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
Many companies use a CRM system, and all companies could
benefit from using one. But how many people understand the
implications of installing CRM?
To help you make the right decision in choosing a CRM system,
we've answered some of the most common CRM-related questions.
What is CRM?
CRM stands for Customer Relationship Management. Based on the
well-known marketing theory that it is more profitable to keep
existing customers than to go out looking for new ones, the CRM
concept is based on forming and developing relationships with
customers in order to enhance customer satisfaction and maximize
profit.
So it's just for our sales team, right?
Wrong! Although CRM systems began as simple contact databases to
help salespeople track prospects and leads, things have moved on
over the last decade, and CRM systems now encompass virtually
all business functions:
Sales
Of course, CRM was originally created as a tool for sales teams.
A good CRM system allows salespeople to manage their
appointments, manage their contact databases, produce
quotations, target customers, and generate reports. Sales
managers can implement processes and check that they are being
followed, and record all vital sales data.
Marketing
Marketing teams can use CRM to maintain and manage
customer/prospect lists and subsequently coordinate marketing
campaigns, as well as monitoring their effectiveness. A powerful
CRM will also allow marketers to prepare, generate and send
mail/email campaigns. A CRM can even help with online marketing,
by recording the buying habits of customers and using web
analytics to help you see which parts of your site are
popular/unpopular. Monitoring the different ingredients of your
marketing mix will help you learn what's working and what isn't.
Management/Administration/Accounts
Customers don't just talk to your sales or customer service
people - they also deal regularly with your accounts department
and, in the case of complaints, they may need to talk to
supervisors, managers or even directors. A CRM system which
records every interaction between you and your customers means
that whoever talks to your customer has all the information they
need to hand - no need to put that customer on hold while you
track down the information you need.
Delivery
Whatever you're selling - a service, a bulk off-the-shelf
product, a one-off customization - your delivery team need to
know exactly what your customers have ordered, and when they're
expecting to receive it. Delivery problems often occur when an
important piece of key information isn't communicated to the
delivery team, and can cost you money. A CRM system means
delivery staff can see exactly what the customer wants and when
they want it, and also allows them to feed useful information
back to the sales team which could result in increased business.
After-Sales Service
Taking care of customers after they've bought your products is a
vital part of the CRM concept, and for many companies,
particularly in the service industries, it is where the majority
of interactions with customers take place. A CRM system will
help your customer service team to constantly monitor customer
relationships, and make you more money by helping them identify
further sales opportunities.
I already have a lot of information about my customers. What can
CRM tell me that I don't already know?
You may already be storing a lot of details about your customers
- where they live, what they do, their age, their interests etc.
- but are you joining the dots and getting the most out of that
data?
Typical organizations store customer data in information
"islands", i.e. isolated in several different software
applications (accounts, ERP, Outlook etc.). CRM allows you to
collate all this information in one central location, and thus
to possibly see connections you didn't even know existed.
Another key benefit of CRM is easy customer segmentation,
allowing you to see which types of customer are buying which
products, and then to group and target them accordingly. All
companies know that the easiest sale to make is that of a new
product to an existing customer, and using customer segmentation
will help you improve your cross-selling figures in no time.
What can CRM do for my employees?
Giving your staff access to greater amounts of information gives
them the power to make quicker, better-informed decisions. This
can speed up your business processes, make your service more
efficient and effective, and consequently impress your
customers. And when your staff have all the information they
need, they feel empowered and in control.
Also, as we saw in the previous answer, collating the
information from your various information "islands" into one
central location saves your staff time they would otherwise
spend hunting down information.
Are there any benefits to the customers themselves?
Of course. As well as the obvious improvements to your
efficiency, service and delivery, CRM allows you to involve your
customers in your business. CRM systems facilitate customer
satisfaction surveys, online ordering and account management,
and online order tracking.
Greater levels of customer inclusion in your business processes
create collaboration, loyalty and trust.
OK, I'm nearly ready to invest in a CRM system. What areas do I
need to consider before I make my choice?
Before you choose your CRM system there are several points you
need to consider.
Compatibility - as we have seen, CRM pervades throughout all
areas of your company, so you will need a CRM system that can
talk to your existing applications (accounting, ERP, email etc).
If you are migrating from one CRM system to another, check how
easy it is to transfer your data.
Future IT strategy - what are your future IT plans? You will
need to make sure any changes or new applications you plan to
introduce will integrate seamlessly with your CRM system.
Customization - no two businesses work the same way, so you will
need a system that can be customized to your requirements. Pay
special attention to areas such as screen layout, security, data
fields, reports, and workflow. A cheap out-of-the-box system may
save you money in the short term, but will inevitably prove to
be a false economy. Your way of working should dictate how you
use CRM, not the other way around, so think about YOUR processes
first and find a system that can handle them.
Provider - from the outset, you need to be very clear about the
role of the software provider who is supplying your CRM system.
Are they simply selling you an off-the-shelf product, or are
they designing a customized system? Will their involvement end
after the system is installed, or will they be responsible for
training? Are they just a software supplier, or will they be
taking a consultancy role and advising you on your business
processes?
ROI - ask your supplier for feedback from customers already
using the CRM system you intend to buy, to find out what
measurable benefits the system has brought them, and over what
timescale.
Installation - how long will the installation process take? How
much training will staff need? In general, how much disruption
will be caused to your business while people get used to the new
system?
People - for most of your staff a new CRM system will mean a new
way of working. Whilst some people embrace change, others prefer
to stick with the ways they know, inefficient though they may
be. So make sure everyone is on board by effectively
communicating the benefits that the new system will bring to
them and the business. Make sure everyone using the system is
properly trained both in its use and in your processes - if some
people are entering incorrect data or not contributing at all,
the system will soon fall into disuse. Ensure that all users
share their knowledge rather than protecting any special
relationships they might have with individual clients. In short
- involve, encourage and educate.
Remote access - some employees, particularly those who travel a
lot, may need to access your CRM system from outside your
offices. Make sure the system is compatible with your staff's
remote devices and your communications technology, and ensure
that your security isn't compromised.
What CRM system does TRG International recommend?
CRM isn't suitable for all companies. Indeed, smaller companies
or companies with just a few
key customers can easily get by using the contact management
functions of MS Outlook.
However, when a company is clearly in need of a CRM system, we
recommend Microsoft Dynamic CRM - in fact, we don't just
recommend it, we use it ourselves! Obviously, being a Microsoft
product it is fully compatible with all the other Microsoft
applications you're probably using already, and as a Microsoft
Gold Certified Partner you will benefit from our expertise in
implementing Microsoft products and training your staff to use
them.
Source: Tim Russell
link
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.
|