salesforce.com CRM 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
Customer Relationship Management has been with us over the
ages, for as long as people traded with each other. In those
days, the physical closeness in location between the customer
and the supplier led to the relationship. Even in less developed
countries and traditional societies such business models
currently still exist. People congregated on market days and the
customers usually buy from people they know, have bought from
before. The supplier also knew his customers well, what they
liked, how they liked it, what they did not want, and was able
to deliver the customer's needs and wants. And based on their
knowledge of the customer, they could also add sweeteners to
ensure customer loyalty, and bring in related samples to
introduce their existing customers to new things. Their loyal
customers then spread the word and introduced other customers to
them. And gradually they became well known for what they sold or
provided.
As countries developed and urbanization took place, the physical
distance between the supplier and the customer increased.
Intermediaries and merchants developed to transport the product
from the producer to the customer. To pay for their efforts they
added their margins on top of the supplier's price.
With increasing urbanization and industrialization, suppliers
could no longer deal with their customers directly. They could
no longer know their customers' needs, wants, preferences,
habits, and other characteristics that helped them to compete.
The problem then arose of how to compete with products that are
not tailored to customers' needs. So they started building
brands, and using advertising and mass marketing to persuade
remote customers and compete for a greater share of the market.
The flavor of the times were mass production, standardization,
strong universal brand, and a deep penetration of the market.
However this involved a lot of guesswork, and some big mistakes
were sometimes made. The disconnection with the customer also
meant that direct-feedback from the individual customer was not
available.
Over the years, competition became so fierce that mass marketing
became inadequate in ensuring the brand, as customers could
easily move to a competitor at any time. Relying on customers to
remain with a business without bothering to interact with them
is risky. It also became clear that not all customers are
equally valuable to a business, and the focus moved to finding
out what made a customer valuable. The way a customer interacts
with the business can have significant impact on their loyalty
and retention, so customer service gained prominence. Costs of
acquiring and retaining a customer became really important, and
it became clear that selling to an existing customer is cheaper
than acquiring and selling to a new customer. Reducing the cost
of selling and improving profits required more precise
marketing, and this required the firm to be able to gather,
retain, analyze and interpret customer data.
However, this information gathering, analysis, and
interpretation was very complex, expensive and could not be
easily done manually.
And then computerization came, followed by the Internet. And it
became possible again for suppliers to reach individual
customers, connect with them and understand their needs and
wants. This enabled the firm to build a relationship with the
individual customer, similar to that seen in the old days, and
the field of Customer Relationship Management (CRM) was born.
The aims of CRM for the supplier/firm is to deliver value to the
customer at a profit, and to deliver that value so well that the
customer remained loyal, and the supplier became a first choice
for the product/service, with an enhancement of the supplier's
reputation and brand. For the customer, the value of CRM is to
have a supplier who understands the customer's needs and wants
so well, that value was delivered at every interaction, with
less mistakes. Since technology is very essential for delivery
of the supplier's CRM aims, for some people CRM became
synonymous with the technological tools. And some CRM technology
vendors and practitioners insisted that their interpretation of
CRM was the truth. These differing views affected the
implementation and use of CRM technology. Companies and
suppliers using these different CRM technology also judged and
defined them by their experience of how it met their business
needs.
Technology has been the hero and the villain of CRM in practice.
For some CRM worked and for others it did not, and the reason
for failure was not always due to the CRM technology. And those
for whom CRM did not work were quite vocal in blaming either the
concept of CRM, or the technology, or the CRM vendors, or all of
them. But over the years, it became clear that the problem was
not always due to the CRM technology, but the implementation and
application of it. CRM is something that companies do. CRM is
not something companies buy. CRM technology solutions is meant
to help companies do CRM. Like all technology, someone has to
turn it on and they need to know what "buttons to press".
CRM is not a fad. It is an underlying principle of interacting
with customers or clients, and it is something that all firms
should practice. All executives need to understand CRM as a
corporate
strategy.
These series of articles are aimed at helping all readers
understand aspects of CRM. Obviously they are written from the
perspective of my experience, but the articles will also
incorporate information from the experiences of others,
including research findings and more.
Source: Mary Akpala
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