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high street banking, students may not represent high
value accounts initially, however, profitability may
soar in the future when many find themselves in
well-paid employment. It is for this reason that
many high street banks offer undergraduates
incentives to join student bank accounts. Although
this is a more generalised example; large quantities
of accurate customer data, a range of sophisticated
data collection techniques and powerful database
analytics can allow CRM organisations model
customer behaviour and value lifetimes. This can
enable the organisation market its products and
services on a more profitable, one-to-one basis.
Subsequently, the communication links with
customers are important too. Kurtyka [2001]
suggests that the growth of the rapid and cost-
effective electronic channels has enabled marketing
evolve to a two-way communication mechanism and
allows organisations gain an insight to customers’
unique communication preferences – for instance,
the type of communication, the delivery frequency
and the channel it arrives through. Recently, a US
bowling company’s CRM system allowed it to stop
irritating its customers by sending them irrelevant
offers as well as minimise the risk of alienating
those who had already purchased the product
[Dragoon 2002]. In an age where customers are
driven to anguish through electronic ‘spam’ and
other junk mail, it is imperative that customers are
able to determine the basis of communication;
otherwise the organisation risks becoming a major
irritation – proving detrimental to both the brand and
its customer retention programme.
5 SALES CRM
Nowadays, the reality of sales teams is that a range
of time-consuming support tasks constantly hinder
the revenue-generating ability of representatives.
This is supported by Kahle [2000] who states that
typical 30-minute tasks can often take two hours or
more. Add to this, each sales representative has
their own repository of contacts, leads and customer
communication history. This has an adverse effect
on revenues since pockets of knowledge exist across
many different inaccessible sources. As a result,
new leads and opportunities are missed, decision-
making processes are drawn out, support resources
are difficult to locate and neither management,
representatives or customers are able to track
information or indeed, each other. A Sales CRM
system centralises and formalises sales activity and
offers an extensive mix of functionality to maximise
the efficiency of sales teams. A typical CRM
system may:
• Contain an accurate and up-to-date range of
commonly used resources such as pricing details,
document templates, presentations, product
specifications and customer contact information.
• Store a ‘live’ register of leads and opportunities,
as well as relevant market and competition
information to enhance business awareness.
• Contain personal details such as contact
information, weekly diary/schedule and a sales
performance summary.
• Act as an intermediary to accelerate and shorten
bureaucratic decision-making processes – e.g.
product quotations that can be submitted
electronically for approval.
• Be integrated with email, video conferencing and
instant messaging facilities; allowing customers,
suppliers and colleagues to communicate more
easily.
• Provide ad-hoc reporting facilities that are simple
to use, flexible and highly informative.
• Contain other miscellaneous resources such as
hotel information, maps and travel guides.
For data consistency reasons, Sales CRM needs to
be closely integrated with the other operational and
management systems. Chase [2001] suggests that
Sales CRM is allowing organisations collaborate
with internal and external parties so that they are
able to take control of their demand chain. For
example, sales forecasting could be integrated with
manufacturing or supplier inventory systems to
ensure optimal levels of stock. This would enhance
customer satisfaction levels, reduce stock holding
costs and minimise support administration.
Similarly, both suppliers and customers would
benefit from a web-based extranet portal that could
provide them with up-to-date stock information, deal
progress tracking and a communications log. This
would lead to a reduction in common customer
queries that take so much time of a representative’s
typical day.
Besides sales inefficiency, Gardner [2001] suggests
that organisations are not managing each stage of the
sales process in the most effective way. In particular
CRM can optimise one of the pivotal components of
sales activity – personnel. Analysing the
performance of each representative may report the
success rates at the various stages of deals. A CRM
system is then able maximise revenues by matching
individual skills with the outstanding stages of leads
and deals appropriately. For example, good
communicators and negotiators would be more
useful towards the end of the sales process (e.g.
securing a deal). In the same way, each stage of the
lifecycle can be analysed for best practice for others
to copy. In a Sales CRM environment, several
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