CRM
...The Emperor's New Clothes
The story of the emperor's new
clothes is a fairy tale about men who fooled the emperor into
believing that they had made him a beautiful suit of clothes. In
fact they had not made anything. The emperor went out in public
wearing nothing but his underwear because he didn't want to appear
stupid since they had told him only the wisest people could see the
fine fabrics.When the emperor went out in public a little child
yelled..."The emperor isn't wearing any clothes!" Today I am that
child.
"CRM doesn't cover your
mistakes or fix your problems and you have been lied to about its
ability to "manage" your client relationships!" CRM is a system
that is based on faulty logic. The premise that companies can
manage clients is foolish!
Business 101 will tell you that
clients manage businesses. They tell the company what to sell, when
to sell it, how to sell it, where to sell it, and will stop buying
it on a whim depending upon a long list of uncontrollable
situations (they are getting older, economic circumstances,
politics, trends, health issues etc etc.)
What does CRM do? It lulls
CEOs, sales and marketing department heads into believing that they
can hold onto clients by using data alone. CRM bogs down sales
& marketing teams and creates massive amounts of additional
work, keeping them connected to their computers instead of visiting
clients. CRM requires cleaning just like any other database and the
larger the database the more time it takes to clean. The sharing of
information within a company can, in some instances, actually slow
down the process of customer service, since more people are now
involved in decision making processes. The bottom line of customer
service is pushed to the side and direct mail marketing moves
forward. Direct mail marketing has abysmal response rates and even
if it was improved is a poor alternative to actually communicating
with clients.
Now is the time to go put on
your clothes and fire the tailors!
You have spent a fortune in
purchasing the software, you spent thousands of dollars on
man-hours used up in training and retraining, sent memos and held
staff meetings, paid tailors(I mean consultants), and still are no
closer to getting customer loyalty than you were 6 months ago. As a
matter of fact it may be worse because client services have
suffered while you spent all this time getting CRM up and running.
Cut your loses and run!
Now pull out a clean sheet of
paper and write down this "to do" list...
1. Set goals for customer
service that involve "WOW" customer service principles. Design a
quality customer service program. Set a start date and end date for
evaluation purposes.
2. Read a book a week on client
relationship marketing and "WOW" customer service and give yourself
a test to make sure you have retained the information. Then USE it!
Make sure all your employees do the same to one degree or
another.
3. Evaluate all your employees,
are they happy, do the have a vested interest in your success,
would they want to be your client? What is their body language on
the job, enthusiastic, angry, indifferent, bored? Get rid of dead
weight! If a customer is likely to meet your employees it MUST be a
positive experience. Pay your front line employees what they are
worth. Smiles and enthusiasm are worth at least $1.00 per
hour.
3. Reduce advertising budget...
increase marketing budget... understand the difference.
4. Cut out or reduce systems
that tend to isolate you from your customers, voice mail mazes,
advertising campaigns designed for the general public,
autoresponders, self help kiosks or webpages, overseas customer
service centers.
5. Increase communication
through handwritten notes, visits with clients, feed back and
brainstorming sessions that put the client and the business on the
same side of the table as partners, reduce outsourcing, reward good
clients frequently, use greeting cards with commerative stamps
instead of postcards with bulk postage ( Customers think, "If I'm
not worth 37 cents you don't need my business."), put some thought
into client gifts (diabetics don't appreciate candy) and finally
ask, ask, ask, ask, ask, ask, ask, for referrals! Then ask for
referrals again.
Don't look to CRM to solve the
problems of customer loyalty. Look at your relationships with your
clients.
Meredith Gossland is owner of
Lasting Impressions2, a Small business marketing service,
specializing in multicultural marketing and high quality low cost
customer service. she can be reached at
info@lastingimpressions2.com.
http://www.lastingimpressions2.com
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