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salesforce.com CRM Management Solutions
Each of these salesforce.com
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
CRM Software solutions are an integral part of the sales,
marketing and customer service of most organizations. Today, CRM
Software dwells far further than these functions to manage all
business requirements. This has been termed by the people at
Microsoft as xRM - (x) anything Relationship Management.
Choosing which solution is right for your company is not easy
and often companies compare different CRM offerings. Two of the
major CRM software applications on the market today are
Microsoft Dynamics CRM and Sales force.
There was a time with these two CRM software applications the
choice was more black and white. You either looked at software
deployed in-house (Microsoft Dynamics CRM) v the
software-as-a-service model (Sales force).
Now that Microsoft has moved into the cloud with their software
as a service model and Sales force now has a development
platform with its "Force" offering your options are now blurred.
Sales force was founded in 1999 with a vision to create an
on-demand information management service that would replace
traditional enterprise software technology. Sales force calls
itself "the enterprise cloud-computing company". Sales Cloud™
and Service Cloud™ are Sales force’s applications for sales and
customer service. Their approach to the cloud computing
deployment model has led to them developing the force.com cloud
platform that allows developers and users to build business
applications on top of the Sales force offering.
Microsoft Dynamics CRM, created by Microsoft product team with
vast resources was designed with a long-term vision that will
allow Customers to use CRM with multiple Microsoft products and
choose deployment options to meet organizational needs.
IT researcher Springboard found Australian and New Zealand was
already the most mature market for SaaS applications in the
Asia-Pacific region.
According to BRW Magazine the market is tipped to grow 45% a
year in Australia and New Zealand from $UA 1.7 billion in 2008
to $US7.7 billion by 2012. The magazine also referred to
customer relationship management software as the most popular
SaaS application (35 percent) and that "companies in Australia
are using SaaS because it's cheaper, rather than because it's
easier to use. Only 9 percent cited "ease of use" as the reason
for choosing SaaS.
Choice and Flexibility
With a multitenant CRM solution, Microsoft Dynamics CRM offers
any number of deployment options, depending on your needs.
On-demand, on-premise, and partner-hosted models are available
for Microsoft Dynamic CRM. If your deployment requirements
change so too can your CRM software deployment options as each
deployment option is built on the same modern architecture and
data model. For example, you can take your configurations and
data hosted by Microsoft and move to In-House or to a Microsoft
Partner web based CRM software hosted model. Sales force
platform offers SaaS by the Cloud and you don't own the software
and configurations. If you want to change to an in-house
solution you need to move to another CRM application. You need
to factor the cost of getting your data out of Sales force.
Depending on the level of subscription you purchase for Sales
force there have been reports of your data being held hostage.
This is, depending on your level of subscription you need to
upgrade your subscription in order to export your data.
Cost
Sales force claims to cost significantly less but Microsoft
Dynamics CRM insists that the comparison is not for like
services. A-la-carte pricing that is additional to potential
price hikes at contract renewal time can significantly affect
the total cost of Sales force. When assessing comparable online
products between the two opponents, Microsoft Dynamics CRM
Online is available for less than 50% of the Sales force fee.
The latest pricing in the USA indicates that "Microsoft CRM
[Online] runs $44-59 per user per month, compared to $125 for
Sales force"
Professional Edition.
Entry price for Sales force is cheaper but if you want more
functionality you obviously have to pay more. With Microsoft CRM
you have access to the complete system from the moment you first
purchase. Your purchase decision should never be based on solely
on price as its only one component in the decision making
process. Those that buy first time around on price usually call
back 6-24 months later asking for help. From personal experience
decision makers who purchase solely on price first time around
re-purchase the second time around on service. To compare
in-house versus hosted pricing you need to calculate over a 3-5
year period and not just 1 year.
Ownership of Data
Sales force, as a software-as-a-service provider, does not own
the data collected by its customers. Instead, its data centers
are outsourced to Equinix, a third party company in the USA and
Singapore. With Microsoft CRM for in-house, and partner hosted
options, customers have full control over the security and
physical location of their data. You can swap and take your data
between these options. Microsoft CRM Online hosted by Microsoft
will be released in Australia late 2010 and the data will be
hosted in Singapore. Again, you will have the ability to move
from hosted to in-house but the online model will have some
restrictions around customization code. In order for Sales force
customers to get development platform capabilities they must buy
the unlimited version.
Ease of Use
Microsoft Dynamics CRM is designed for easy user adoption
because of its similarity and compatibility with Microsoft
Office and Outlook. Simply put, it is designed to minimize the
need for training, reduce application switching, and produce
high productivity. With the launch of Microsoft CRM 5 or 2011
its release name), Office 2010 and SharePoint 2010 the GUI
(interface) between the three product suites becomes very
similar in look and feel. This provides users with an easy to
learn experience and greater chance of user uptake.
