CRM - November 2007 - (Page 8) REALITY CHECK BY BARTON GOLDENBERG Web 2.0 and the Digital Client Handling the customers who represent the future of your business I F YOU MISSED this year’s destinationCRM 2007 ■ Why will the digital client drive the future of business? In the conference and exhibition in New York, you missed a tremendous opportunity to actively participate in the industry’s leading learning forum. At the top of the conference, Malcolm Gladwell, the author of The Tipping Point, suggested that the CRM industry needs to reframe its value proposition. In my chairman’s address, I spoke of our industry’s healthy transition resulting from continued growth, the application of wisdom, and the emergence of the Digital Client—but with continued challenges in each of these areas. Author Stan Davis (Blur) suggested that, to secure continued growth and innovation, the CRM industry must get onto a new lifecycle that embraces Web 2.0 developments and accepts the digital client as a key factor in this transition. These keynotes were followed by the challenger ses- THE CRM INDUSTRY MUST GET ONTO A NEW LIFECYCLE THAT EMBRACES WEB 2.0 DEVELOPMENTS. sion I conducted along with Tim Bajarin and Patrick Bultema—the content of which I would like to share. First, we reviewed characteristics of the Web sites that form the current core of Web 2.0—Wikipedia, Craigslist, Google, Facebook, MySpace.com, YouTube, and LinkedIn. We asked lots of provoking questions, including: ■ How much does it cost to secure products and services on Web 2.0 sites? Nothing; basic services are all free. ■ Who are the Web 2.0 customers? Anyone and everyone. ■ How do you define a Web 2.0 customer? Anyone who invests personal resources online in exchange for value. ■ What’s the value proposition for Web 2.0 sites? Social networking and the exchange of user-generated content. ■ Are there really significant numbers of visitors to Web 2.0 sites? Yes, including 56 million alone who have viewed the “Evolution of Dance” video on YouTube. ■ What’s the value of these sites? In the billions: Google bought YouTube for $1.65 billion, and a rumored Microsoft investment would peg Facebook’s value at $10 billion. We also reviewed why Cisco Systems’ vibrant chairman and chief executive officer, John Chambers, recently concluded that “what our children started with social networking will be the business models of the future.” Finally we responded to these two tough questions: 8 CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT | NOVEMBER 2007 United States, there are 75 million young (less than 23 years old) digital clients. As I mentioned in my last column (“The Rise of the Digital Client,” August 2007), these people are the key drivers behind Web 2.0, spending, on average, 8.5 hours per day digitally connected. They are the force mainly responsible for purchasing 270,000 iPhones during its first three days of release in the U.S. and 3 million iPhones by year-end. They provide much of the user-generated content for Web 2.0 sites. They commercialized social networking. They are “always on and always connected” (to each other and to the Web). And, as Tim Bajarin reminded us, this generation’s social movement goes way beyond technology, drawing on normal human impulses and absorbing only those technologies that fit its goals. But most important, the digital client increasingly is the buyer of your products and services as well as the influencer of your employees and your other customers. Simply said, the digital client represents the future of your business. ■ How can your organization begin to create its digital client roadmap? We suggested nine starting points: • Immerse yourself in Web 2.0 culture to understand it; • Ramp up your knowledge of social networking through participation; • Keep your eyes open to digital-client developments outside of your industry; • Conduct research among your client base regarding its Web 2.0 desires; • Secure an understanding of and comfort level with “disruptive” behavior; • Buy (or partner with) a Web 2.0 firm in your industry; • Ensure that all the information that you offer clients is accessible via mobile devices; • Hire Generation Y employees (and put at least one on your board of directors); and • Look at Web 2.0 and the digital client as an imperative extension of your brand. Here’s one prediction that bears repeating: Any organization in 2008 that isn’t actively participating in at least two experiments involving Web 2.0 and the digital client is destined to follow the almighty typewriter into extinction. Barton Goldenberg is president and founder of ISM Inc., a CRM real-time enterprise consulting firm in Bethesda, Md. He is the author of CRM Automation and the publisher of The Guide to CRM Automation. Contact him at bgoldenberg@ismguide.com. www.destinationCRM.com http://www.destinationCRM.