Posted by : Unknown Sunday, June 30, 2013

1. INTRODUCTION

                                            Generally organisation's motive is to increase the sales of their products there by increasing their revenue and profit. To attain this different organisations follow different strategies. These strategies are of different types. For example, giving discounts, giving warranties, etc., on their products to attract the customers. To increase the sales the organisation has to maintain good relations with their customers. To attain increase in sales the organisation has to maintain some standards on their products.

                            We can't satisfy our customers today merely by the quality of the products or services we offer them. We have to 'know' our customers and 'understand' their needs. Customer Relationship Management (CRM) involves extending our organisation to encompass our customers, and treating them the way we would treat our near and dear ones.

                          In a fiercely competitive market, ensuring customer loyalty is not an easy task. Organisations must work hard to aim at customer satisfaction. But they are yet to fully appreciate the fact that customer loyalty depends as much on cutting-edge technologies like the Internet and the Web, as also on the organisation's attitude towards their customers.
  
2. What Is CRM ?  

          Business must understand the psychology of knowledged and demanding customers today: customers don't care how a company stores its information, or that data from different sources must be combined to give them what they want. They don't even care if they've called the right department or not. All that customers are clear about is that they want excellent and instant service. This basic customer need has given birth to CRM.
3. Why Is CRM ?

                           There are several reasons why CRM has become the most important factor of today's business:

·                     There have been a significant number of changes in the competitive business environment.
·                     Feature proliferation has resulted in an increase in the average number of customer transactions.
·                     Customers are beginning to understand that companies are compiling an enormous amount of data on them with the help of information technology; so they become intolerant when this is not reflected or used optimally in the service doled out to them.
·                     In general, customer dissatisfaction is on the rise as a result of increased expectations.

Here are some interesting facts to know about CRM:

·                     It costs six times the effort to sell to a new customer than to sell to an existing one.
·                     A typical dissatisfied customer will tell eight to ten people about his/her experience.
·                     A company can boost its profits 85 per cent by increasing its annual customer retention by only 5 per cent.
·                     The odds of selling a product to a new customer are 15 per cent, whereas the odds of selling a product to an existing customer are 50 per cent.
·                     70 per cent of customers with complaints will do business with the company again, provided their complaints are handled efficiently and quickly.
·                     More than 90 per cent of existing companies don't have the necessary sales and service integration to support e-commerce. 
4. Goals of a CRM framework

          CRM requires companies to juggle their customers' requirements and demands at the same time. It is defined as integrated sales, marketing             and service strategy that precludes lone showmanship and depends on co-ordinated actions within the company. Thus, CRM is a business framework for envisaging, designing and organising a repertoire of customer-related applications.

The figure summarizes the goals of a CRM framework, and each goal is briefly described below:

Use existing relationships to grow revenue :

          Businesses must create a comprehensive perspective of the customer to maximise his or her relationship with the company through up-selling and cross-selling; and enhance profitability by identifying, attracting and retaining the 'best customers'.

Use integrated information for service excellence :

          Customer information must be used for better servicing by saving time and easing a customer's frustration: for example, a customer should not have to repeat the same information while dealing with various departments in an organisation. The challenge lies in surprising your customers and showing them how well you know them by creating complete and well-organised databases, and personalising services offered to them.

Introduce repeatable processes and procedures for sales:

            With the proliferation of customer contact channels, many more employees are involved in sales than in the past. In order to enjoy continued success, companies must improve consistency in account management and sales.

Create new value and instil loyalty:

            Work towards becoming a company that has the ability to respond to needs and accommodate request, a company well-deserving of customer patronage, a company to which customers will remain loyal--this can be the key differentiator, USP or competitive advantage of your business.

