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Customer Relationship Management Chapter 15 Objectives After reading Chapter 15, you will be able to: Define customer relationship management (CRM) and identify the major benefits to e-marketers. Outline the three pillars of CRM for e-marketing. Describe social CRM and how it relates to traditional CRM. Discuss the nine major components needed for effective and efficient CRM in e-marketing. Highlight some of the company-side and client-side tools that e-marketers use to enhance their CRM processes. Differentiate CRM metrics by customer life cycle stage. ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-2 The Best Buy Story Best Buy is the 11th largest U.S. e-commerce retailer with 1B online visitors and a multichannel strategy. In 2008 Best Buy initiated the Best Buy Community online. 600,000 customers a quarter post 20,000 messages and view over 22 million pages of content. The community has yielded $5M in benefits to Best Buy. Best Buy also uses Twitter to engage customers (@twelpforce). http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RbkS8AnqNGU ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-3 Customer Relationship Management http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IdmtJIlkHzw ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-4 Building Customer Relationships, 1:1 According to Harvard Business Review authors Jones and Sasser, “Increased customer loyalty is the single most important driver of long-term performance.” Many experts believe that relationship capital is the most important asset a firm can have. This approach represents a major shift in marketing practice From mass marketing and focus on acquiring lots of new customers To individualized marketing and retaining and building more business from loyal, high-value customers 1:1 Consumer Services Market Internet technologies facilitate relationship marketing One key is identifying key Internet tools ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-5 Relationship Marketing Defined Marketers named customer focus relationship marketing (also 1:1 marketing) Relationship Marketing is about “establishing, maintaining, enhancing, and commercializing customer relationships through promise fulfillment” (Gronroos, 1990) Promise Fulfillment is making offers in their marketing communications programs; customer expectations would be met through actual brand experiences. A firm using relationship marketing focuses more on wallet share than on market share. Wallet share is the amount of sales a firm can generate from one customer over time, rather than on market share.15-6 ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL From Mass Marketing to Relationship Marketing ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-7 Stakeholders Relationship marketing can be used to build mutually supportive bonds with stakeholders other than consumers, such as employees and suppliers. The four stakeholders most affected by Internet technologies are: Employees. It is difficult for a firm to persuade buyers when employees are not happy Employees who need training and access to data and systems used for relationship management. Many relationship management programs fail due to lack of employee training and commitment 15-8 ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL Stakeholders, Cont. Business customers in the supply chain. With partners relationship management (PRM), firms build and maintain relationships with those companies upstream and downstream Both business customers and suppliers are extremely important Lateral partners. Such as other businesses, not-for-profit organizations, or governments join with the firm for some common goals but not for transactions with other. Consumers. Consumers who are end users of products & services. Marketers must differentiate between business customers and final customers ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-9 3 Pillars of Relationship Marketing Relationship Marketing is more than promising fulfillment Two-way communication is vital to the success of this relationship. Experts believe that relationship marketing has three pillars that support customer relationships with the company’s products and services: Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Customer experience management (CEM) Customer collaboration management (CCM) ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-10 3 Pillars of Relationship Marketing, Cont. Customer Relationship Management (CRM, 1.0) Customer experience management (CEM) “The process of targeting, acquiring, transacting, servicing, retaining and building long-term relationships with customer” “Represents the discipline, methodology and / or process used to comprehensively manage a customer’s cross-channel exposure, interaction and transaction with a company, product, brand or service” Customer collaboration management (CCM) Also called CRM 2.0 and Social CRM Social CRM is a strategy to engage customer in relationshipbuilding conversation, often through social media. Designed to make the company and the customer collaborate to create mutually beneficial results ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-11 3 Pillars of Relationship Marketing ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-12 Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Customer experience management (CEM) Customer collaboration management (CCM) / CRM 2.0 / Social CRM Definition • The