CRM - October 2008 - (Page 10) REALITY CHECK BY JIM DICKIE CRM on the Inside What your inside sales team knows about selling, and what your field sales force needs to learn C SO Insights’ 2008 survey of over 1,600 firms worldwide found that the number of sales organizations that have formally implemented a CRM system has risen to 70 percent. Five years ago, the figure was only 51 percent—a sign that the CRM industry as a whole has enjoyed a solid period of growth. But overall growth isn’t the whole story. Are all firms achieving the same levels of results? Drilling into the study data shows the answer is no. We are seeing different results based on factors such as 40% the size of the company, geography, Inside the type of system implemented, etc. Sales But one of the variables with the most dramatic impact on results was the type of sales force a company had: inside sales versus field sales. When asked about the performance improvements seen as a result of implementing a CRM solution, the experiences reported by inside sales were noticeably better that those reported by firms that sell exclusively through field sales. (See Figure 1.) Two other statistics are worth noting. First, a whopping 88 percent of inside sales teams have implemented CRM IS MORE OFTEN INTEGRATED INTO TASKS PERFORMED BY INSIDE SALES THAN FOR THOSE PERFORMED BY FIELD SALES. a CRM system, compared to just 64 percent of field sales teams. But then drill deeper: Among those firms that have implemented CRM, there’s a significant differential in terms of how many report adoption by at least nine-tenths of the sales force. Fifty-three percent of the inside sales teams report having penetrated that thoroughly; only 41 percent of the field sales forces could say the same. Why the differences? In reviewing specific CRM projects over the years, one key factor we have seen is process workflow: Put simply, CRM is more often integrated into the tasks that inside sales reps perform than it is for tasks performed by field salespeople. 10 CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT | OCTOBER 2008 Consider the following workflow of an inside sales rep at a telecommunications firm we benchmarked: A rep is automatically notified when a lead coming in from the Web site is passed from the marketing automation system into the CRM system. Wanting to know more before calling the prospect, the salesperson is then able to access information on the company and the contact via sales-knowledge subscription serFigure 1: Percentage vices integrated directly into the CRM of Firms Reporting application. Armed with these insights, Significant Improvements in the rep next has the CRM system autoSales Performance matically dial the number; at the same time, the system displays a sample call script on the rep’s PC screen. Following the call, the rep records the notes of 23% the conversation, updates the status of Field Sales the opportunity, and prepares a leadfulfillment email—all within the CRM application. The system then tracks the status of that email and automatically notifies the rep when it’s opened and what information the prospect subsequently views. This is a clear example of how CRM optimizes the workflow of the rep, acting as a digital assistant to help get things done. On the opposite end of the spectrum, we have seen examples where field sales reps access their CRM application as rarely as once a month—to update their forecast. Why so little usage? Because no one has taken the time to look at what these reps do and how they operate. As a result, no one has designed a CRM application to support them conducting key selling tasks such as account research, needs analysis, presentation/proposal creation, order entry, etc. Remember that technology is only an enabler for performance improvement. If your company has field salespeople, and your CRM investments have failed to produce significant gains in their performance, go see how their counterparts in inside sales are faring. Those inside sales reps may well know things about process workflow that you don’t—things you can learn from. Jim Dickie is a partner with CSO Insights, a research firm that specializes in benchmarking CRM and sales effectiveness initiatives. He can be reached at jim.dickie@csoinsights.com. www.destinationCRM.com http://www.destinationCRM.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of CRM - October 2008 CRM - October 2008 Contents Front Office Feedback Reality Check Customer Centricity The Tipping Point Sprinting Toward Disaster? SAP Retains Market-Share Lead in CRM A Week of Strong Customer Service CRM on Twitter Build a Good Event and They Will Come Required Reading There's No Place Like Home The New Breed of CRM Consultant The Price is Right...You Hope How Much Marketing is Too Much? The Sweet Smell of High-Quality Service The Next Act! For An Acquisition Some Stories Never Get Old CRM Eases the Pressure For WIKA Instruments Secret of My Success Re:Tooling Scouting Report Pint of View CRM - October 2008 CRM - October 2008 - CRM - October 2008 (Page Cover1) CRM - October 2008 - CRM - October 2008 (Page Cover2) CRM - October 2008 - Contents (Page 3) CRM - October 2008 - Contents (Page 4) CRM - October 2008 - Contents (Page 5) CRM - October 2008 - Front Office (Page 6) CRM - October 2008 - Front Office (Page 7) CRM - October 2008 - Feedback (Page 8) CRM - October 2008 - Feedback (Page 9) CRM - October 2008 - Reality Check (Page 10) CRM - October 2008 - Reality Check (Page 11) CRM - October 2008 - Customer Centricity (Page 12) CRM - October 2008 - Customer Centricity (Page 13) CRM - October 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 14) CRM - October 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 15) CRM - October 2008 - Sprinting Toward Disaster? (Page 16) CRM - October 2008 - SAP Retains Market-Share Lead in CRM (Page 17) CRM - October 2008 - SAP Retains Market-Share Lead in CRM (Page 18) CRM - October 2008 - CRM on Twitter (Page 19) CRM - October 2008 - Build a Good Event and They Will Come (Page 20) CRM - October 2008 - Required Reading (Page 21) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page 22) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page 23) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page 24) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page 25) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page 26) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF1) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF2) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF3) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF4) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF5) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF6) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF7) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF8) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF9) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF10) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF11) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF12) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF13) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF14) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF15) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF16) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF17) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF18) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF19) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page SF20) CRM - October 2008 - There's No Place Like Home (Page 27) CRM - October 2008 - The New Breed of CRM Consultant (Page 28) CRM - October 2008 - The New Breed of CRM Consultant (Page 29) CRM - October 2008 - The New Breed of CRM Consultant (Page 30) CRM - October 2008 - The New Breed of CRM Consultant (Page 31) CRM - October 2008 - The New Breed of CRM Consultant (Page 32) CRM - October 2008 - The Price is Right...You Hope (Page 33) CRM - October 2008 - The Price is Right...You Hope (Page 34) CRM - October 2008 - The Price is Right...You Hope (Page 35) CRM - October 2008 - The Price is Right...You Hope (Page 36) CRM - October 2008 - The Price is Right...You Hope (Page 37) CRM - October 2008 - How Much Marketing is Too Much? (Page 38) CRM - October 2008 - How Much Marketing is Too Much? (Page 39) CRM - October 2008 - How Much Marketing is Too Much? (Page 40) CRM - October 2008 - How Much Marketing is Too Much? (Page 41) CRM - October 2008 - How Much Marketing is Too Much? (Page 42) CRM - October 2008 - The Next Act! For An Acquisition (Page 43) CRM - October 2008 - Some Stories Never Get Old (Page 44) CRM - October 2008 - CRM Eases the Pressure For WIKA Instruments (Page 45) CRM - October 2008 - Secret of My Success (Page 46) CRM - October 2008 - Re:Tooling (Page 47) CRM - October 2008 - Scouting Report (Page 48) CRM - October 2008 - Scouting Report (Page 49) CRM - October 2008 - Pint of View (Page 50) CRM - October 2008 - Pint of View (Page Cover3) CRM - October 2008 - Pint of View (Page Cover4)
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