I was recently asked to present on the impact of technology on sales, has it helped, in what way, or has it had a negative impact?

After examining the issue with some colleagues and experts in the field, it became clear that technology is an enabler, and as such amplifies what is already there, and what is not.

I don’t think that that there is anyone in sales today that has not heard of, used or been impacted by a CRM package of one sort or another, be it a simple contact management application with some added functionality, to a top of the line CRM that fully integrate with other enterprise applications. Many companies will tell you of the disasters they have encountered rolling out a CRM, in fact an article in the February 1, 2002 Harvard Business Review : Avoid the Four Perils of CRM, stated that “55% of all CRM projects don’t produce results” , and went on to say that “According to Bain’s 2001 survey of management tools, which tracks corporate use of and satisfaction with management techniques, CRM ranked in the bottom three for satisfaction out of 25 popular tools. In fact, according to last year’s survey of 451 senior executives, one in every five users reported that their CRM initiatives not only had failed to deliver profitable growth but also had damaged long-standing customer relationships.”

Yet by November 2004, one of the same writers in an article entitled CRM Done Right stated: ” Senior executives have become considerably more enthusiastic about CRM. In 2003, Bain & Company’s annual Management Tools Survey of 708 global executives found that firms actually began to report increased satisfaction with their CRM investments. In 2001, CRM had ranked near the bottom of a list of 25 possible tools global executives would choose. Two years later, it had moved into the top half. In fact, 82% of surveyed executives said they planned to employ CRM in their companies in 2003-a large jump from the 35% who employed it in 2000.”

While the piece went on to suggest a number of factors, we’ve experienced a number of key things in our work with clients that are worth noting.

First, we very much believe and have seen numerous examples to support the view that Customer Relationship Management is a way of doing business. Most of our successful clients have a consistent view on Customer Relationship Management.

To them CRM is part of their culture, part of their corporate DNA. They see CRM as the proper alignment between software and process to effectively manage their relationships with their customers. The alignment is based on objectives:

Corporate objectives drive the sales organization’s objective; which in turn are the foundation for regional/territorial objectives, and client objectives; when properly executed, these objective form the basis for each client/prospect interaction.

It is as much about process as it is about software. If you don’t create a balance and alignment between the two, you will fail to manage the relationship with you key customers, and not derive much benefit from your investment. In fact we are working with a company that has spent in excess of $13 million dollars over the last 5 years implementing a CRM software with little tangible results to show in improved sales, increased productivity or understanding of their clients and how to mutually improve their relationship.

A study I read recently showed that over 80% of the CEO’s surveyed said their sales organization had a process that was poorly defined or a process that wasn’t being followed. A sales process is like a good map or a GPS if you will. Used properly it helps you determine where you are, if you are in heading in the right or wrong direction, also helps you plan what your “next step” should be to get to your destination. A well defined sales process gives a sales organization the same advantage. It should have logical and defined steps that allow both parties to develop a better understanding of each other and a set of questions that help you qualify or “disqualify” an opportunity.

When we meet with a new client we always enquire about their sales process. A VP we recently met responded: “why yes of course, we use XYZ” (name change to protect the innocent, us). Yet he openly admitted that he struggles with forecasting, prospecting, and his people were spending too much time with unproductive activity, in the little activity he was able to glean from the system. (Unfortunately no software will pick up the phone and do a cold call, I’m working on it.)

The clients who do use the software to support their process tell a different story. Activity is focused on the client experience. It is still true that getting new business from an existing client, is much more cost efficient than from new prospects. No I am not saying you should stop prospecting, but don’t ignore those that have rewarded you with their business, show them some love, make it easy for them to deal with you, and hard to leave you.

A good CRM (software and process) provides you with a complete view of the client, allowing you to align your resources to best serve them. Reducing service calls, reducing time to respond, reducing the effort to take orders, reducing the cost of sale, increasing their satisfaction level and creating a mutual economical value add relationship.

The data available to you will also help segment your clients better, allowing you to decide where you want to put your focus, and which clients you may want to off load. Remember that some 30% or your lowest margin clients suck over 50% of your resources. A CRM done right can assure that you are retaining the right clients.

CRM system can also break down hierarchical communication barriers allowing everyone, not just sales to focus on the customer relationship, allowing top executive to get involved in meeting client expectation and driving revenue. Of course this will only work where the CRM culture is present. And in many companies that have rolled out the software without the process, with out the training, without the internal value proposition, it is not. As stated earlier it in fact diminishes the client relationship. Many companies are experiencing push back from the front line because they failed to show the ROI to the users. Like the clients sales reps want to know what’s in it for them. There is a lot, if there is a supporting process focused on everyone’s success, the company, the rep, the client. This can be achieved with a sales process that aligns around key objectives.

