CRM - December 2007 - (Page 12) REALITY CHECK BY IAN JACOBS Playing at the Speed of the New When online businesses put customer feedback to use quickly, customers begin to expect it from all companies W E H AV E H A D more than 10 years of reading—seemingly endlessly—about how the Internet will change the way we all do business. And business has clearly changed. The rise of the Internet-enabled business has also, however, begun to change customer relationship management, often in unexpected ways. Just look at one of my favorite Internet-era success stories: Netflix, a service that takes old-world conventions (physical DVDs, the U.S. Postal Service) and mixes them with Internet conventions, including a Web interface that all customers use to do business with the company. While the company has had ups and downs— including intrusion into its market space by competitors as varied as brick-and-mortar video chain Blockbuster and online commerce leader Amazon.com—what interests me here is how Netflix has taken to heart the message that CRM is not a software application or some external technology, but an attitude, one that is inherent in almost every business process in an enterprise. ASSET-INTENSIVE BUSINESSES ARE GOING TO NEED TO EMULATE THE RESPONSIVENESS DISPLAYED BY INTERNET-DRIVEN ONES. Users primarily interact with Netflix via its Web site (although customer service uses a more traditional phone-based contact center). A growing portion of that Web site is its community area: features that allow users to connect with each other and track each other’s movie preferences and recommendations, as well as some entertainment-focused features such as quizzes. What caught my eye is that the Netflix team that builds the social elements of the site also maintains a very active and well-visited corporate-sponsored blog. At the Netflix Community Blog (http://blog.netflix.com), the team hosts vibrant discussions about proposed changes that might eventually affect the main Netflix site. The designers take users’ input on the blog very seriously—seriously enough so that the head of the Netflix 12 CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT | DECEMBER 2007 design team recently posted a message detailing exactly how he was swayed by users’ arguments about privacy and was utilizing the majority user opinion to guide his development of security features. Because those changes eventually will be rolled out to every Netflix user, users posting to the blog have had a huge impact on the overall user experience. This very active form of listening to the voice of the customer is CRM taken to an extreme: using customer input to guide product development. The Internet nature of Netflix’s business means site changes can be rolled out in a matter of days. That’s a fairly unique CRM situation. Imagine how long a similar change would take for a hardware manufacturer that needs to source all of its components, change assembly lines, and feed the distribution chain before customers see any changes. And yet, the approach to CRM taken by Netflix and its ilk will raise customer expectations across the spectrum of businesses; hardware manufacturers and other asset-intensive businesses are going to need to learn to emulate, as best they can, the type of responsiveness displayed by Internet-driven businesses. At the same time, the Netflix generation of companies is only halfway through the CRM transformation. The changes that Netflix users have directly impacted, for example, are not integral to the basic functions of the Netflix service. A customer can very easily ignore all the community features and still successfully and happily rent DVDs. And the information gathered via blog forums is unstructured data—hard to capture, quantify, and reuse. One can easily envision a more organized version of this idea chain: an informal mechanism driving the development of rapidly delivered features, products, and services with data that can be analyzed to influence other decision-making processes. This model would truly serve the interests of a CRM-driven culture—giving the customers what they want and making them feel as if they have control of their user experience. Ian Jacobs is a senior analyst in Frost & Sullivan’s contact center practice. Contact him at ian.jacobs@frost.com. www.destinationCRM.com http://blog.netflix.com http://www.destinationCRM.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of CRM - December 2007 CRM - December 2007 Contents Front Office Reality Check Customer Centricity SAP’s Midmarket Design A Shift in SAP’s Growth Strategy: Buy Big to Get Bigger The Buyer Is Your Owner Prime Time for Streaming TV The Word on the Floor Market Focus: Energy/Utilities: Speaking Truth to Power (Companies) The Pulse Required Reading It’s All Coming 2.0gether Power to the People Speak Up! Document Management That's a Breeze Customers Gain Traction With Off-Road Vehicles Getting Connected With Surveys Mobile Data Gets Better Reception Secret of My Success Re:Tooling The Tipping Point Pint of View CRM - December 2007 CRM - December 2007 - CRM - December 2007 (Page Cover1) CRM - December 2007 - CRM - December 2007 (Page Cover2) CRM - December 2007 - CRM - December 2007 (Page 3) CRM - December 2007 - CRM - December 2007 (Page 4) CRM - December 2007 - Contents (Page 5) CRM - December 2007 - Contents (Page 6) CRM - December 2007 - Contents (Page 7) CRM - December 2007 - Contents (Page 8) CRM - December 2007 - Contents (Page 9) CRM - December 2007 - Front Office (Page 10) CRM - December 2007 - Front Office (Page 11) CRM - December 2007 - Reality Check (Page 12) CRM - December 2007 - Reality Check (Page 13) CRM - December 2007 - Customer Centricity (Page 14) CRM - December 2007 - Customer Centricity (Page 15) CRM - December 2007 - SAP’s Midmarket Design (Page 16) CRM - December 2007 - A Shift in SAP’s Growth Strategy: Buy Big to Get Bigger (Page 17) CRM - December 2007 - The Buyer Is Your Owner (Page 18) CRM - December 2007 - The Word on the Floor (Page 19) CRM - December 2007 - The Pulse (Page 20) CRM - December 2007 - Required Reading (Page 21) CRM - December 2007 - It’s All Coming 2.0gether (Page 22) CRM - December 2007 - It’s All Coming 2.0gether (Page 23) CRM - December 2007 - It’s All Coming 2.0gether (Page 24) CRM - December 2007 - It’s All Coming 2.0gether (Page 25) CRM - December 2007 - It’s All Coming 2.0gether (Page 26) CRM - December 2007 - It’s All Coming 2.0gether (Page 27) CRM - December 2007 - Power to the People (Page 28) CRM - December 2007 - Power to the People (Page 29) CRM - December 2007 - Power to the People (Page 30) CRM - December 2007 - Power to the People (Page 31) CRM - December 2007 - Power to the People (Page 32) CRM - December 2007 - Power to the People (Page 33) CRM - December 2007 - Speak Up! (Page 34) CRM - December 2007 - Speak Up! (Page 35) CRM - December 2007 - Speak Up! (Page 36) CRM - December 2007 - Speak Up! (Page 37) CRM - December 2007 - Speak Up! (Page 38) CRM - December 2007 - Speak Up! (Page 39) CRM - December 2007 - Speak Up! (Page 40) CRM - December 2007 - Customers Gain Traction With Off-Road Vehicles (Page 41) CRM - December 2007 - Customers Gain Traction With Off-Road Vehicles (Page 42) CRM - December 2007 - Getting Connected With Surveys (Page 43) CRM - December 2007 - Mobile Data Gets Better Reception (Page 44) CRM - December 2007 - Secret of My Success (Page 45) CRM - December 2007 - Re:Tooling (Page 46) CRM - December 2007 - Re:Tooling (Page 47) CRM - December 2007 - The Tipping Point (Page 48) CRM - December 2007 - The Tipping Point (Page 49) CRM - December 2007 - Pint of View (Page 50) CRM - December 2007 - Pint of View (Page Cover3) CRM - December 2007 - Pint of View (Page Cover4)
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