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of CRM - November 2007 CRM - November 2007 Contents Front Office Reality Check Customer Centricity Have You Caught It? The Mother of Enterprise Information Market Focus: Technology: The Simple Truth about Complex Manufacturing Q&A: Gianforte Talks CRM Required Reading Predicting Profitability Checking the Pulse of the Contact Center Cast a Narrow Net Modern Times, Modern Methods Primos Hunting Calls Snares Efficiency Nailing It Down Moving in on Mortgage Delinquencies RDS Delivery Delivers on Service Secret of My Success Re:Tooling The Tipping Point Pint of View CRM - November 2007 CRM - November 2007 - CRM - November 2007 (Page Cover1) CRM - November 2007 - CRM - November 2007 (Page Cover2) CRM - November 2007 - Contents (Page 3) CRM - November 2007 - Contents (Page 4) CRM - November 2007 - Contents (Page 5) CRM - November 2007 - Front Office (Page 6) CRM - November 2007 - Front Office (Page 7) CRM - November 2007 - Reality Check (Page 8) CRM - November 2007 - Reality Check (Page 9) CRM - November 2007 - Customer Centricity (Page 10) CRM - November 2007 - Customer Centricity (Page 11) CRM - November 2007 - Have You Caught It? (Page 12) CRM - November 2007 - The Mother of Enterprise Information (Page 13) CRM - November 2007 - Market Focus: Technology: The Simple Truth about Complex Manufacturing (Page 14) CRM - November 2007 - Market Focus: Technology: The Simple Truth about Complex Manufacturing (Page 15) CRM - November 2007 - Q&A: Gianforte Talks CRM (Page 16) CRM - November 2007 - Required Reading (Page 17) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page 18) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page 19) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page 20) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page 21) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page 22) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S1) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S2) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S3) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S4) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S5) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S6) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S7) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S8) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page 23) CRM - November 2007 - Checking the Pulse of the Contact Center (Page 24) CRM - November 2007 - Checking the Pulse of the Contact Center (Page 25) CRM - November 2007 - Checking the Pulse of the Contact Center (Page 26) CRM - November 2007 - Checking the Pulse of the Contact Center (Page 27) CRM - November 2007 - Checking the Pulse of the Contact Center (Page 28) CRM - November 2007 - Checking the Pulse of the Contact Center (Page 29) CRM - November 2007 - Cast a Narrow Net (Page 30) CRM - November 2007 - Cast a Narrow Net (Page 31) CRM - November 2007 - Cast a Narrow Net (Page 32) CRM - November 2007 - Cast a Narrow Net (Page 33) CRM - November 2007 - Cast a Narrow Net (Page 34) CRM - November 2007 - Cast a Narrow Net (Page 35) CRM - November 2007 - Modern Times, Modern Methods (Page 36) CRM - November 2007 - Modern Times, Modern Methods (Page 37) CRM - November 2007 - Modern Times, Modern Methods (Page 38) CRM - November 2007 - Modern Times, Modern Methods (Page 39) CRM - November 2007 - Modern Times, Modern Methods (Page 40) CRM - November 2007 - Modern Times, Modern Methods (Page 41) CRM - November 2007 - Modern Times, Modern Methods (Page 42) CRM - November 2007 - Nailing It Down (Page 43) CRM - November 2007 - Moving in on Mortgage Delinquencies (Page 44) CRM - November 2007 - RDS Delivery Delivers on Service (Page 45) CRM - November 2007 - Secret of My Success (Page 46) CRM - November 2007 - Re:Tooling (Page 47) CRM - November 2007 - The Tipping Point (Page 48) CRM - November 2007 - The Tipping Point (Page 49) CRM - November 2007 - Pint of View (Page 50) CRM - November 2007 - Pint of View (Page Cover3) CRM - November 2007 - Pint of View (Page Cover4)
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