5 'Zero Cost' CRM Strategies
- 27 May, 2009 03:10
- Comments
It's not shocking that many companies are scaling back, delaying or canceling IT projects. Recent Gartner survey data of 475 IT decision makers in global enterprises with 1,000 or more employees found that more companies are actually postponing or scaling back computing projects rather than canceling them outright.
MORE ON CIO.com CRM on the Cheap: Five Strategies That Really Work Boost ROI on CRM Projects By Focusing on Change Management First Why Salesforce.com's Social Media Smarts Could Get You Closer to Customers
Conventional wisdom would hold that customer relationship management (CRM) software is one area of the business not to be ignored during tough financial times. But who's got millions to spend on new CRM apps and functionalities?
According to Gartner analysts, companies don't have to spend millions. In fact, they might not be tapping into many functionalities that their CRM applications already offer or may have to spend next to nothing to gain more insight on and better connect with their customers via their websites, call centers and other sales and marketing systems.
"Companies need to think in terms of spending smarter, not spending less," notes Scott Nelson, managing vice president at Gartner, in a recent report. "There are zero or low-cost strategies that can be implemented now that can make all the difference, generate competitive differentiation and not draw the attention of the CFO."
As recommended by Gartner, here are five CRM strategies that companies can undertake now while not breaking the bank:
1. Target Customer Communities
Like many other analysts, the Gartner report expects that future CRM strategies will rely on "creating online communities of customers" using social media, including Facebook, Twitter and other websites. These Web tools are quite free, of course.
"The economic downturn provides a great opportunity to begin experimenting in this area," notes the report, "and Gartner advises companies to set up accounts on the various websites and learn what they do and don't do, and how users interact" with a company's brand and systems.
2. Scour Customer Analytics
The average enterprise has already bought and installed analytic and customer intelligence packages (with varying degrees of success), and economic downturns are great times to tap into that computing horsepower. "Many companies have more information than they know what to do with," states the report, "and now they have the opportunity to put this to good use studying attrition models, looking at the next most likely to buy models, and figuring out channel usage patterns."
Of course, as the report points out, decision-makers using the analytic tools should remember that customer behaviors may change significantly when the economy finally does improve.
3. Review Customer-Segmentation Tactics
Gartner research finds that many segmentation strategies are based on "psycho-demographics, profitability or account attributes," notes the report. "However, a down economy provides companies with the opportunity to review their segmentation strategy and see if it really is the very best one that they could have."
4. Fix Broken CRM Processes
Process is "often an overlooked part of CRM and in many cases all that CRM technologies have done is taken out old, broken processes and made them run more efficiently," notes the report. But they're still bad processes.
Now is as a good a time as any to reexamine customer processes with a mindset to redesigning poor, inefficient ones. The end result for this strategy, according to Gartner, would be to create situation in which both parties win: the company-which gets greater efficiency-and the customer-who gets a more interactive "partner."
5. Change Your Organizational Structure
Not everyone likes change. And any type of organizational change can be one of the most difficult areas of CRM strategy, Gartner states. However, notes the report, "many companies need to make the move from product-centric to customer-centric." A down economy typically offers "fewer distractions," and many companies should find that this is the perfect time to begin addressing some of the organizational issues that get in the way of identifying the needs of and serving their customers, according to Gartner.
"At the end of the day, CRM is all about change. Changing from product to customers, changing age-old processes, changing enterprise mindsets, and changing how companies relate to customers," notes Gartner's Nelson. "All of this can be done without new systems, and the challenging economic environment may give companies just the chance they have been waiting for."
For a different take on cost-conscious CRM strategy, see David Taber's recent CIO.com article, "CRM on the Cheap: Five Strategies That Really Work."
Do you Tweet? Follow me on Twitter @twailgum. Follow everything from CIO.com on Twitter @CIOonline.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
- Gartner Says Financial Crisis Is Delaying, More Than Cancelling, Client Computing Projects
- CRM on the Cheap: Five Strategies That Really Work - CIO.com - Business Technology Leadership
- Boost ROI on CRM Projects By Focusing on Change Management First - CIO.com - Business Technology Leadership
- Why Salesforce.com's Social Media Smarts Could Get You Closer to Customers - CIO.com - Business Technology Leadership
- CRM Definition and Solutions - CIO.com - Business Technology Leadership
- Gartner Highlights Five CRM Strategies That Cost Little to Nothing, but Will Generate Positive Results
- Social networking, ROI, pricing among '09 CRM trends - CIO.com - Business Technology Leadership
- Businesses Are Still Crazy for BI After All These Years : CIO - Blogs and Discussion
- 2012 Pathways ICT Leadership Development Program
- The Pathways ICT Leadership Development Program | Turning today’s ICT professionals into tomorrow’s business leaders | 2012 Course Curriculum
- Smarter Storage and Data Management for Virtual Server Environments
- NAND Flash Solid State Storage for the Enterprise
- USABILITY AS AN ERP SELECTION CRITERIA
-
The 30 best Safari extensions -- so far
-
Apple and Google disagree over licensing of essential patents
-
Monash Uni reduces IT teams after consolidation project
-
FTC warns makers of background checking apps
-
QLD govt demands answers after pay glitch
-
Lowering your IT Costs with Oracle Database 11g Release 2
This white paper identifies the key capabilities in Oracle Database 11g Release 2 that enable IT professionals to successfully deliver more information, with higher quality of service, and at much lower cost, than they have been able to do in the past. -
Oracle Database 11g Product Family
Oracle Database 11g is available in a variety of editions tailored to meet the business and IT needs of all organisations. This paper outlines the features and options available with each edition of Oracle Database 11g. Read on for more details. -
Bend or break: Flexible Policy
DON’T. PANIC. Aligning business and IT needs has always been a challenge. Finding the right balance between ensuring the safety of sensitive data and enabling the free flow of information is increasingly difficult in today’s evolving regulatory and threat environment. Read on.



















Comments
Post new comment