Implement a more proactive strategy:

          Make an attempt to use a customer-focused business solution that works across the entire enterprise, instead of just gathering data and eventually using it. Eliminate issues before thy reach the crisis stage, and move from reactive data collection to proactive consumer relations that resolve problems on the first call.
5. A CRI Product Architecture

          One of the most universally applicable for text mining products is the IBM Customer Relationship Intelligence product. It was designed to help companies better understand their customer's needs and opinions about the company. This information allows an organisation to retain and grow their customer base by developing a prompt and clearer understanding of:

·                     Customer needs.
·                     Customer issues.
·                     Industry and market trends.
·                     Product issues, complaints and acceptance.
·                     Competitive positioning.

The figure  depicts the overall CRI (Customer Relationship Intelligence) process. The steps involved are briefly defined below:

Identification and Collection of Input

            The first step in any data mining process is the identification and collection of different prospective inputs. Each company can assemble its own list of sources to be used as inputs. These usually include: the textual results of customer surveys, focus groups (including the groups' participants and the observations of the people running the group), letters sent in by consumers, e-mails received (either unsolicited or in response to specific offers or invitations), telephone calls in the form of  transcripts or notes taken by phone operators.

Input Standardization

          After the sources of information have been identified, the next step is to make them analysable. The work required to standardise these diverse input sources will vary depending on the method of collection.

Telephone call responses can be collected by voice recognition units (i.e. systems that listen to voices and create transcripts of what is said) and/or interactive touch-tone systems (users input preferences by pressing different keys). Letters and surveys can be read into the system by optical character recognition systems, or through the translation and transcription of that input into textual form, e-Mail can usually be copied right into the system. In all these cases, the different forms of input need to be converted into a standard textual format, which the CRI product will be able to read and interpret.

6. Analysis

          After the input has been collected and standardised, the CRI product is ready to run. Analysis is accomplished through the following steps:

Preparation:
          The input text is prepared, and core customer data is coded (standardised and converted into the correct codes). In this step, the key database identifiers are standardised, such as a customer's age, sex, income level, date of input collection and so on.

Conversion of textual information into coded data (linguistic accessing):

          As part of this step, the textual information is read into the system. The system is then able to interpret and translate it into the predetermined codes earlier set by it. In other words, if you are checking for whether the customer likes or dislikes something, you can set the system to look for positive or negative statements, and then have those coded into a 1 for positive and 0 for negative feedback from the customer. This is accomplished by using the following four capabilities.

          Tagger--A facility that reviews the input and tags recognisable text, looking for things like the company name or product name.

          Expressions--A facility that looks for known expressions and assigns the related code. For example, the expression "I really like" will be coded as a positive response.

          Terminology--A facility that looks for a known terminology and assigns the related code, looking for special terms or words that are specific to the industry or product.

          Semantics--A facility that uses semantic analysis of text, referring to the meanings that words and combinations of words are meant to communicate.

Feature selection:

          After the initial analysis of the input has been performed, users are allowed to select those features that they wish to have employed through the rest of the processing.

Clustering:

          The now codified, but still raw, data is then subjected to several forms of cluster analysis, including:
·                     Simple clustering of 0 and 1 values.
·                     Standard statistical frequency clustering.
·                    Assignment of cluster values to each entry within the system.

Code storage:

          The corresponding collections of customer identification information and the codes derived are stored within a customer characteristic database.

Report generation:

          Finally, the users are able to examine and analyse the feedback by simply running informational reports out of the codified database. The system can produce output for HTML, ASCII, Lotus Notes or other reporting formats. The report output depends only on the user's ability to read and analyse relational data, since the codes and customer information have been stored within.

6. Towards customer-centric CRM architecture

          To evaluate your business's position with reference to Web-deployed CRM, ask yourself the following questions:

·                     Are your applications designed simply to automate existing departmental processes? (Business process re-engineering)
·                     Are the applications capable of identifying and targeting the best customers? (Profitability analysis)
·                     Are the applications capable of realtime customisations/personalisation of products/services based on detailed knowledge of customer's wants, needs and buying habits? (Customer need analysis)
·                     Do the applications keep track of the customer contacts? (Contact management)
·                     Are the applications capable of consistent user experience across all contact points? (Uniform service)

The figure shows the components of an integrated Web-based solution of CRM. The core processes in CRM are:

·                     Cross selling and up-selling.
·                     Direct marketing and fulfillment.
·                     Customer service and support.
·                     Field service and operations.
·                     Retention management.