Sales force graphical interface is modern and should be easy to
use for most users. The integration to Microsoft Outlook and
Office is reported as not as strong as Dynamics CRM especially
for MS Excel and Outlook. Those using Google Mail will find
Sales force to their liking.
Both Sales force and Dynamics CRM have similar modules including
sales force automation, customer service and support, marketing
automation, document management, contract management, product
catalogue management and reports. Although each module for each
product has its strengths and weaknesses side by side you need
to evaluate each application module against your business
requirements (and not user likeability).
Often an organization short lists three CRM applications to be
presented to its users. Evaluation should not be based heavily
(if at all) on the users liking the look and feel of the
graphical interface. The users of an organization tend to agree
on one CRM application as by nature we feel most comfortable
with what we already know. If you ask a salesperson who has been
using a paper diary for 30 years, what is better? A paper based
or CRM system the answer is always paper! Over the years I have
witnessed three different systems put in front of users at
different organizations and there is never a clear winner for
the CRM application chosen.
At present, Sales force has a lot of easy to use business add-on
products for its core offerings built on its force.com platform.
Microsoft has a host of ISV Partners who have built add-on
products to Microsoft CRM but it's not as easy to find these
add-on's spread out across the globe on various websites.
Microsoft has just launched PinPoint that allows you to search
globally for Partner software solutions. Also, Microsoft CRM
Dynamics Online does not provide the same access to write custom
code in a sandbox because Microsoft did not want outside code in
its own application, but with Microsoft Azure, ISVs can execute
their own code.
Access to CRM and Email
Microsoft CRM is available either through a web browser, through
a mobile device or through a plug-in to MS Outlook. Sales force
integrates with Microsoft Outlook, Lotus Notes, or Google App's.
Sales force will run on a mobile device, through a web browser
and if you want some level of Email (Outlook, Lotus Notes, or
Google App's) integration, however you will still need to
download and install a Sales force connector.
Scope and Support
According to Wikipedia, Sales force offers support for 16
languages, while Microsoft Dynamics CRM offers support for 25.
Microsoft Dynamics CRM's ecosystem includes 750,000 solutions
partners; 2,200 users groups, and 400 community web sites
globally. Standard support included in Sales force’s
subscription fee allows for a 2 business day response time. With
Microsoft, support is dependent on the licensing module used to
purchase the software and the support offered by a Microsoft CRM
Partner. You can choose from ad-hoc through to dedicated
support.
The Future and Investments
It has been reported in online publication The Inquirer.com that
Microsoft will spend US$9.5 billion dollars in 2010 on research
and development making it the largest R&D technology spender in
the world.
In 2008, Sales force spent $63.8 million, or 8% of its revenue,
on research and development, much of which went towards
expanding the Sales force’s cloud computing abilities. In
addition, 91% of sales force’s revenue comes from subscription
and support fees from their cloud computing services.
The CEO of Zoho, Sridhar Vembu first made this good point in
April 2008 by noting the disparities in R&D and sales &
marketing spending by Sales force. Using the financial data from
the last 12 months, Sales force’s sales and marketing spending
of $605 million was almost 5 times its R&D spending of $131
million. It has been reported in businessinsider.com that
Google, R&D spending of $2.8 billion was almost 1.5 times that
of its S&M expense of $2 billion.
There is no doubt Sales force is a leader in the SaaS market.
The question will be whether the heavy weights including
Microsoft (with Azure and BPOS) and Google with its GoogleApps
MarketPlace will be able to stay in the game as the heavy
weights begin gaining heavy market share in the cloud.
SaaS versus In-House
A note on SaaS versus In-House deployment. "In 2009, within
enterprise applications, SaaS represented 3.4 per cent of total
enterprise spending, slightly up from 2008 at 2.8 per cent,"
said David Cearley, vice president of Gartner. This market will
reach $8.8 billion in 2010, according to the company's
forecasts.
From a market perspective, most of the spending for SaaS is
occurring in the content, collaboration communication, and
customer relationship management markets. Collectively, they
represented 65 per cent of the global enterprise applications
software market in 2009. Many of the bad practices that occurred
in the on premises world are now moving their way into SaaS.
The biggest example is shelfware. "Shelfware-as-a-service is the
concept of paying for a software subscription that is not being
accessed by an end user," said Cearley. "This most commonly
occurs in large organizations, but it could happen to any
company, especially those that have downsized their workforce,
or one that has oversubscribed to trigger a volume discount." "SaaS
may not have delivered on its early grand promises - of the
current SaaS deployments we estimate that a total of 90 per cent
of SaaS deployments are not pay-per use - but it has reenergized
the software market and added choice," Cearley said.
First Steps in Choosing Your CRM Solution
Your first step in determining which solution is right for your
company is to document your CRM requirements. Secondly, research
to see what CRM applications are going to meet your
requirements. Third, bring in a CRM consultancy firm and/or CRM
Vendor to discuss your requirements and demonstrate their
knowledge and application to you. Whether you go hosted or
in-house should always come after you've gone through the above
steps.
Source: Antony Dutton
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