| Topic : Best practices to implement, upgrade, or integrate SAP CRM |
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Oracle CRM
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last activity : 07 06 2010 20:18:04 +0000
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Customer relationship management, or CRM, may seem somewhat like alphabet soup to many small- and medium-sized businesses (SMB). The variety of CRM options (and acronyms that come with sales, customer service and marketing terms) can make decision-making quite difficult for SMBs when it comes to solving business needs.
CRM doesn't have to be difficult. Here are some key guidelines to follow before you implement CRM at your company.
- Develop corporatewide CRM engagement from key stakeholders.
Many CRM projects fail because critical stakeholders are not involved
in setting CRM strategy, assessing requirements and selecting options.
Get key sponsors involved from the get-go and make sure that the
individuals involved can make the financial and time commitments to
ensure success. If possible, involve customers in this dialogue through
surveys, councils and other ways to ensure that your strategy is in
sync with their expectations. At the executive level, start determining
the kinds of information that various people need to better understand
and respond to customers.
- Envision the company's CRM strategy. CRM is more
than just software. It is also about selecting appropriate
methodologies and business practices to help your business enable
better relationships with customers. Benchmark your company's current
CRM practices with peers in your industry, and set some high-level
customer relationship goals in areas such as increasing customer
retention, speeding problem resolution, closing a higher percentage of
sales, etc.
- Determine and prioritize CRM drivers and requirements.
Even in small companies, CRM decisions are often stovepiped in relation
to departmental needs and business problems. For example, sales
managers may want to get better pipeline and forecasting capabilities,
while customer service groups want to provide Web-based self-service
customer support. Engage a corporate team of decision-makers to
prioritize CRM requirements. Priorities should include solving problems
in areas such as functional areas that are causing the most pain, cost
and missed opportunity for the business; areas where employees are most
or least resistant to changing business; weaknesses compared with
competitors; complexity of each area that requires addressing; and with
what other systems this needs to integrate.
- Develop a CRM roadmap. Once you have the high-level
vision and know which areas are likely to bring the greatest reward,
develop a master plan consisting of several smaller steps and projects
that will move you toward achieving the corporate CRM vision. For each
step, spell out key outcomes and metrics; roles and responsibilities;
budgets and timelines. Start with low-risk/high-reward projects to
build momentum and success. Make sure all key stakeholders in each
project are included up front and early in the solution evaluation and
implementation process to ensure faster, higher user adoption at the
end.
- Think integration. Determine how, where and when
CRM tools need to integrate with one another and with other
applications. At a high level, this includes evaluating the business
processes flow, and identifying process-related customer interactions
and transactions that need to be integrated. For example, it's likely
that you'll want to integrate sales initiatives and transactions across
channels, including e-commerce storefronts, to optimize sales
opportunities, and link your CRM system with your financials and/or ERP
system.
- Do your homework and create a short list. Check out
prospective vendors' financials and customer references; eliminate any
that appear shaky. Talk to peers who have more experience in the CRM
area, search Web sites and peruse publications. Many hosted CRM vendors
offer 30-day free trials. Get an independent perspective from an
independent CRM consultant, too. With a roadmap in place and your needs
defined, you can come up with a manageable list of RFP-worthy vendors.
- Apply the 80-20 rule in the selection process.
Don't get snowed under by competing vendors' feature-function wars.
You've already determined your top needs and priorities: stick to that
list and determine which vendor can best meet those needs before you
get sidetracked with the nice-to-have -- but not essential -- features.
Compare how vendors stack up in terms of solution strengths and
weaknesses. Have vendors spell out terms and conditions, thorough
document pricing, training, methodology, milestones and metrics for a
successful deployment. Finally, listen to your intuition, and select a
vendor that you think will be as responsive to your needs, after the sale is closed.
- Keep everyone in the loop. Once you've made a
selection, err on the side of over-communicating. Get internal
evangelists involved early, and encourage input along the way as you
roll it out. Offer flexible training options to help accommodate
different schedules and learning preferences. This will also speed
adoption and produce benefits more quickly.
- Learn, adjust and evolve. Develop a mechanism to monitor use, get feedback and adapt the solution as necessary to make sure it's evolving with business and customer needs. Depending on the type of CRM package you've deployed, you can use surveys, ongoing education, user groups and other venues to stay on top of how these needs are changing, as well as what types of adaptations the solution will need over time.
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It depends on the interest level of the candidate. And I think there was a similar kind of debate .... so do check before posting... |
This is not a platform for advertisement. Stop posting such kind of promotion. |
Yes it is an added advantage to the company. They can reduce the no. of ppl leaving the company. |