Each one of these is briefly described below:
Cross selling and up-selling

·                     Cross- selling: suggesting complementary products.
·                     Up-selling: suggesting a similar product with better quality.
·                     Capability to qualify prospects, track contacts and refer them to appropriate times.
·                     Scheduling sales calls, keeping detailed records about sales activities, and tracking customer order status.
·                     Identifying customer life path needs.

Direct marketing and fulfillment

·                     Selling well and delivering fast.
·                     Influencing customers to bring them closer to the purchase decision.
·                     Tracking customer requests for information received via the Web.
·                     Campaign management.
·                     Managing responses, qualifying leads and arranging event logistics.
·                     Providing information quickly and easily.

Customer service and support

·                     Service request management.
·                     Account management.
·                     Contact and activity management.
·                     Automating the helpdesk function.
·                     Verifying customer status (what level of support are they entitled to).
·                     Monitoring service level agreements.
·                     Incident management.

Field service operations

·                     Hands-on approach to instil faith.
·                     Hands-on extension of external customer support.
·                     Knowing when the problem cannot be solved on the phone/remotely.
·                     Scheduling and dispatching troubleshooting teams to the customer.
·                     Managing inventory and logistics.


Retention management

·                     Spending valuable time judiciously on customers who count.
·                     Differentiating between customers, based on account and transaction histories.
·                     Effective use of DSS technology.
·                     Gathering customer information of high granularity.
7. Key success factors for CRM through the Web

            In preparing for the success of CRM via the Web, organisations will have to worry about questions like: How will the emergence of Internet-delivered customer service affect traditional communication channels of support? Will online customer service really be cheaper than traditional support channels?

            In addition, the management needs to find answers to these questions:

·                     How do we listen to our customers? Are systems in place to do this effectively?
·                     How can our call centre help to build customer loyalty? When our customers call us, do they get courteous service? Are they satisfied when the call is over?
·                     Are we creating an integrated service experience?
·                     Have we thought from the customer's point of view, while creating a service experience?
·                     Does our infrastructure allow the creation of new value propositions?

Finally, the management’s road map to building Web-based CRM architecture involves:

·                     Defining a vision for integrated CRM  -- a holistic view of the customer.
·                     Understanding the customer -- "they are smart."
·                     Developing a business case -- avoid using inferior technology as an excuse for inaction.
·                     Evaluating current readiness -- do DRP/BCP determine your position with respect to competition.
·                     Establishing CRM strategy and specific objectives in line with overall company strategy.
·                     Evaluating current applications for their ability to meet CRM objectives -- look at the applications from an integrated viewpoint.
·                     Taking the consideration, not the product or account view.
·                     Identifying and targeting quick wins -- set aggressive but realistic milestones.
·                     Putting the ownership of the end-to-end project in the hands of a single manager.
·                     Implementation in stages (phase approach) -- building CRM infrastructure isn't easy.
·                     Being sure of creating a closed loop CRM environment.
·                     Making sure that each CRM application is backed by concrete measurement goals.

7. Conclusion

In summation, in order to attract and retain customers, companies must not only anticipate and satisfy customer needs, but also delight and surprise them. CRM is a combination of business processes and IT, using which a company seeks to understand its customers from a multi-faced perspective and answer questions like:

WHO are they?
WHAT do they DO?
WHAT do they like?


            Research has recognised that effective management of customer relationships is the basic source of competitive differentiation. CRM, therefore, promises to remain one of the highest growth areas in the software market well into the next century.

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