Customer relationship management (CRM) issues can often be traced to ineffective
business processes that involve human communication. Companies can overcome
the limitations inherent in those marketing, sales, and service processes by
pursuing communication-enabled business processes (CEBPs) -- processes enabled
by communication systems that are tightly integrated with business applications.
With CEBP, firms can reduce latency, enhance the ability to locate people with
the right skills, provide recording of and visibility into interactions, and
better enable end-to-end processes involving employees, customers, suppliers,
and partners.
CEBP yields the most value in contact-intensive situations where service requests
are complex. In particular, when business requirements call for a high volume
of interpersonal interactions, when customers demand service through multiple
contact channels, and where there are globally distributed resources, CEBP can
bring the greatest benefits. When CEBP is well-deployed for CRM and other processes,
it results in simplified interactions for a firm and its customers, faster response
times, greater accuracy, a breaking down of organizational silos, and a better
social context for communication.
Here's a story: at first, the chief marketing officer (CMO) of a global consumer
electronics firm was quite pleased -- management was finally shifting from a
technology focus to a marketing focus to enhance differentiation. But in the
rush to initiate new programs, there was little time to carefully revamp customer
relationship management-based marketing processes. Telemarketing staff across
a dozen locations worldwide handled new campaign materials -- including call
lists and scripts -- using paper, spreadsheets, and e-mail. Sales leads resulting
from the campaigns were simply distributed by e-mail, and related call information
wasn't recorded.
After months of stepped-up marketing investments, the CMO's C-level peers were
deeply disappointed with the outcome. Marketing staff didn't have meaningful
insights into responses to individual campaigns, and customer data was perpetually
out-of-date. By the time new leads reached the sales force, they were cold.