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Sales & Marketing ― What’s CRM got to do With it? Lane Michel, Partner Peppers & Rogers Group [email protected] CRM Can Enable Greater Alignment Across all Customer Touch Points Strategy alignment, not just technology Guiding principles (1to1, IDIC) New tools and techniques that bring Sales & Marketing together STRATEGY ALIGNMENT, NOT JUST TECHNOLOGY 40,000 customers. What if only 80 matter? CRM in Four Words… Treat Different Customers Differently Ask Yourself: What is your firm’s most unique, non-replicable asset? Products? Brand equity? Sales staff? Merchandise? Stores? Databases and contact centers? Marketing programs? … Or customers? The “Learning Relationship” Save me time Customer tells you what he wants FEEDBACK You tailor your product, service or elements associated with it The more effort the customer invests, the greater their stake in making relationship work Now the customer finds it more convenient to remain loyal, rather than re-teach a competitor Creating a Competitive Advantage “We have only two sources of competitive advantage: 1)the ability to learn more about our customers faster than the competition 2)the ability to turn that learning into action faster than the competition.” — Jack Welch, CEO of GE, outlining his competitive strategy for the 21st Century Technology & Tools Enable CRM, but… CRM tools are only: • as smart and capable as your workforce • get results when your business processes change to harness customer insight CRM can’t be installed. It must be adopted. The Four Steps of 1to1 Marketing Identify customers, individually and addressably Differentiate them, by value and needs Interact with them more costefficiently and effectively Customize information, messages, product and service offering based on learning GUIDING PRINCIPLES Cascading Goals: More profitable growth Greater share of customer Differentiated treatment/experience Analytics on value/needs Customer knowledge Management Strategy for Building Customer Knowledge Management Intelligence Layer: Customer needs, feedback, unstructured information fields 360º View Achieved Over Time Associative Layer: Detailed transactions, complex associations, analytics, predictive values Transactional Layer: Basic transaction and association information direct and indirect Foundational Layer: Tools, technology, business rules, basic customer identification and address information to build and maintain profiles Start with Core Customer Profile NEW TOOLS AND TECHNIQUES THAT BRING SALES & MARKETING TOGETHER • Customer Value and Needs Analysis • Customer Knowledge Management • 1to1 Marketing Discipline & Pilots Customer Metrics Required Capabilities for Marketing 10 High-Value Marketing Processes for 21st Century •Marketing operations management •Marketing visibility, accountability and value measurement •Customer and market insight generation •Customer-value-based segmentation •Portfolio and capacity-based resource allocation •Product development and introduction •Customer-needs-based trigger identification •Orchestrated customization– integrated marketing activities •Orchestrated cross-channel dialogues •Customer-value-based network management Source: Gartner Group Insight Analysis Customer Data Response Action Managed Analytics Overview 1. Gather Customer Data (both internal and external) 2. Derive Customer Insight Analysis • Contact Information • Preferences • Purchasing Behavior • Customer Interaction • Demographic and firmographic Reporting & Feedback Decisionsupport • Customer Needs • Customer Defection • What products customer will need next - portfolio analysis • Look-a-like • Positive and negative triggers Action 4. Evaluate Response w Increase in customer satisfaction w Incremental customer contribution w Increased customer interaction (e.g., attendance at events) w Decrease in defection rate w Increase in wallet share w Increase in customer loyalty 3. Suggest Proactive Action • Align Marketing & Sales resources to customers based on opportunity • Develop customized marketing collateral based on customer need • Offer customized content on Internet based on customer needs • Design events around, and send invitations to, most valuable customers and look-a-likes • Feed customer insights to product development Customer Value Tiers Use 1to1 to keep these customers Actual Value …and grow these. Migrate these (potential value unknown) Potential Value Costs Spend no resources marketing to these MVCs MGCs “Migrators” BZs Customer “Needs” Groups in Action The trick is to find customers who “look like” each other in terms of their needs Goal is to organize strategy and treatments around portfolios of customers with similar needs Identifying needs-based groups among customers is a first step to differentiating the experiences of individual customers Defining and Meeting Enhanced Needs Increases Your Relevance Beyond demographics • Gender, age, geography, income, company size, title Beyond attitudes • • I am status conscious and want to use only the best products My company uses technology as a competitive advantage and we are on the leading edge Needs are unique and behavior-driven • • I am an “information-junkie” and a “techie.” I want you to provide me with as much relevant information about personal electronics as you can. I am a “frequent traveler” that spends most of my time driving from one city to the next. I have very little time – how can you save me time? Basic Addressable Client Needs (B2B example) Vertical industry Business event or trigger Advancement in life cycle Stated unmet need (feedback) Relationship growth, issue Common customer need Needs are Classified in Different Ways Needs common to a large majority of customers Differentiating Needs Shared Needs Group Needs Group Needs Needs shared across two or more needs groups Needs shared by customers in one needs group Needs specific to one individual customer Individual Needs Increasingly Relevant and Impactful Interactions Deepening Individual Customer Relationship Common Needs …Serves as the Foundation for a Customized Interaction Strategy Mass Marketing Common Needs Shared Needs Shared Needs Shared Needs Shared Needs Needs Group A Needs Group B Needs Group C Targeted marketing messages Shared Needs Needs Group D Needs Group E Customized, Templated Offerings Individualized Learning Relationships 1to1 Marketing Definition Discipline for the enterprise Engages the right INDIVIDUAL CUSTOMER At the right TIME With the right MESSAGE In the right WAY Enabled through CRM tools To drive more profitable revenue growth Build a 1to1 Marketing Pilot Define ITSM Interaction Strategy Step 1. ITSM Messaging Review • Review