CRM - February 2009 - (Page 19) Insight REQUIRED READING THE Recession ISSUE Finding a New Path to Customers t’s no secret that customers are more cautious now about how they spend. Likewise, gone are the days when marketing and sales got by with little insight into operations. Aiming to help companies determine what works, what doesn’t, and what should be done, authors Antoine Leboyer, JeanClaude Malraison, and Peter Raulerson have packaged their experience working with multinational corporations into a new book, Building Routes to Customers. CRM’s Assistant Editor Jessica Tsai spoke with Raulerson about the value of the book’s “Routes-to-Market” approach (RTM). CRM magazine: What did you think was missing in today’s businesses that would be addressed with RTM? Peter Raulerson: Marketing and sales are [usually] not well aligned. [Another] problem we’re addressing…is that the actual productivity of marketing and sales is not understood or well-managed in many companies. With very little effort, we think almost every company can improve the only two things that top executives want: grow revenue and grow profit. We have a tough economy. The challenge is to avoid laying off the salespeople, stopping the advertising, and changing what you were doing in sales and marketing to your detriment. [If] you’re cutting, are you cutting to optimize? Or are you cutting indiscriminately? RTM shows exactly what’s working for you—not just how many hits [you’re] getting on your Web site, but all the way through your sales cycle to getting orders, to collecting payments, and [delivering] customer satisfaction. It’s not hard to connect the dots inside your organization. [Comparing] what you’re doing to what your objecwww.destinationCRM.com I tives are makes it possible to do simple fine-tuning. CRM: The book is loaded with questions businesses should ask themselves. Does the challenge stem from companies not knowing what they don’t know? Raulerson: There’s a huge education problem here: How many CMOs know how to talk about how much profit their new marketing strategy will deliver versus how creative their new marketing is going to be? I’m still in meetings everyday with executives who haven’t a clue about doing any kind of optimizing in marketing and sales…. Companies that have CRM are running their sales and marketing operations on CRM, [which can] be used to do reporting and optimization, but they don’t. I still see people using CRM as a way to keep track of leads and opportunities and measure the amount of contact going on with prospects, the same way people use Web-site analytics to measure the number of hits they’re getting. RTM is a great adjunct [to a] CRM environment. You’ve got literally all, or almost all, of the data you need to connect what you’re spending with the two things that are the most critical in your business: the brands [and] products driving your revenue, and the market segments your revenue is coming from. CRM: Who is your intended audience? Raulerson: Change agents. They know something’s busted in what they’re doing now, and they want something to fix it. It’s like learning to use a new set of tools. CRM in its early days was picked up not at the CSO or CMO level in a big company. CRM was picked up by a business unit or a division of a company where some farsighted executive said, “This looks pretty useful. Let’s use it.” After his department got some progress with it, then it spread to other departments in the company. RTM follows that same path everywhere. CRM: How do you see RTM as a resource specific to the current economic dilemma? Raulerson: You have to spend smarter in a recession. RTM shows you how. You carry that [lesson] forward into markets as they come back out of the recession— that’s a real accelerator. It creates a feedback loop inside your company. You see how well things have worked and you can keep investing in that. You can experiment with where to spend in marketing and sales. [RTM] enables you to figure out very quickly where to allocate your budget, to get the most out of it. You really do need to know what the most productive things to spend on are. On the flip side, it lets you know where you’re going to have the leastnegative cuts to what you’re doing. If you can see where the most-productive place to spend money is, then the question is, “Should you cut everything else?” The answer might be “No,” the answer might be “Let’s just cut the things that are the least productive for us.” [During the 2001–2002 recession], I had clients saying, “We need to focus on our existing customers,” and the people down in the trenches were saying,“Wait a minute, our existing customers are going to continue buying from us because they have long-term investments in us, and if we don’t pursue these new market opportunities, we’re not going to grow at all”—and they had the numbers to back them up. They hung onto their existing customers, but they were also opportunistic—they came out of it explosively with revenue growth of 20 percent [and their] profit more than doubled. Check out our bonus selection of Required Reading— Other Page-Turners—online at www.destinationCRM.com. CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT | FEBRUARY 2009 19 http://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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