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
First of all what does CRM stand for? CRM = Customer
Relationship Management.
The concept of CRM has been around for a long time. The original
form of CRM was a manual card system kept by a sales person that
usually sat on the sales person's desk or alongside them in the
car. These client cards sets were very valuable to the sales
person as this is where they kept important customer information
such customer contact details, key contacts in the company, a
running commentary on their activities, personal and product
preferences, buying patterns, business connections and so forth.
Each card was a dossier on each client. To successful, well
managed sales people, their client cards were gold.
However, often times, this vital data resided with the sales
person alone. The company, the sales person worked for, did not
have ready access to this important information and when the
sales person left the company more often than not so did the
client information, client relationship and sales did as well.
The 'softwarising' of CRM for businesses is seen as a major
breakthrough in being able to capture important client
information and better manage client relationships. CRM promises
faster customer service at lower costs, higher customer
satisfaction, better customer retention and ultimately customer
loyalty and more sales. However many companies still believe
that CRM is simply software, or technology and the full benefits
of CRM are not being fully realized by business. CRM is much
more than just a data-mining tool.
CRM is not (just) technology.
CRM is a business strategy!
Your CRM has the potential to and should be your corporate
memory. It can be the archeological record of your business. In
fact, if introduced and applied correctly, one of the most
significant benefits of having and using a CRM in your business
is being able to fully realize and map the true value of your
clients as company assets. Besides the obvious benefits to you
and your business, if ever you chose to sell your business,
having a CRM with all this valuable information tracked and
mapped can be valued and sold for premium.
This trail of information becomes a real asset in itself. A
potential buyer can see your business in real client terms and
understand the value of the client relationships to the
business. Therefore instead of the wisdom and knowledge going
out the door with the previous owner it can be captured and
retained with the new owners to be further cultivated and
developed.
NB: Not all data is good data. You must make sure you have the
right information in place. Too many CRM's are filled with
rubbish data and the wrong stuff making them a liability not an
asset.
As a CEO, you can't make the right decisions if you don't have
the right data/information foundations in place. If you are
going to get the best benefits from a CRM strategy and CRM tools
you need to know how to you are going to align your key business
objectives between your clients, sales people, suppliers and the
rest of your business so every piece of relevant information and
action adds value to the client fulfillment process.
The interconnectedness of clients to your business can begin to
be truly mapped and you will then see how everyone in your
business can affect the retention and growth of your clients,
not just your sales people.
What does an effective CRM system look like?
An effective CRM system should be what your strategy needs and
wants it to be. These days you can get access to open source CRM
software where you can configure what you want in your CRM so
you do not have to be tied to proprietary CRM's that cannot be
customized to your needs. Also CRM's do not have to be
prohibitively expensive either. Many people have put off getting
CRM's in the past due to their high cost and focus on big
corporations. But now good CRM's systems are available for SME's
and home based businesses at very cost effective rates. For
instance we use SugarCRM at Barrett which is an open source
system we can configure to suit our business needs.
This means you need to think carefully about what you want your
CRM system to do and be and who you partner with to make it work
for you.
A good place to start is to:
Know your business strategy and key outcomes you want to achieve
and work backwards from there.
Know your customer, their needs, wants and motives and your path
to market
Appreciate the length, width and depth of the relationships
between the customer and your organization
Understand how you properly manage of all interactions with your
customer
Know what your sales and service people need to do make sales
happen in your business.
Aim to build a business system that manages prospects, clients
and projects.
Look at what data, behaviors, and outcomes you want to track:
Client data, sales person activity data, product sales data,
effectiveness of marketing initiatives including your website,
direct mail/email campaigns, etc.
What behaviors do you want to encourage and reinforce in your
sales and service teams as well as your clients and prospects?
What do you want to measure by way of lead and lag sales
indicators?
How do you want to communicate data internally and externally?
Important point: you do not want you CRM to turn your
salespeople into glorified desk jockeys. We need to make sure
any CRM is easy to use, doesn't take necessary time away from
vital interpersonal sales activities. If you think your CRM can
replace your sales team you will fall short in your efforts. If
your business needs to be in personal contact in some way with
your clients you need your CRM to enhance these relationships
not replace them?
Here are some ways a CRM system can serve you well:
Provide immediate insight into prospect and customer leads
originating from any channel
Provide deep visibility into the sales pipeline and opportunity
details which quickly produce accurate sales forecasts.
Allow for a consistent, informed, and personalized customer
communication approach i.e. automated emails relevant to the
specific customers
Give sales people and everyone in your business access to a
consolidated view of the customer across your organization -
this will allow everyone in the organization to know how they
can help play their part in taking control of every opportunity
and managing it to a successful conclusion
Encourage, enforce and track best-practice sales methodologies
you want in your sales teams i.e. logging of Lead Indicator
Activities such as: # of prospecting calls made, # of client
meetings had; # of real deals in the pipeline, # of sales made:
# of cross sales made, # of sales made with new clients, # of
sales made with existing clients, # of follow customer service
enquiries, # of service calls, etc.
Encourage, enforce and track best-practice service methodologies
you want in your customer service and support teams i.e. logging
of Lead and Lag Indicator Activities such as # of follow
customer service calls made post sales, # of service calls made,
# of customer service calls and complaints received, etc.
Monitor and map effectiveness of have automated sales and
marketing activities that are specific to the customers and
markets
Streamline and automate those customer activities that can go
online i.e. confirmation emails, automatic emails sent out at
periodic intervals for things like renewals for instance
Map work in progress with clients and staff allocated to client
projects
Have the ability to integrate with your website and keep track
of web activity
Support your entire frontline sales and sales lead management
team with the right information they need to quickly and
efficiently fulfill all of their daily requirements.
Deliver knowledge at the point of action
Keeps vital customer data in the business whether the sales
person stays of leaves thus creating a valuable company asset?
Word of caution: Before you even think about integrating Twitter
or FaceBook into your data mix and CRM, which is a hot topic at
the moment, make sure your current data is clean and relevant
because if it is not then you will be piling more garbage on an
already big garbage heap and there's no value in that.
Remember CRM systems are tools that should support, enhance and
grow the customer relationship by giving your sales team and
others in your business access to vital information they can act
upon with purpose and in the easiest manner possible.
A CRM should not be an imposition on anyone; a CRM should be a
part of your vision to continually improving the relationships
with your customer, your sales team and everyone in your
business.
CRM is a strategy and way of life not a piece of technology.
Source: Sue Barrett
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