process of targeting… • Discipline, methodology and / or process... • Social CRM is a philosophy and a business strategy Focus • Internal processes • More on the customer • Designed to make the to maximize customer expectations and company and the value in the long term touch point customer satisfaction / collaborate to create dissatisfaction mutually beneficial (customer value) results. Requires • • • • • Controlled by • Marketer Requires much data Information Customer insight Knowledge Requires relationship building skills • Experience • Collaboration • Content, people & interaction • Marketer • Customers 15-13 Customer Relationship Management CRM is the process of targeting, acquiring, transacting, servicing, retaining, and building longterm relationships with customers. CRM is a philosophy, strategy, and process (not just software) that includes all 3 pillars. Firms now focus on the idea that if they do not keep their customers happy, someone else will. ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-14 Maximizing Customers Through Retention Customer acquisition Customer retention ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-15 Social Customer Relationship Management (CRM 2.0) Social CRM (CRM 2.0) holds all the principles of CRM 1.0, it adds social media technology and customer collaborative conversations to the process. Social CRM means that companies must interact with customers on their terms, and not based solely on the company’s data, strategy and desires. Social CRM extends CRM 1.0, but does not replace it. Adds benefits such as: Monitoring and improving reputations. Learning more about customer needs, wants, and problems. Improving target market selection and revenue potential. Gathering data for market research on products & customer service. Decreasing customer service costs. Identifying new revenue opportunities. The explosion of social media has marketers putting “social” in front of CRM ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-16 CRM Benefits Increased revenue from better prospecting Increased wallet share with current customers Most companies use customer data and mathematical models to determine who is a “good” customer Can define prospects that are most likely to respond to promotional offers Current customers will spend more of their disposable income with the firm Brand loyalty is a must to increase wallet share Retaining customers for longer periods of time It is five to seven times more expensive to attract new customers than to retain a current customer. Money would be better spent marketing to current customer due to the 80/20 principle ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-17 CRM Benefits, Cont. More customer leads to more sales Word-of-mouth communication among customers is the heart of CRM Cost Saving US businesses saved $155 billion between 1998 and 2000 by using CRM A 5% increase in customer retention translates to 25% to 125% profitability in the B2B market ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-18 Retention vs. Acquisition Retention is less costly than acquisition because: Reduced promotion costs both for advertising and discounts. Current customers are likely to have higher response rates to promotional efforts . Sales teams can be more effective since they should know their individual customers well. CRM makes sense because they build loyal, experienced customers. They know who to call in the firm when they have questions. This means loyal customers should cost less to service. They post positive reviews online. ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-19 CRM Evolves Using Social Media Social CRM (2.0) Customers CRM 1.0 Company employee MEDIA Phone E-mail In-person SMS Website Paper mail Customer Traditional media Company employees ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL MEDIA Blogs Social networks Microblogs Photo sharing Forums Wikis Reviews/Ratings Interactive Web sites Other social media Live chat All CRM 1.0 media 15-20 9 Building Blocks for Successful CRM Businesses understand that CRM is necessary to be successful, but nearly all firms are currently losing money on the investment of CRM software. Businesses want to use CRM technology, but want to know how to use it effectively and efficiently. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. CRM vision CRM strategy Customer experience management (CEM) Customer collaboration marketing (CCM) Organizational collaboration CRM processes CRM information CRM technology CRM metrics ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-21 9 Building Blocks for Successful CRM ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-22 1. CRM Vision Management must start with a vision that fits the company culture and makes sense for the firm’s brands and value propositions. To be successful, the CRM vision must start at the top and filter throughout the company to keep the firm customer focused. One key aspect of CRM vision is how to guard customer privacy. The benefits of using customer data must be balanced by the need to satisfy customers and not anger them. TRUSTe is a non-profit, independent organization helps web users build and earn trust in companies. TRUSTe: Provides its seal and logo to any website meeting its privacy philosophies. Will not sponsor or recommend an organization unless specific requirements are met Offers security to online customers ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-23 TRUSTe Builds User Trust ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-24 2. CRM Strategy E-marketers must determine their objectives and strategies for initiating CRM programs and buying technology or setting up social media accounts. Relationship Intensity Many CRM goals refer to customer loyalty (e.g. Harley Davidson and Apple computers) An important CRM strategy is to move to move customers up the relationship intensity pyramid to advocacy (awareness, identity, connection, community, and advocacy, Ch. 9). Another CRM goal involves building bonds with customers on 3 levels: financial, social and structural. ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-25 2. CRM Strategy, Cont. 1. Relationship Levels Marketers build a financial bond 2. Marketers stimulate social interaction with customers 3. Ongoing personal communication Aggressive pricing strategies Customers are more loyal due to the social bond Can also use community building Marketing relies on creating structural solutions to customer problems Use pricing strategies Price promotions are easily imitated (the lowest level) Firms add value by making structural changes that facilitate the relationship Customizing Web pages Social networks combine levels two and three, they create community and structural bonds (e.g. LinkedIn, Facebook). ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-26 3. Customer Experience Management Most customers want brand loyalty as much as the firms want customer loyalty According to Sheth (1995), the basic principle of CRM is choice reduction. That, consumers want to patronize the same website Many consumers are “loyalty prone,” and will stick with the right product as long as its promises are fulfilled. Communication preferences vary by individual Customer Service Fills every stage of customer acquisition, retention, and development practices. Most often occurs post purchase E-mail and web self-service are emerging trends Synchronous and asynchronous technologies can provide automated and human communications that solve customer problems. ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-27 Relationships Over Multiple Communication Channels ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-28 4. Customer Collaboration Management / Marketing (CCM) CCM recognizes the change from a transaction focus online to an interaction focus A learning relationship between a customer and an enterprise gets smarter and smarter with each individual interaction CCM is content, people, and interaction driven, while traditional CRM is data-driven. CCM is about managing customer relationships and experiences by creating and monitoring online content Listening the online chatter using technology such as Google Alerts and social media dashboards is more important than talking when a company is selling. ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-29 5. Organizational Collaboration Marketers must collaborate both internally and externally Internally Cross-functional teams focus on customer satisfaction to create a CRM culture Creates a better company culture as well Externally Companies join forces to create results that would reach beyond what each could have done separately. Can be in distribution channel or non-transactional type collaboration ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-30 5. Organizational Collaboration, Cont. CRM-SCM Integration CRM refers to front-end operations (e.g. emails, telephone calls…) SCM refers to back-end operations (e.g. inventory & payment) Working to create satisfying experiences at all customer levels Can be challenging due to different employees and computer systems Usually includes the entire supply chain Goal is to seamlessly link all involved Extranet Two or more intranet networks joined for the purpose of sharing information (allow CRM-SCM integration). Proprietary to the organizations involved. ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-31 CRM-SCM Integration ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-32 6. CRM Processes ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-33 6. CRM Processes, Cont. Firms monitor and attract customers, both online and offline and they progress through the stages of customer care life cycle (target, acquire, transact, service, retain, and grow). A customer churn cycle, that works both for retention and for increasing customer value: Hear Now or Gone Tomorrow 2. Build a Dynamic Customer Profile 3. Sales Force Automation (SFA) 4. Marketing Automation 1. ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-34 6. CRM Processes, A customer churn cycle: Cont. 1. Hear Now or Gone Tomorrow Describes the importance of listening to customers and gathering interaction data across all marketing channels Customization occurs when companies tailor their marketing mixes to meet the needs of small target segments even to the individual level, using electronic marketing tools. Personalization involves ways that marketers individualize in an impersonal computer networked environment 2. Build a Dynamic Customer Profile Gather data to profile each customer as reflected by his interactions with a brand at many touch points ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-35 6. CRM Processes, A customer churn cycle, Cont. 3. Sales Force Automation (SFA) this means “increasing your sales, not the sales force” Allows salespeople to build, maintain, and access customer records; manage leads and accounts; manage schedules; and more. Up-to-date customer and prospect records help build customer relationships. Salesforce.com also has tools to monitor brand conversations in the social media. ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-36 6. CRM Processes, A customer churn cycle, Cont. 4. Marketing Automation Marketing automation activities that aid marketers in effective targeting, efficient marketing communication and real-time monitoring of customer and market trends. SAS, a business intelligence and predictive analytics software provider, offers automation benefits to aid CRM, such as: An integrated customer view Customer life cycle management Customer targeting and analytics ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-37 Building a Dynamic Customer Profile ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-38 7. CRM Information The more information a firm has, the better value (more accurate, timely, and relevant information) it can provide to each current or prospective customer. Firms gain much information by tracking behavior electronically. Bar code scanner data. Software that tracks online movement, time spent per page, and purchase behavior. Databases can provide a 360° customer view across various channels. ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-39 7. CRM Information, Cont. Some factors in facilitating customer relationship management are: 1. Target the right customers 2. Own the customer’s total experience 3. Streamline business processes that impact the customer 4. Provide a 360 degree view of the customer relationship 5. Let customers help themselves 6. Help customers do their jobs 7. Deliver personalized service 8. Foster community ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-40 8. CRM Technology Technology enhances the CRM process and can be categorized into Company-Side Tools (push information to users) and Client-side Tools (pull information from customers) Cookies, Web site logs, bar code scanners, social media, and other tools help to collect information about consumers and their behaviors. ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-41 Company-Side Tools (push) 1. Cookies: allow ad-server companies to track user activities and shopping baskets 2. Web Analytics : files to assist companies in tracking customer’s habits and preferences. Firms use software to help analyze customer behavior to customize the web experience 3. Data Mining: firms use software to find patterns of interest 4. Behavioral Targeting: using customer profiling to offer instant promotions or coupons based on customer behaviors ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-42 Company-Side Tools (push), Cont. 5. Collaborative Filtering : software that gathers the recommendations of an entire group of people and presents the results to like-minded customers 6. Outgoing E-Mail: E-mail is used to communicate with individuals in an effort to increase their purchases, satisfaction, and loyalty 7. Social Media: Companies build community and learn about customers and products through blogs, social networks, and bulletin board/newsgroup e-mail postings all over the Web 8. iPOS Terminals: credit card technology used to create instant sales promotions and coupons ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-43 Client-Side Tools (pull) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Agents: shopping agents and search engines match user input to databases and return customized information Individualized Web Portals: customizable websites – My Yahoo! or My AOL Wireless Data Services: most wireless users only want text due to slow connection speeds and small displays Web Forms: can be used for site registrations or survey research Fax-on-Demand: for documents that are not in digital format 15-44 ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL Client-Side Tools (pull), Cont. 6. Incoming E-Mail: post transaction customer service. Companies are careful to adequately staff email addresses, since customers expect a response in a reasonable amount of time 7. RSS Feeds: Really simple syndication (RSS) allows users to subscribe to blogs and Web sites 8. CRM Software: Technology and software are what grease the CRM wheel, allowing companies to gather, interpret, and use masses of customer and prospect data 15-45 ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 9. CRM Metrics E-marketers use numerous metrics to assess the Internet’s value in delivering CRM performance. Experts believe the three most important metrics to CRM are customer retention rates, ROI, and customer lift (increased response or transaction rates). ROI Cost savings Revenues Customer satisfaction Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) LTV is the expected profit that you will realize from sales to a particular customer in the future ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-46 10 RULES FOR CRM SUCCESS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Recognize the customer’s role. Build a business case. Gain buy-in from end users to executives. Make every contact count. Drive sales effectiveness. Measure and manage the marketing return. Leverage the loyalty effect. Choose the right tools and approach. Build the team. Seek outside help. ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-47 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Printed in the United States of America. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall ©2014 PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. PUBLISHING AS PRENTICE HALL 15-48