Current State messaging materials, contacts, vehicles • Identify gaps in marketing and sales materials and messages • Account Selection Step 2. INSIGHT • Insight interviews with Marketing and Sales Review of all Account related external sources such as, Annual Report, Hoovers, Audio Broadcasts, etc. Identification of all Key contacts and types of interaction • Delivery of INSIGHT document detailing all relevant and key insights from all sources Step 3. FOCUS Step 4. PLAN Review INSIGHT document with Marketing Review FOCUS document with Marketing Review INSIGHT document with Sales Review FOCUS document with Sales Begin building 1to1 plan by determining who to focus on and what activities need to surround that interaction Delivery of FOCUS document detailing how marketing can Focus their efforts to support Sales at the selected accounts • Detail out how to best deliver what messages to achieve the focus activities for each individual • Delivery of the PLAN document which lays out what has to happen to deliver the right message at the right time in the right way Step 5. Execute Plan • Coordinate activities and timing with Sales • Ensure baseline measures are in place • Initiate interactions defined in PLAN • Monitor responses, feedback • Refine communications materials as needed based on feedback and responses. SF TEMPLATING & PLAYBOOKS Sales Playbook Description Used by sales in preparation for customer discussions • Provides clearer view of customer experience in the context of understanding addressable needs groups in the market • Delivers scripts and “golden questions” to uncover customer needs in context of your ability to meet those needs • Packages relevant marketing treatments that include optimized product & service offerings for grouping of customer needs Addressable Needs are Grouped in Different Ways to Make you More Relevant to Customer Common Needs Increasingly Relevant and Impactful Interactions Deepening Individual Customer Relationship Needs common to a large majority of customers Differentiating Needs Shared Needs Group Needs Group Needs Needs shared across needs groups Needs shared by customers are grouped Needs specific to one individual customer Individual Needs • • • • • Business event or trigger Advancement in life cycle Stated unmet need (feedback) Relationship growth, issue Common customer need Delivering the Sales Playbook Segment & vertical plan Customer needs research Sample account plans Define addressable Needs Groups by segment Product / Service Offering Develop Golden Questions & Scripts to fit customers to defined Needs Groups Align product/service offer to meet customer defined need Package marketing collateral for selected needs groups Produce Sales Playbook What can a 1to1 approach to CRM do for my sales & marketing teams? 1. Better position my company with our customers 2. Replace 1-to-many marketing efforts 3. Drive additional sales 4. Enable greater alignment between Sales and Marketing 5. Doesn't require any more customer information than we have today 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 1 2 3 4 5 Case Study: Bentley Systems Illustration of using customer needs group to create templated offerings for Sales Force Effectiveness Bentley Systems Inc. Background U.S. leading provider of software for “enterprise engineering modeling” • • • Annual revenues of $175 million 300,000 professional users Software manages architecture from design all the way through a structure’s life cycle Software shares info, automates paper trail • • Core product is MicroStation CAD program runs on PC Shanghai World Financial Center One of Bentley’s Business Challenges High market share (second in industry, saturated market) Infrequent sales spikes Revenue Historical client sales But not only did this product focus make year-toyear growth projections uncertain ... it created numerous pitfalls • • • • Time Competitors could imitate MicroStation, eroding margins If market slows, Bentley must either cut margins or costs If market grows, competitors may create better product Independent resellers create unstable sales environment Bentley’s Business Solution – Leverage What They Know About Their Customers Broaden product line to meet more client needs over time Focus on end-user needs instead of market development • • • Host industry user conferences Defined and meet enhanced needs through better information and data gathering, “Drip Irrigation” through “Golden Questions” New products and services to increase revenue from each client Revenue Create sources of revenue by meeting more of each client’s needs Time Sales Playbook Supported Aligning Sales & Marketing for Customer Growth Effectively shifted focus from market share development to customer share development • Integrated marketing in front of and behind sales and channel partners Balance between corporate and sales-level customer relationships Marketing delivers value to the customer-facing sales force by helping identify needs and interactions with most valuable customers Benefits are three-fold: • A culture of trust and support that further enables the whole company to develop deep customer relationships • More effective prioritization of sales efforts • Improved efficiency and relevance of marketing efforts Result: Alignment of sales and marketing efforts resulted in doubling of revenue and significant decrease in costs Templating the “Sales” Process Bentley initially devised 11 “account use scenarios” Needs Group 7 Architects focus on design Needs Group 1 aesthetics, price, comfort... Needs Architectural-engineering firms build hospitals, factories... Group 2 Needs Group 3 Needs Group 4 Engineers put a pipeline in the desert or a bridge across a river... Needs Group 8 Needs Group 9 Needs Group 10 Needs Needs Group Group 5 11 Needs Group 6 Using the Templates… Account scenarios derived from grouping of needs without looking at past transactions Bentley mapped 85 products and related services to the 11 account scenarios • Descriptions of environment, customer needs and objectives of the customers within the scenario Account Manager and Marketing team quickly assembled details on all appropriate product and service “modules” mapped into templates When a customer or prospect profiles into a scenario, sales and marketing respond together with the matching template Bentley’s Results Bentley’s new revenue model • By moving MVCs to direct sales using sales templates and aligning Marketing behind Sales • Bentley in FY 2001 achieved growth of 66% to $290M standing out among software vendors in a poor post 9/11 sales environment ..for additional information Lane Michel Partner Peppers & Rogers Group [email protected]