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Sales Force Automation CRM Solutions
Each of these sales force
automation CRM solutions are grounded in best practices collected from hundreds of thousands of sales professionals supported over three decades. You will increase the velocity of your sales cycle, eliminate sales bottle necks and maximize your sales team’s effectiveness in less than 30 days.
Baker Sales Systems will help you:
- Significantly expand
the capacity of your sales, marketing and
business development teams
- Improve the
efficiency of your sales prospecting funnel
- Dramatically decrease
your sales cycles
- Promote selling
clarity, motivation and sales proficiency
- Expand the geographic
reach of your marketing, sales and customer
services organizations
- Dramatically reduce
the time required to roll out sales improvement
initiatives
Regardless of your company's size and the requirements for
your CRM (Customer Relationship Management) solution, the goal
remains the same: learn more about your customers and leverage
that knowledge into increased customer loyalty and improved
sales.
However, too often companies jump into their CRM initiatives
without the proper thought and planning. The result? A CRM
system that does not meet critical organizational needs and
fails to provide the proper insights into their customer base.
Or perhaps worse--a CRM system that is not used at all. The key
to success for your CRM implementation is not just the
technology driving your solution, but in the strategy itself.
To achieve CRM success, there are 3 steps every company must
follow before starting to consider CRM technology:
1. Establish a commitment to organizational change. If your
company already understands why it is essential to improve
customer loyalty and agrees that a CRM initiative is a high
priority, congratulations! If not, you'll need to do the legwork
necessary to achieve consensus with all teams. Don't be
overwhelmed. Use this as an opportunity to put the pieces of
your CRM puzzle together--discovering where customer touch
points interact, what information is important to whom and why,
and to identify what current business processes seem inefficient
to those tasked with executing them. Once each team feels heard,
and their grievances documented, they will likely agree that
change is a good thing. Then you not only have much of the
critical information you need for your next step, you also have
the capital to return to these folks for their buy-off when your
CRM strategy is completed. Your next step?
2. Define specific adjustments to operations. This seems like a
tall order, but it is the logical next step towards building a
solid strategy that your entire organization can get behind and
evangelize. We suggest creating a matrix of all the problems
identified in the first step and the solutions that were
discussed. Use this matrix to compare the challenges across
departments and identify potential operational changes that
would solve these issues. Do not think about how technology can
support these solutions, just concentrate on the operational
changes necessary--who needs to know what and when, what
workflow will share critical information between departments,
and what critical customer-facing actions should occur at the
completion of each task. TIP: The biggest factor to building a
solid CRM strategy is developing a standardized sales process
that is based on best practices, can be implemented across your
sales organization, and integrates tightly with marketing and
operations. Armed with this information, you are ready to:
3. Document your CRM Strategy. Your strategy should identify the
specific business problems that need to be addressed (based on
your information gathering and prioritization exercises from the
first 2 steps), define objectives whose results can be measured
(to demonstrate the ROI of your implementation), and outline
solid insight into how CRM will impact the company, current
operations, and your customers. To ensure organizational
buy-off, boil down your CRM strategy into these critical points:
How will CRM improve the lives of its users? How will it
increase productivity? How will it impact sales? It is this
strategy you then take back to the key stakeholders for final
buy-off. It is this strategy that you will arm yourself with
when researching and evaluating all possible CRM solutions
available to you.
Understanding what business problems you need to solve and how
they impact your operations--while demonstrating company support
for this initiative--will ensure a successful implementation of
your CRM solution. Not only will you better understand the
trade-offs that you will need to make with the technology you
choose, you will be able to better evaluate customization
requirements and recommendations made by your CRM partner. The
time you spend planning and documenting your strategy will be
well worth the results!
Source: Shannon Kavanaugh
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Contact us for a free sales and marketing consultation on the effectiveness of your current go-to-market strategies and to discuss how our RevGen
Sales Systems can improve your bottom line.
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