION PROGRAM. retention. If it is difficult to go out and acquire new customers, shift your attention—and spending—toward keeping the customers you already have. This retention-first strategy obviously goes beyond technology, but technology can play a central role, and many vendors already have existing offerings designed for retention management. One good example: churn-management tools for high customer-turnover environments such as telecommunications. Analytical tools predict which customers are at high risk for jumping ship to a competitor. The churnmanagement tools can create proactive retention-focused marketing campaigns and offers, or they can push retention-focused scripts to customer service representatives. 10 CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT | FEBRUARY 2009 Using technology along the lines of churnmanagement tools requires companies to, y’know, actually buy the tools. But what of companies that cannot free up the capital for that sort of spend or cannot shift their spending around to include these types of tools? This is where retention efforts need to go beyond technology. While there are exceptions, customer loyalty typically starts not with the brand name or the company, but rather with the employees that customers interact with. So internal programs that focus on employee loyalty and employee morale during a tough economy—especially at companies where employees are seeing colleagues lose their jobs—can have a direct impact on customer retention. In fact, employee satisfaction should be part of any customer retention program. Companies should also approach the problem of customer retention before they even start the process of customer acquisition. The easiest way to build a loyal customer base is to recruit customers most likely to be loyal in the first place. One of the widely cited examples of this type of thinking: A major credit-card issuer went through its mountains of data and found that customers acquired through so-called affinity groups (associations for engineers, for example) were more likely to be loyal than were consumers targeted through generic marketing campaigns. So the credit-card company shifted around existing resources to increase the share of its marketing directed to those affinity groups. The cost of customer acquisition stays relatively flat, but customer retention still rises. In the span of a recent week, I met two different people who worked for companies that pulled them off most of their projects while the corporate structure was being rethought. This economic crisis will give many companies the breathing room to reassign their smartest people to problems such as figuring out the best types of customers and then changing processes to refocus on acquiring those customers. The lessons: Use the forces available, don’t fight them; use the smart people who have less to do than before. So, yup, I said it: There is opportunity in chaos. Ian Jacobs (ijacobs@datamonitor.com) is a senior analyst at Datamonitor. www.destinationCRM.com http://www.destinationCRM.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of CRM - February 2009 CRM - February 2009 Contents Front Office Reality Check Customer Centricity The Tipping Point Express Service CRM on Twitter Breaking Customer Service Tradition Outsprinted That’s (Not) Entertainment Running on Empty Required Reading Up Against the Downturn The Numbers Tell the Tale Make Marketing Your Megaphone! Hold Onto Your Customers! Spend Your Way Out! Constructing a Virtual Customer Experience Next Customer, Please! It’s Showtime! From A(erospace) to Z(oology) Secret of My Success Re:Tooling Scouting Report Pint of View CRM - February 2009 CRM - February 2009 - CRM - February 2009 (Page Cover1) CRM - February 2009 - CRM - February 2009 (Page Cover2) CRM - February 2009 - Contents (Page 3) CRM - February 2009 - Contents (Page 4) CRM - February 2009 - Contents (Page 5) CRM - February 2009 - Front Office (Page 6) CRM - February 2009 - Front Office (Page 7) CRM - February 2009 - Reality Check (Page 8) CRM - February 2009 - Reality Check (Page 9) CRM - February 2009 - Customer Centricity (Page 10) CRM - February 2009 - Customer Centricity (Page 11) CRM - February 2009 - The Tipping Point (Page 12) CRM - February 2009 - The Tipping Point (Page 13) CRM - February 2009 - Express Service (Page 14) CRM - February 2009 - CRM on Twitter (Page 15) CRM - February 2009 - Outsprinted (Page 16) CRM - February 2009 - That’s (Not) Entertainment (Page 17) CRM - February 2009 - Running on Empty (Page 18) CRM - February 2009 - Required Reading (Page 19) CRM - February 2009 - Required Reading (Page 20) CRM - February 2009 - Up Against the Downturn (Page 21) CRM - February 2009 - The Numbers Tell the Tale (Page 22) CRM - February 2009 - The Numbers Tell the Tale (Page 23) CRM - February 2009 - Make Marketing Your Megaphone! (Page 24) CRM - February 2009 - Make Marketing Your Megaphone! (Page 25) CRM - February 2009 - Make Marketing Your Megaphone! (Page 26) CRM - February 2009 - Make Marketing Your Megaphone! (Page 27) CRM - February 2009 - Make Marketing Your Megaphone! (Page 28) CRM - February 2009 - Make Marketing Your Megaphone! (Page 29) CRM - February 2009 - Hold Onto Your Customers! (Page 30) CRM - February 2009 - Hold Onto Your Customers! (Page 31) CRM - February 2009 - Hold Onto Your Customers! (Page 32) CRM - February 2009 - Hold Onto Your Customers! (Page 33) CRM - February 2009 - Hold Onto Your Customers! (Page 34) CRM - February 2009 - Hold Onto Your Customers! (Page 35) CRM - February 2009 - Spend Your Way Out! (Page 36) CRM - February 2009 - Spend Your Way Out! (Page 37) CRM - February 2009 - Spend Your Way Out! (Page 38) CRM - February 2009 - Spend Your Way Out! (Page 39) CRM - February 2009 - Spend Your Way Out! (Page 40) CRM - February 2009 - Spend Your Way Out! (Page 41) CRM - February 2009 - Constructing a Virtual Customer Experience (Page 42) CRM - February 2009 - Next Customer, Please! (Page 43) CRM - February 2009 - It’s Showtime! (Page 44) CRM - February 2009 - From A(erospace) to Z(oology) (Page 45) CRM - February 2009 - Secret of My Success (Page 46) CRM - February 2009 - Re:Tooling (Page 47) CRM - February 2009 - Scouting Report (Page 48) CRM - February 2009 - Scouting Report (Page 49) CRM - February 2009 - Pint of View (Page 50) CRM - February 2009 - Pint of View (Page Cover3) CRM - February 2009 - Pint of View (Page Cover4)
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