SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Enterprise Business Applications >> Customer Relationship Management (CRM) and Customer Self-Service

Solve the CRM nightmare: A buyer's guide

Solve the CRM nightmare: A buyer's guide

By:  Vawn Himmelsbach  On: 13 Sep 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

It was supposed to make call centres more efficient. Sales and marketing teams hoped it would allow them to target their efforts more effectively. But for most enterprises, that didn’t happen. After years of trying, we still don’t know our customers very well

Customer relationship management has a history of failed deployments. Myriad vendors — from mainstream ones to the more obscure — offer CRM in a variety of ways, from on-premise to partner-hosted to software-as-a-service. CRM is not a one-size-fits-all solution, and finding the right fit for your organization is essential to its success.

From an IT perspective, CRM is a software package they buy, implement, support and maintain. Along with that comes new data that has to be shared, archived, managed and secured — and this is why software-as-a-service has found a niche with CRM. But the value of CRM is found less in how you deploy it, and more in why you’re deploying it in the first place. If deployed correctly, it can be used to capture valuable information about customers, such as how they buy from you, when they interact with you and who they interact with.

The bane of most CRM applications, and what has historically been seen as a challenge, is getting that information to the right person in a meaningful way, said Joel Martin, vice-president of enterprise software research with IDC Canada. If a sales rep uses CRM to establish that a particular customer buys a particular product in January of each year, but the CRM system doesn’t let operations or inventory management or essential partners in on that, then the CRM system isn’t going to be of much use.

To be successful, said Martin, CRM must tie back into a company’s traditional ERP, payroll, procurement and inventory management tools. And it should have analytics and reporting tools so line-of-business managers can see what’s going on across the organization. Components of CRM have been built into SAP, Oracle and Axapta solutions, but they tend to be components of capturing data activities. What we want now, he said, is a CRM tool that allows us to capture information on mobile devices.

Where and how

To get the most out of CRM, certain IT decisions have to be made — but you shouldn’t start thinking about on-premise, hosted or SaaS until you’ve figured out what exactly you’re trying to do, said Martin. That way, the vendors will have a better appreciation of the business processes that CRM will fit into.

If you’re looking for a small point solution for employees who are always in the office, for example, then maybe on-premise is the way to go, but you should tie your CRM solution into your total apps platform. If you’re looking at hosted content management, can that partner also facilitate CRM? If you’re sales-oriented and looking for a pure play point solution, software-as-a-service might work. And if you’re looking for something industry-specific, that’s where a partner-hosted solution comes into play. Or, you might seek a partner that can host a solution that enables mobility.

A partner can also help if you want a mixed solution, where some of it’s managed internally and some of it’s managed by a partner. For example, you might want a portion of your CRM on-premise, but then want a partner to ensure that the other half of your sales business, which is out in the field, has access to the solution.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 1222   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Vawn Himmelsbach Vawn Himmelsbach is a Toronto-based journalist and regular contributor to IT World Canada's publications. She also writes about travel and runs the Web site http://GlobalNomad.ca.

Related Content

Bluenog adds open source BI to portal, content suite
Bluenog adds open source BI to portal, content suiteColumbia University becomes a customer of an application combination that addresses everything from analytics to what sits on a company Web site. The vendor's CEO discusses the product roadmap
Tracking program helps tech vendors gain customer leads
Tracking program helps tech vendors gain customer leadsA marketing services company, Harte-Hanks Market Intelligence, recently released a program that allows subscribers (mainly tech vendors) to track changes in companies' IT products and management.
Management apps get Cs, Ds
Management apps get Cs, Ds?Management software heavyweights BMC, CA, HP and IBM are barely making the grade with their customers, earning C and D averages and driving IT buyers to look elsewhere for their operations management needs, according to a recent Gartner poll.
Anatomy of a Kickoff: Part 2: Client and Primary Sponsor Introduction
arun nithyanandam -this is a series of posts, if you haven’t read the earlier ones, please read it here.part 1: overview briefly introduce peopleintroduce the people in the room first—present their names, titles, and responsibilitie

Comments (1)

President
by Jon Sherrington 9/18/2007 12:00:00 AMCustomer Relationship Management is a mindset more than an application. Until corporations realize this they will fail to capitalize on their software investment. As their inability to increase customer loyalty erodes their own market share so the CRM developers will commensurately lose their customers, which is a shame, because it is not an application problem. I strongly recommend for CRM developers to build strategic alliances or value-added partnerships with experts in customer-centric marketing, in order to help their customer leverage the best outcome from their CRM tools To read a white paper on how to make the customer the centre of the universe go to http://www.hydrogencreative.com/touchmarketing.pdf.
Name: (required) eMail: (optional)

Your email address will not appear online and will be used only if the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comments.