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Main Page –› Business & Commerce –› Sales
 

5 Keys to CRM Success

 

In the early days of marketing CRM software, gushing articles detailed its many benefits, presenting the product as a near miracle cure for problems with any customer facing business process. The IT landscape has more recently been littered with several large implementations that failed to deliver on their promised organizational benefits, tempering much of the early enthusiasm. Like most disruptive technologies, CRM implementations are long, costly and require extensive changes to the organization. What can be done to ensure their success?

Start at the Top as CIO, one of your key roles in any implementation is to ensure support from the top of the organization. Your CEO should be well aware of the project and its organizational impact, and if he or she is not asking you for regular updates then you need to do a better job selling the importance of the project at the highest level. Your sales job must continue down to the highest-level sales and marketing executives. CRM, if done correctly will change the very core of their business, and they must be involved beyond giving mere lip service to the project at the annual sales meeting. You should jointly be driving the project with your counterpart from sales or marketing.

Get the Right Team If you look at many of the teams that implemented a failed CRM project, the biggest surprise is that most were well funded, with excellent project managers, IT staff and consultants. However one key ingredient was missing: team members from the business community. If you want to succeed at CRM, from the day the project charter is approved to the final post-implementation status meeting, you must have at least 30% of your full-time team composed of people from the sales and marketing organizations. These folks will drive your process change efforts, ensure requirements are appropriate and correct, and serve as change agents when communicating with their counterparts back in the organization. It is often difficult to pull sales people from their job of selling, but this is an excellent gauge of how committed the organization is to CRM. When you start asking the SVP of Sales for people, you are effectively asking Sales to put their money where their mouth is in support of the implementation effort.

Change the Process CRM will change the very core of your sales and marketing business. All of the major CRM packages are not merely software, but business processes facilitated through software. Resist the temptation to adopt the software to your current business processes and instead seek the reverse. Unless there is an exceedingly compelling reason, modify your processes rather than the software and remember that weve always done it this way is not a compelling reason to modify software. The ROI and organizational benefits touted by vendors assume you adopt their processes; do not let your implementation be another case of using technology to merely accelerate a bad process.

Avoid the Customer Centric Trap Many of the benefits touted by CRM vendors surround enhanced customer service and the building of a customer centric organization. While these benefits may help sell software, remember that the core goal of any organizational change, software implementations included, is to reduce costs and increase revenue. While a good CRM implementation certainly improves customer service, it never does so at the expense of the top or bottom line. If you design convoluted processes and technologies to satisfy every customer whim without respect for the financial implications, your CRM implementation will be unwieldy and ultimately fail. An efficient process increases customer satisfaction through its ease of use, and also reduces costs.

Positive and Negative Reinforcement on the User Community There is nothing worse than spending months of time and millions of dollars on a system that remains unused. Despite your best efforts to involve senior sales executives and get the sales force excited, there are still those that will resist the new system any way they can. As part of your process redesigns in concert with the sales organization, rebuild the commission and compensation structure to encourage use of the new system. All is takes is for one naysayer who ignores the new system to not receive full commission on a large deal to show the sales force that your organization is serious about CRM. Similarly, immediately after the system is live, provide bonuses for those who enter the most correct orders, or document all their leads and opportunities correctly in the new system.

Constantly evaluate your project in these five areas and attack any issues before they escalate into project-threatening problems. If you find your project is lacking in most of these areas, it may be time to evaluate your organizations readiness for CRM, and make an honest assessment before throwing good money after bad. CRM, done right, will provide many of its promised benefits. With solid organizational support, the right team and enhanced business processes that focus on the top and bottom line, your company will be a case study in CRM success.

Author: Patrick Gray
 
Author Bio:

Patrick Gray

Patrick Gray is the founder and President of the Prevoyance Group, located in Harrison, NY. Prevoyance Group focuses on providing Project Performance consulting, which combines project management and process improvement to ensure large IT projects deliver organizational value. Past clients include Gillette, Pitney Bowes, OfficeMax and several other Fortune 500 and 1000 companies.

Patrick graduated from Boston College with a triple major from the Carroll School of Management. After spending his youth ?anchored? to the East Coast of the United States, Patrick?s consulting career has allowed him to work in and explore the rest of the US and much of Europe. His recent work has focused on international projects, and he has led implementations for foreign subsidiaries of several US companies. Patrick frequently speaks for large audiences during client engagements, and once had the opportunity to speak at a former Royal Manor House near Windsor Castle.

Always investigating new methods to improve project performance, Patrick has a Six Sigma Black Belt certificate from Villanova University and is a member of the Project Management Institute. He has published several articles and has been quoted numerous times in major publications such as the New York Times, InfoWorld and Business 2.0.

Also active outside the consulting world, Patrick is also a co-founder and member of the Board of Directors of Connected Minds, an organization dedicated to capturing often neglected perspectives of historical events. Rather than present history through the words and writings of its ?greatest figures,? Connected Minds captures history through video and audio recordings of everyday people who lived through these events.

 
 
 

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