CRM - June 2008 - (Page 8) REALITY CHECK BY DENIS POMBRIANT The Customer Module After years of trying, CRM still hasn’t got a single place to capture and analyze relevant customer data module to CRM? The concept would provide companies with something they don’t yet have: a single place within the CRM system to capture and analyze relevant customer data. We seem to be iterating in that direction. CRM 2.0 has attempted to find creative ways to embed social networking and media into CRM systems. It is the leading edge of a movement to shift the focus from the transaction to the customer, but you have to wonder how successful any such movement can be without a full complement of data. One of the loudest refrains in CRM has always been, “Who is the customer?”—a question we’ve only answered with snapshot analytics that lack real depth. The fact that CRM has been rather successful despite this deficiency says more about the market lifecycle than it does about our ability to know the customer. The marketplace has been domiIT’S NOT WHAT YOUR nated by early-lifecycle companies— MARKETING MESSAGING SAYS; vendors working hard to establish IT’S WHAT THE SOCIAL themselves and whose only concern NETWORK SAYS IT SAYS. was market share. For these vendors a transaction orientation was appropriate. But as markets continue to consolidate and competition becomes savvier, customer intimacy becomes essential to continued success. Vendors now thrive by selling additional products and services to established customers; but those customers are now wiser and thus less likely to settle for the undifferentiated capabilities of a first-generation software offering. It takes a higher level and greater depth of customer knowledge to understand needs, biases, and desires—and to be successful in the process. Any customer module providing that level of knowledge would have to include: • A database for tracking customer demographic information that can be maintained by the customer as well as the vendor—much like a social networking site. • A community interface through which the company could ask its customer base about product innovation, messaging, and anything else relevant to how the customer consumes its products and services. This interface, a kind of customer laboratory, would support typical 8 CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT | JUNE 2008 I S I T T I M E to add a customer bidirectional interactions with customers as well as one-to-many interactions. For example, a company could collect data while individuals interact to trade information about their use of that company’s products and services. • Analytics to slice and dice the data generated by the community. • A mechanism for rewarding good customer behavior (repeat purchases or contributions in the community). All of this is being done piecemeal right now. That may work for a while, but at some point the duplicative efforts stop producing substantive results. A customer module changes all that. There is obviously a cost associated with setting one up, and the finance people might not see a direct way to monetize the data collected. “What do we get out of it?” they might say. My response is, “Consider the alternative.” A few years ago I ran into a staggering statistic: In 2005, 36,000 new products hit the market and, by early 2006, 80 percent of them were projected to fail. I doubt it’s much different today. In baseball, that would mean batting .200—and that’s not good even in a game where failure is the norm. What’s very good about a customer module—assuming it leverages on-demand computing—is that it can be almost frictionless and, if incorporated into normal marketing activity, it can pay big dividends. It’s all about the utility of the information gleaned from listening to customers and incorporating it back into products, services, promotions, and messaging. In a world with a customer module, we will have to think differently about how we market and sell—but I doubt that will be very difficult. Companies are now facing twin whammies: marketing programs with singledigit response rates, and a social milieu that has nearly taken over control of marketing messaging. In other words, it’s not what your marketing messaging says; it’s what the social network says it says. The social customer is already here. The customer module—a place for the social customer to hang a hat— makes all the sense in the world. Denis Pombriant is the founder and managing principal of Beagle Research Group, a CRM market research firm and consultancy. He can be reached at denis.pombriant@beagleresearch.com. www.destinationCRM.com http://www.destinationCRM.