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
Customers vote every day, implicitly through how they
prioritize, how they spend their time, and where they engage in
transactions (or not). So instead of asking your customers and
prospects for an explicit vote, your CRM system needs to listen
much more carefully to discern when they have made a choice, and
decode what it means about their level of satisfaction.
This means you need to have a much more systematic way of
tracking and managing customer/prospect responses across several
departments. The core technologies you'll need: a CRM system, a
marketing automation system, a Web content-management system
with good Web analytics, integration with your ERP and customer
support system, and probably a data warehouse. But as I wrote
previously, all of these systems will be rendered nearly
powerless if you don't have a consistent way to identify your
users and prospects. It's not good enough to tally by segment:
your systems need to attribute the series of choices and votes
to individuals.
People won't register or give you any good identifier
information unless they think you are halfway relevant to their
interests and believe you are trustworthy. Classically, the best
way to get user identification info is to start very small, and
ask only for the prospect's e-mail address in exchange for
something of value.
Initially, ask the user to opt-in only to a relevant newsletter
— do not ask for a blanket opt-in. Way too many people will
opt-out as they're already inundated with junk mail; and because
in the low-trust world we live in, people will too often just
say no.
Every time a customer or prospect returns to your site to look
up a price or download something, they are voting again. In
exchange for any detailed request, ask them for one more piece
of information, such as state and country. Each time they
return, this progressive registration technique gets them to
gradually give you a ton of up-to-date information, including
their preferences regarding newsletter subscriptions, product
interest, etc. Of course, from day one you must respect their
privacy.
Much of the mechanics for all this can be handled with a good
CRM system integrated with a solid marketing automation system.
In addition to the explicit profile-based scoring that sales
typically asks for (e.g., "give me just Director and VP job
titles"), add the implicit behavioral-based scores (e.g., "add
ten points when they watch this video"). But for real voting,
summary scores aren't enough. Record the timing and details of
each customer and prospect interaction, so you have the
time-series detail you need to analyze the voting patterns.
Once a lead is handed off to the sales team, you've got to deal
with a new layer of the voting problem. Sales rep interactions
tend to be much more personal, so they are poorly documented.
Make sure that every customer e-mail conversation is captured in
the CRM system (via "auto attach" features like
Email2Salesforce), and integrate your phone system so that every
dial from the desk phone is instrumented for customer ID, time /
date, and length of call. Of course, you can't capture
everything automatically (some reps make half their calls from
their mobile phone), so make sure there are incentives for the
reps to at least record the outcome of every conversation
(because that's where the "vote" is).
Once the deal is in negotiation, there's even more opportunity
for collecting and understanding how the customer is voting:
• During the closing part of the sales cycle, every quote and
contract version is a voting occasion. Record the blow-by-blow
detail of these negotiation cycles in the CRM system as a series
of documents.
• Once the deal is signed, record when the customer actually
installs or starts using your product. Look at the logs of your
post-sales support people or your license fulfillment server for
indications of activation.
• Measure how long is it before their first support call. Of
course, track all subsequent support and call-center
interactions, and use a brief customer satisfaction survey at
the close of every case.
• How long is it before customers register for training or
attend a training Webinar?
• If your product has a call-home feature, have it send
anonymous statistics to your CRM system. You'll need to get the
customer's authorization for this, but everyone in high tech
understands that support engineers need baseline statistics to
provide better product support.
• If you have a retail channel, provide ways for the customers
to provide you input in real time. If you're flush with budget,
you can make an iPhone app for that.
• Set up a voting system in your customer forums and portals.
The first step is to set up a simple survey system to ask users
questions (offering a small prize for the best response of the
week). The second step is a product or service suggestions area
(such as Salesforce.com's Ideas feature) to get users to submit
and vote on ideas.
Given the number of prospects and voting occasions, it's pretty
easy to see the nightmare of trying to analyze every vote
sequence. So don't do that. Instead, collect the votes
continuously, summarize the trends regularly, but count the
votes in detail only when you need to answer a specific
question. This means you need to have your data warehouse set up
for easy ad-hoc queries, typically using a business intelligence
tool.
Think this sounds expensive? It can be. But think about what
profit is: Customer lifetime value minus cost of customer
acquisition. By listening to customer votes, you encourage more
loyalty (increasing customer lifetime value) and improve
marketing and sales effectiveness (lowering the cost of customer
acquisition). That's a formula even your CFO could love.
Source: David Taber
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