One last thing to consider, CRM systems are usually associated with sales organizations. But client satisfaction is the function of the whole organization. A truly successful CRM extends beyond sales to all groups with in a corporation, and as such, a key success factor is the alignment of the sales process with other processes impacting the client relationship.

Tibor Shanto , is a Principal with Renbor Sales Solutions Inc. , Renbor Sales Solutions Inc. enables companies achieve sustained growth, by focusing on critical aspects of revenue growth. By recognizing that an outstanding sales force is THE differentiator in today?s environment, our clients with our help, focus on the development of both strategic and tactical initiatives to foster a winning team that will out think, out sell and out perform competitors while consistently gaining market share.

Renbor?s Objective Based Selling (OBS) is a structured approach to delivering ongoing results and improvement by focusing the entire sales organization on a key set of objectives. The overarching objective for any sales organization is to achieve exceptional and sustainable revenue growth. This is accomplished by creating a culture of sales excellence built around the principles and processes adopted by world-class sales organizations.

For more information on helping your team sell better, write to: info@sellbetter.ca
, visit http://www.sellbetter.ca
or call 416 671-3555

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Many CRM projects are not successful because the big bang approach is attempted to solve all needs at once. Others are not successful because of politics between IT and business stakeholders. However, there are successful CRM projects that have proven to not be as painful in terms of time, money, and resources. These projects follow 8 key trends that combat the key issues often found in CRM projects, thereby increasing a successful delivery of a solid CRM vision.

What Are The Trends?

Trend 1. The Right Solution is Selected for Reasonable Implementation Time

If the solution does not fit the business model or revised business processes with out-of-the-box functionality, it should not be considered if it can not be implemented with minimal customizations or integrations with external systems. Instead of relying solely on the input of long-term employees, executive leadership usually hires an independent vendor selection committee to work with business and IT management to determine which solution best meets the business needs.

Trend 2. Choosing the Right Implementation Vendor Makes the Difference

While it is great to choose one of the Big 5 Consulting spin-off firms to implement the CRM solution, the most successful CRM projects chose smaller referenceable consulting firms based on feedback from prior and existing clients. Smaller consulting firms yield more efficient results (usually three times the quality of the deliverables provided by Big 5 Consulting firms) from the design to production phases and painstakingly take more pride and ownership in the success of the CRM implementation.

Trend 3. Negative People Are Never on the Core Team

There will always be nay-sayers but negative energy destroys CRM projects. The lazy, nonchalant, disgruntled employees are better served either removed from the project or engaged at the system testing phase where the negativity will force them to try to break the system, thereby identifying potential bugs and missed functionality that can be resolved before user acceptance testing and ultimately implementation.

Trend 4. Hybrid Teams Yield Better Results

There is always a hybrid team consisting of a counterpart on the client side to the lead developer, lead tester, and lead integrator from the third party vendor and a business lead that understands the business process for each system function. If offshore development teams are in place, two employees/consultants from the client are available to challenge and explain business logic that is normally lost in translation – a Senior Project Manager that understands developing checkpoint analyses, scorecards, and detailed project plans and a Technical Lead (consultant with years of experience in delivering the CRM solution).

Trend 5. Bad Processes are Eliminated as Part of CRM Readiness

Successful CRM projects have executive stakeholders that understand a bad process implemented in a CRM solution is nothing more than an automated bad business process that requires more customization – ultimately spending more in time, resource, and budget.

Trend 6. Data Quality and Reliability Is Planned In Early Phases

Recognizing that data conversion must be planned and developed at the same time of development is key to a successful CRM vision. Data migration and data integration are planned with data quality (cleansing) initiatives at the forefront of the design stages – not after development of system functionality

Trend 7. Reporting Is Not an Afterthought

Successful CRM projects keep the purpose of management visibility in the forefront of all planning and designing. Since this is always a priority and top reason for implementation, reporting is planned early in the design stages by ODS and Data Warehousing experts.

Trend 8. Testing Time Is At Least Double the Development Time

The standard rule of allotting two times the development time for accurate testing still applies. Successful CRM projects have 5 testing phases that involve unit/functional testing, system testing, user acceptance testing, and regression testing to re-test errors that are resolved by the development team.

In summary, CRM projects can be a success if these trends are adhered from the onset of the project. Following these common trends will increase the likelihood of a successful CRM vision put into action.

The full white paper may be reviewed at http://www.tsgonestop.com/whitepapers.html
. For an assessment or consultation, contact TSG One Stop at 310-860-4795 or send a request to crm@tsgonestop.com

Temeko Richardson, a principal consulting partner at TSG One Stop, has a combined ten years of experience leading the architecture and implementation of CRM solutions ranging from Siebel, SAP and Salesforce.com across various industries for strategic business models and processes. For more information about structuring CRM solutions to fit a business model or business process, contact the solutions group via email at crm@tsgonestop.com

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