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Home >> Enterprise Business Applications >> Customer Relationship Management (CRM) and Customer Self-Service

Is CRM Dead?

Is CRM Dead?

By:  Allen Bonde  On: 19 Jan 2006 For: CIO US Creator

And you thought you knew what CRM was. While many see the acquisition of Siebel by Oracle as the death knell for CRM as you know it, others see it as an evolutionary process. Find out why and weigh in.

With the acquisition of Siebel by Oracle, many of us are pondering the question, “Does this mean that CRM as we know it is dead?” As a long-time industry watcher and former analyst, I actually do look at this deal as a potential endpoint in the evolution of a model that has developed over the past 15 years or so. But I also see it as further evidence of the sea change taking place in the overall enterprise applications market, which despite challenges and the potential changing of the “old guard,” is in fact undergoing a bit of a renaissance—especially when it comes to bringing powerful new capabilities to the masses of business users and empowering customers to betterserve themselves.

Customer relationship management or CRM as a model has it roots in three primary areas: call center systems, help desk applications and sales force automation, or what some have called the “front-office functions.” In the mid-1990s several platform providers like Siebel and Clarify (now Amdocs) emerged, driven primarily by acquisitions, to offer consolidated functionality across the entire front-office, while the “back-office” providers like SAP and Oracle generally remained focused on areas like finance, supply chain management and as it emerged, e-business.

In a way, the consolidation of front-office and back-office functionality under one umbrella—like we see with the Oracle-Siebel deal and saw before that with the PeopleSoft-Vantive deal—has been a long time coming. The benefit of having one database and common set of end-user tools is attractive. Plus, the return on traditional, stand-alone CRM investments has been mixed at best, especially when it comes to large-scale deployments. I know of several global organizations that have spent more than $100 million on CRM projects and are still uncertain what real value they have received!

It’s (still) about the customer

Despite its name, one can argue that the greatest shortcoming of CRM is that it never really was about directly helping customers. Solutions were sold to executives running call centers or sales organizations as a way to wring out inefficiency, force standardized processes and gain better insight into the state of the business. In particular, what most CRM and CTI systems provided was a way to track customers, route and facilitate inbound communications and report on the progress of various marketing, sales or support activities.

But what these solutions generally did not address was the need to help organizations resolve customer problems, answer their questions faster or help customers solve their own problems. For this reason, we have seen a slow but steady shift in focus and investment from automating core internal front-office functions to streamlining edge processes like online customer support, product returns or account management.

In parallel, there has been a recent wave of innovation powered by Internet standards, open source software and on-demand delivery models, as well as a renewed interest in areas like knowledge management and what some are calling service resolution management or SRM. As defined by leaders in this sector like Knova Software, SRM aims to improve access to corporate knowledge by breaking down silos, simplify the authoring and capture of new content and provide more consistent answers across all sales and service channels.


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Allen Bonde Allen Bonde is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.
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