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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 is fast becoming a key business strategy that many
companies rely on to streamline their sales, marketing and
customer service processes. Choosing the CRM application that is
right for your business now and into the future is a critical
step to take.
It is perceived that a large enterprise that requires
integration into other business systems must deploy their CRM
solution In-House whilst a smaller business with less demanding
requirements should consider a web based software solution using
Software-as-a-Service (SaaS). These perceptions can be far from
the best solution in both cases. There are a number of factors
that go into deciding In-House versus SaaS.
What IT resource and capacity do you have to manage a system
In-House? For example, if you buy Microsoft Dynamics CRM and you
are a "Microsoft house" the impact is likely to be small. Do you
want to integrate your CRM into other systems such as
accounting, document management or ordering systems? As a
general rule, integration is cheaper and easier through In-House
deployment. It also depends on whether a commercial connector is
available to connect your CRM with these other systems. For
example, with accounting systems there is a variety of
connectors developed by third party developers you can purchase
to provide (bi)-directional connection to your CRM application.
If your information is extremely sensitive then In-House
deployment is usually chosen. It is a myth that security for
cloud based SaaS applications is likely to be less secure than
In-House. Commercial web hosting companies provide security that
most organisations could only dream of affording.
Traditionally, if the IT department is heavily involved in the
decision making of a CRM project they are most likely to want an
In-House deployment as they have ownership of the solution. IT
decision makers are starting to see the virtues cloud computing
can offer and the market is seeing a move to SaaS.
From a financial perspective SaaS is an operational expenditure
and looks better on the balance sheet in the short term.
In-House solutions, if paid upfront require a capital budget.
Although, many CRM providers offer a financing option to
commercially lease the software and services over a period of
time moving the cost from capital to operational. It's tough to
see how SaaS is a less expensive option when looked at over a
3-5 year period even if further hardware is required for
In-House deployment. With SaaS you effectively rent the
software, so your configuration and data are only good as long
as you keep paying your bill. Further, you need to keep pace
with the upgrades as they are applied to the system. To do this
users require training on new features, and updates often need
to be applied to the latest versions of key software such as
Microsoft Office. Further any development customisations you've
made to your system require updates and testing.
SaaS is highly desirable for a new business or a new department
if you have a small budget to get started. Many commercial CRM
Vendors provide "cheap" entry points for their SaaS options.
Why? It's a "loss leader" offer to get you hooked in. It's a bit
like the TV grocer commercial where you get a litre of milk for
99 cents to get you in the store. This is just good marketing
but you want to think a little about the future before signing
on the dotted line. If you take a cheap option to get going,
what is it going to cost to get my data exported into the system
I really need in 12 months time? Or, upgrade to the "full
version" of the application. Be careful!
Does the number of users make a difference? When you are looking
at less than 10-20 users and want to get going quickly SaaS
might be your answer. More than a couple of hundred users tend
to be more In-House and you can go either way in between. Some
CRM Vendors provide the ability to jump between In-House and
SaaS. Sage with SageCRM and sagecrm.com; and Microsoft Dynamics
CRM are two examples. If you have a high retention rate of
employees and you are highly customising the system, the
tendency is towards In-House deployment. If you need a system
"yesterday" then SaaS can be "turned on" very quickly.
Further factors to consider - Are you an early adopter of new
technology and can afford to take on greater risk? What load is
the CRM application putting on the entire system (In-House) or
Internet (SaaS)?
The argument for and against the best option for deployment is
on-going between experts but should not be your number one
consideration when evaluating a CRM system. If a particular
vendor only offers SaaS they are obviously going to sing the
virtues of the platform and vice-versa for Vendors with an
In-House deployment option.
Source: Antony Dutton
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.
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