CRM - March 2008 - (Page 14) CUSTOMER CENTRICITY BY IAN JACOBS Your Customers Are Everywhere Beyond the comfy confines of your corporate Web site, people are talking—and complaining H AV E YO U H E A R D that the Internet will radically transform CRM? It’s an overworked trope—but even tropes have some merit. The on-demand model, for example, is attractive to chief information officers looking to cut capitalexpenditure costs and to mitigate risks. But the Internet is not just changing CRM’s technology infrastructure; in fundamental ways it’s transforming the underlying relationships between customers and companies. At last summer’s destinationCRM 2007 conference in New York, one presenter detailed 10 strategies to create thriving support communities using Web 2.0 tools such as blogs and forums. This presentation included numerous tips for how enterprises could make the new technologies work—but the suggestions only really BY FOSTERING AN UNCONTROLLED—AND UNCONTROLLABLE—ENVIRONMENT, THE INTERNET HAS BEGUN TO RADICALLY TRANSFORM CRM. applied to forums and blogs planted inside an enterprise’s walled garden. That’s helpful for firms looking to set up, manage, and moderate communications among the customers they can see. But what about the thousands (millions?) of Webbased conversations that reside beyond an enterprise’s control? In the vast expanse of the Internet, the www in Web addresses may as well stand for Wild, Wild West. It’s in that uncontrolled—and, from a company’s point of view, uncontrollable—environment that the Internet has begun to radically transform CRM. (See “Power to the People,” December 2007, page 28, for more on the conversations your customers are having without you.) I regularly check out blogs on design. These cover an astonishing array of topics, from product design to architecture to user experience to ubiquitous computing. I’m dead certain that readers of these blogs are the ideal target market for numerous high-end companies out there. The typical reader is highly educated, upper-middle class, and tech savvy; has significant discretionary income; and tends to be interested in well-designed products—truly a great fit for design-heavy brands, design tools, publications 14 CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT | MARCH 2008 about design, schools that focus on design, and so on. But how does a company reach out to this potential customer? If the blog accepts advertising, ad-placement technologies such as Google AdSense can help with marketing. But most of these blogs are not ad-supported. Some companies have tried to participate in the forums to “enlighten” the users about a new product or service or to post messages in response to postings that seemed appropriate— big mistake! Most forums have highly specialized cultures; suddenly encountering a corporate voice, especially in a marketing or sales context, is clearly taboo. Except when it’s not, of course: Some sites, such as frequent-flier community FlyerTalk, welcome direct input from relevant companies that are cognizant of the community’s culture and respectful of its needs. Another community I’ve long been a member of discusses food and restaurants. The moderators on that site may be a bit heavy-handed in banning participants who come off as shills for food producers and restaurant owners— but that’s the culture of that specific site. In addition to sales and marketing concerns, customers often bring up important service issues on consumer-focused Web sites or on relevant forums and blogs. The problem is clear: Companies do not control these venues. But for the most part, companies just need to accept that there are some areas where cultures—even virtual cultures—will force them to leave money on the table. Since each of these sites has its own culture, companies would be hard-pressed to hire enough employees to become true community members so that they understand and respect the culture’s rules and norms. In other words, the resource cost of “doing this right” should make most companies think twice. Worse, without specialized and customized tools, most CRM systems would have a hard time tracking all these efforts, especially in forums that allow for anonymous postings. Just think: How would you provide and track sales, marketing, or service with a customer who insists on posting under the name “User27”? Ian Jacobs is a senior analyst in Frost & Sullivan’s contact center practice. Contact him at ian.jacobs@frost.com. www.destinationCRM.com http://www.destinationCRM.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of CRM - March 2008 CRM - March 2008 Contents Front Office Feedback Reality Check Customer Centricity The Tipping Point Re-shoring Contact Centers NetSuite’s Sweet Ride Takes Another Turn SaaS X.0? destinationCRM Dashboard Retailers Dream Big Detroit: Driven to Distraction Required Reading The Markets Within the Masses In Search of... Selling CRM to Your Sales Force Quixtar’s Quick Fix Travelocity’s New Traveling Companion Chasing Down First-Call Resolution Governing Better Marketing Secret of My Success Re: Tooling Connect Pint of View CRM - March 2008 CRM - March 2008 - CRM - March 2008 (Page Cover1) CRM - March 2008 - CRM - March 2008 (Page Cover2) CRM - March 2008 - Contents (Page 3) CRM - March 2008 - Contents (Page 4) CRM - March 2008 - Contents (Page 5) CRM - March 2008 - Contents (Page 6) CRM - March 2008 - Contents (Page 7) CRM - March 2008 - Front Office (Page 8) CRM - March 2008 - Front Office (Page 9) CRM - March 2008 - Feedback (Page 10) CRM - March 2008 - Feedback (Page 11) CRM - March 2008 - Reality Check (Page 12) CRM - March 2008 - Reality Check (Page 13) CRM - March 2008 - Customer Centricity (Page 14) CRM - March 2008 - Customer Centricity (Page 15) CRM - March 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 16) CRM - March 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 17) CRM - March 2008 - Re-shoring Contact Centers (Page 18) CRM - March 2008 - NetSuite’s Sweet Ride Takes Another Turn (Page 19) CRM - March 2008 - destinationCRM Dashboard (Page 20) CRM - March 2008 - Retailers Dream Big (Page 21) CRM - March 2008 - Detroit: Driven to Distraction (Page 22) CRM - March 2008 - Required Reading (Page 23) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 24) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 25) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 26) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E1) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E2) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E3) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E4) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E5) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E6) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E7) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E8) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E9) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E10) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E11) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E12) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 27) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 28) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 29) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 30) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 31) CRM - March 2008 - In Search of... (Page 32) CRM - March 2008 - In Search of... (Page 33) CRM - March 2008 - In Search of... (Page 34) CRM - March 2008 - In Search of... (Page 35) CRM - March 2008 - In Search of... (Page 36) CRM - March 2008 - In Search of... (Page 37) CRM - March 2008 - Selling CRM to Your Sales Force (Page 38) CRM - March 2008 - Selling CRM to Your Sales Force (Page 39) CRM - March 2008 - Selling CRM to Your Sales Force (Page 40) CRM - March 2008 - Selling CRM to Your Sales Force (Page 41) CRM - March 2008 - Selling CRM to Your Sales Force (Page 42) CRM - March 2008 - Travelocity’s New Traveling Companion (Page 43) CRM - March 2008 - Chasing Down First-Call Resolution (Page 44) CRM - March 2008 - Governing Better Marketing (Page 45) CRM - March 2008 - Secret of My Success (Page 46) CRM - March 2008 - Re: Tooling (Page 47) CRM - March 2008 - Connect (Page 48) CRM - March 2008 - Connect (Page 49) CRM - March 2008 - Pint of View (Page 50) CRM - March 2008 - Pint of View (Page Cover3) CRM - March 2008 - Pint of View (Page Cover4)
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