Title: Customer Relationship Management A Databased Approach
1Customer Relationship ManagementA Databased
Approach
- V. Kumar
- Werner J. Reinartz
- Instructors Presentation Slides
2Chapter One
- CRM, Database Marketing
- and Customer Value
3Overview
- Topics discussed
- Marketing concept
- Link between CRM and Database Marketing
- CRM and Customer value
- Conceptualizations of CRM
- Relevance of CRM
- Data based Customer Value Management
4Marketing-definition
- Marketing is an organizational function and a
set of processes for creating, communicating and
delivering value to customers and for managing
customer relationships in ways that benefit the
organization and its stakeholders. - American Marketing Association,2004
5Link Between CRM and Database Marketing
- Database Marketing
- Customer Databases
- Identify and analyze customer population
- Group based on similarities
- Recommend separate marketing campaigns for
different groups - CRM
- Applies database marketing techniques at customer
level - Develops strong company-to-customer relationships
CRM
DB
6CRM
- Capture customer data and interact with the
- customer simultaneously
- Develop specific strategies for interaction with
each customer - Better relationships with profitable customers
- Locating and enticing new customers that will be
profitable - Finding appropriate strategies to deal with
unprofitable customers, including termination of
relationships
7Link Between CRM and Customer Value
- Customer Value The economic value of the
customer relationship to the firm expressed on
the basis of contribution margin or net profit - CRM is the practice of analyzing and utilizing
marketing databases and leveraging communication
technologies to determine corporate practices and
methods that will maximize the lifetime value of
each individual customer to the firm
8Using Customer Value for Marketing Decisions
- Decrease in Costs
- Maximization of Revenues
- Improvement in Profits and ROI
- Acquisition and Retention of Profitable
Customers - Reactivation of Dormant Customers
9Conceptualizations of CRM
- Functional level focuses on technology
- Sales force automation in the sales function
- Campaign management in the marketing function
- Customer facing front-end level focuses on total
customer experience - To build a single-view of customers across
contact channels - To distribute customer intelligence to all
customer-facing functions - Strategy level focuses on customer satisfaction
- Frees CRM from technology underpinnings
- Describes CRM as a process to implement customer
centricity in the - market and build shareholder value
- Knowledge about customers affects the entire
organization
10Components of CRM from a Business Strategy
Perspective
- Strategic process
- Spans multiple organizational functions
- Continuous effort towards becoming
customer-centric - Selection
- Resource allocation based on economic value of
customer - Interactions
- Exchange of information and goods between
customer and firm evolves as a function of past
exchanges
C
R
M
11Components of CRM from a Business Strategy
Perspective (contd.)
- Customers
- End-users and intermediaries such as distributors
and retailers - Greater fine-tuning of segmentation strategies to
eventually target individual customers with
customized product offerings - Optimizing current and future value of customer
- Maximizing customer equity by maximizing profits
over a series of transactions - Caution Managing fairness in the exchange
process is important to sustain mutually
profitable relationships
12Relevance of CRM
- Firms are facing changes with respect to
- Consumers
- Marketplaces
- Technology
- Marketing functions
- CRM is a response to these changes
13Changes with respect to Consumers
- Growing consumer diversity- due to demographic
and behavioral trends - Ageing of the population in developed countries-
de-youthing - Increased diversity in ethnicity of population
- Increasing individualization
- Time scarcity
- Activities compete for customers time
- Value consciousness and intolerance for low
service levels - Rise in customer expectations
- Decline in consumer satisfaction level
14Time Scarcity and Value Consciousness- Example
Average waiting time (in seconds) after
which calls are abandoned by customers
Source Merchants International Call Center
Report Figure shows that customers are less and
less satisfied with the treatment they get from
corporate call centers. The average time after
which calls are abandoned fell by about 19 in
just one year.
15Declining Customer Satisfaction- Example
(American Customer Satisfaction Index) with
products and services Source http//www.theacsi.
org, University of Michigan
16Changes with respect to Consumers (contd.)
- Information availability and technological
aptitude - Customers more knowledgeable in making purchase
decisions - More comparisons across providers and
transactions - Decrease in loyalty
- Diversification of holdings across service
providers even within same household - Consequences
- Marketers should be wary of placing heavy time
demands on consumers - The major challenge facing companies has become
meeting consumer demands rather than cost
reduction
17Decreasing Customer Loyalty- Example
Number of different financial service providers
that respondents are associated with
Number of financial service providers
Source Unidex Report
18 Changes with respect to the Marketplace
- More intense competition between firms for
customers - Fragmentation of markets
- Diminishing product-quality
- differentiation
- Consequences
- Value added to customers by offering customized
product and service propositions - To maintain market share, need to realign
business strategy to become customer-centric
19 Product Parity of Grocery Private Label (US)
More switching to private-label products with
decrease in disposable income .
Switching back to national brands with
economy picking up and decreased unemployment.
This link broken today. (Source Information
Resources, Sloan Management Review, BCG Analysis)
20Changes with respect to Data Storage Technology
- Better technology, cheaper and larger storage
units - Huge increase in demand for data storage
- Increased popularity of data warehouses
-
- Consequences
- Better information about customer behavior and
attitudes - Better prediction of customer buying behavior
- Too much data can lead to misapplication and
wrong analysis
21Changes with respect to Marketing Function
- Media dilution and multiplication of channels
- Proliferation of communication media focused on
the customer - Direct-to-consumer channels - email, telephone
- Interactive media - internet, interactive TV etc
- Reduced need for techniques focused on price
alone due to - Availability of new data collection and
communication tools - Marketing processes such as loyalty programs
22Changes with respect toMarketing Function
(contd.)
- Decreasing market efficiency and effectiveness
due to - Focus on acquisition, price and short-term
transactions - Proliferation of new contact channels
- Increased or flat cost of contact
- Decreased customer response
- Reduced value for advertising in any medium
- Consequences
- Pressure on the marketing function
- Marketing in danger of being restricted to
advertising and media planning
23Implications of Changesin Business Environment
- Greater demand for learning about
- Customer preferences
- Product and service customization
- Focus on customer-centric instead of
product-centric strategies
24Data Based Customer Value Management
- To satisfy increasing customer heterogeneity
- To address concerns of marketing accountability
- To put available data to use
- To use customer profitability as the key
objective function
25Benefits of Data Based Customer Value Management
Approach
- Integrate and consolidate customer information
- Provide consolidated information across all
channels to assist in timely and relevant
communication with customers - Manage customer cases
- Personalize the service and products offered to
each customer to meet expectations - Automatically and manually generate new sales
opportunities - Provide flexibility to adapt campaigns to take
changes in customer behavior or information into
account
26Benefits of Data Based Customer Value Management
approach (contd.)
- Yield faster and more accurate follow-up on sales
leads, referrals and customer enquiries - Manage all business processes by introducing a
central point of control ensuring all business
processes are executed in accordance with correct
and effective business rules - Give top managers a detailed and accurate picture
of all sales and marketing activities - Instantly react to a changing business environment
27Summary
- From a strategic perspective, CRM is the process
of selecting the customers a firm can most
profitably serve and shaping the interactions
between a company and these individual customers - Assessing Customer Value is critical to CRM
- Rapid changes are taking place in the environment
in which firms operate with respect to customers,
market places, technology, and marketing
functions - These changes have driven the marketplace to
become relationship-based and customer-centric - CRMs goal is to optimize the current and future
value of the customers for the company