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of CRM - June 2008 CRM - June 2008 Contents Front Office Reality Check Customer Centricity The Tipping Point Making Mashup Masterpieces Trouble in the Air CRM on Twitter Is SaaS Ready for Its Contact Center Close-up? CRM: In the Public Interest Required Reading Lollipop Loyalty Best Practices Series: CRM & eCommerce eGain NetSuite Infor Longwood Software Vovici The Second Coming of 2.0 Believe the Hype About Hosted Contact Centers All Talk So Hot It’s Cool Linksys Gets Shaken, a Community Is Stirred The Risky Risk Business Awana Hears a SaaS Sermon Secret of My Success Re:Tooling Scouting Report Pint of View CRM - June 2008 CRM - June 2008 - CRM - June 2008 (Page Cover1) CRM - June 2008 - CRM - June 2008 (Page Cover2) CRM - June 2008 - Contents (Page 3) CRM - June 2008 - Contents (Page 4) CRM - June 2008 - Contents (Page 5) CRM - June 2008 - Front Office (Page 6) CRM - June 2008 - Front Office (Page 7) CRM - June 2008 - Reality Check (Page 8) CRM - June 2008 - Reality Check (Page 9) CRM - June 2008 - Customer Centricity (Page 10) CRM - June 2008 - Customer Centricity (Page 11) CRM - June 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 12) CRM - June 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 13) CRM - June 2008 - Making Mashup Masterpieces (Page 14) CRM - June 2008 - Trouble in the Air (Page 15) CRM - June 2008 - CRM on Twitter (Page 16) CRM - June 2008 - Is SaaS Ready for Its Contact Center Close-up? (Page 17) CRM - June 2008 - CRM: In the Public Interest (Page 18) CRM - June 2008 - Required Reading (Page 19) CRM - June 2008 - Required Reading (Page 20) CRM - June 2008 - Required Reading (Page 21) CRM - June 2008 - Lollipop Loyalty (Page 22) CRM - June 2008 - Lollipop Loyalty (Page 23) CRM - June 2008 - Lollipop Loyalty (Page 24) CRM - June 2008 - Lollipop Loyalty (Page 25) CRM - June 2008 - Lollipop Loyalty (Page 26) CRM - June 2008 - Best Practices Series: CRM & eCommerce (Page S1) CRM - June 2008 - Best Practices Series: CRM & eCommerce (Page S2) CRM - June 2008 - eGain (Page S3) CRM - June 2008 - NetSuite (Page S4) CRM - June 2008 - Infor (Page S5) CRM - June 2008 - Longwood Software (Page S6) CRM - June 2008 - Vovici (Page S7) CRM - June 2008 - Vovici (Page S8) CRM - June 2008 - Vovici (Page 27) CRM - June 2008 - The Second Coming of 2.0 (Page 28) CRM - June 2008 - The Second Coming of 2.0 (Page 29) CRM - June 2008 - The Second Coming of 2.0 (Page 30) CRM - June 2008 - The Second Coming of 2.0 (Page 31) CRM - June 2008 - Believe the Hype About Hosted Contact Centers (Page 32) CRM - June 2008 - Believe the Hype About Hosted Contact Centers (Page 33) CRM - June 2008 - Believe the Hype About Hosted Contact Centers (Page 34) CRM - June 2008 - Believe the Hype About Hosted Contact Centers (Page 35) CRM - June 2008 - Believe the Hype About Hosted Contact Centers (Page 36) CRM - June 2008 - Believe the Hype About Hosted Contact Centers (Page 37) CRM - June 2008 - All Talk (Page 38) CRM - June 2008 - All Talk (Page 39) CRM - June 2008 - All Talk (Page 40) CRM - June 2008 - All Talk (Page 41) CRM - June 2008 - All Talk (Page 42) CRM - June 2008 - Linksys Gets Shaken, a Community Is Stirred (Page 43) CRM - June 2008 - The Risky Risk Business (Page 44) CRM - June 2008 - Awana Hears a SaaS Sermon (Page 45) CRM - June 2008 - Secret of My Success (Page 46) CRM - June 2008 - Re:Tooling (Page 47) CRM - June 2008 - Scouting Report (Page 48) CRM - June 2008 - Scouting Report (Page 49) CRM - June 2008 - Pint of View (Page 50) CRM - June 2008 - Pint of View (Page Cover3) CRM - June 2008 - Pint of View (Page Cover4)
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