100 Proven CRM Ideas You Can Use , Parts I and II

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  • Vasili
    Moderator

    • Mar 2006
    • 14683

    100 Proven CRM Ideas You Can Use , Parts I and II

    100 Proven CRM Ideas, Part 1
    ...successful and disastrous: 90 bright ideas for your CRM strategy and 10 dim ones to avoid.

    Edited by DavidMyron

    CRM projects fail--and succeed--for many reasons. When they fail it's often because they lack guidance. It takes a customer-centric vision across all departments and employee levels to be successful. It's a daunting task, but don't reach for the antacid yet: Our 100th issue provides some much-needed tips for success. We racked our brains, combed through previous issues of CRM, and spoke with industry consultants and project leaders to distill 90 bright and 10 dim ideas. We found that while the formulas for CRM success may differ, they include some or all of the 90 bright ideas.

    Don't believe us? The proof is in the process. When CRM works, C-level execs make smarter decisions because they have a 360-degree view of corporate performance; salespeople increase their proficiency and close more deals; marketers create more targeted campaigns with better insight into their effectiveness; and employees--especially CSRs--become more productive and efficient.

    Consider the 100 ideas list here a guide to proven strategies for starting or resuscitating your CRM efforts. The sales, marketing, customer service, and company-wide ideas are color coded to show where they best fit in the organization. We believe companies following these strategies are the ones truly committed to long-term CRM success. If we're wrong, you can give us 100 lashes with a wet metric.


    1| Break down those silos. Having an integrated customer service solution is critical to maintaining customer service. Disparate databases of customer information prevent companies from gaining a holistic view of the customer throughout the organization.

    2| Make a business case. Prior to selecting the CRM system, monitor employee behavior and performance to identify which business processes can benefit the most. Determine how the CRM system might help share information and resources, cut clutter, administrative duties, and duplicated tasks.

    3| Keep customers in mind. While the technology that enables successful CRM is important, at its heart CRM is a business strategy. Finding out how technology can enable all of your company's touch points to facilitate its corporate strategy is key. "The software is only there to enable your implementation of a CRM strategy, not the other way around," says
    IzzyFranco, CRM leader for North America at Cap Gemini.

    4| Ask and ye shall receive. Farm Credit Services of America wanted to become more vital to its customers and the overall rural agricultural credit business, where customer interactions are largely face-to-face. To evaluate possible new retail locations, employees asked their customers and discovered they wanted to carry out banking and financial dealings at their own place of business. So that's what they're doing. Ask customers how they want to interact with your company.

    5| Build a team. Before selecting your CRM software, form a CRM team with reps from each department to make sure their colleagues' needs and concerns are addressed. Too often companies neglect to include the correct stakeholders, and the initiative fails to meet the needs of those tied to its results. Pick your CRM team wisely, as it should evangelize the new system when it arrives.

    6| Consider people, process, and technology. One of the most common reasons why CRM initiatives fail is that executives tend to think of CRM as an IT project. In fact, it is an organizational and business-process change that requires companies to think about people, process, and technology to succeed.

    7| Create a project checklist. Companies need to consider the following six steps when implementing their CRM initiatives: creating a clear strategy, addressing organizational issues, enabling processes, implementing the appropriate technologies, recording and tracking the data that drives the insight, and measuring the appropriate metrics, according to
    JeffSchumacher, an associate partner at McKinsey & Company.

    8| Experience counts. "I can't emphasize enough the value of an expert consulting organization that understands our business [and] a vendor that has a track record," says JeanMarcPigeon, president of Inortech. To that end, ask the consultant and vendor for customer references.

    9| Take the Goldilocks approach. Some CRM tools are too big; others are too small. Find what's just right for your business. Just because other companies like yours use one approach doesn't mean you have to do the same thing.

    10| Benefits come in many flavors. Cost justifications are critical, but look deep enough to see the indirect effect of changes to your CRM policy. Look past the dollar signs of implementation and consider things like employee efficiency, productivity, and customer satisfaction.

    11| Calculate short- and long-term costs over time. CRM is not a one-time expense. Total cost of ownership (TCO) and return on investment (ROI) need to be used together when evaluating a CRM project. Expectations should be managed over time. Consider costs over monthly, quarterly, yearly, and three-year periods. Costs don't end with technology, so consider services as well, which can easily cost twice as much as the technology.

    12| Emulate best practices. Nothing turns employees off like being forced to do their jobs differently for no obvious reason. Study your top sales and service people, then design or invest in technology that enables your firm's best practices--their best practices--to be emulated company-wide.

    13| Get support from the top brass. If management doesn't believe in the new system, why should the employees? Many times the difference between a successful CRM strategy and a huge waste of money is a leader who motivates the rest. Once they're hot on the idea, you need to keep them committed, so communicate with them regularly.

    14| Go with a CCO. Yes, another acronym to add to your mile-long scroll of industry terms, but this one's got potential, we promise. If you're lacking accountability across all departments, the chief customer officer is the person to bring it to your organization. Still not sure what a CCO really does? It's her job to keep an eye on everything we put on this list.

    15| Get a champion of change. Don't have a CCO handy? Choose a manager who's behind the implementation, understands the problems, realizes the benefits, and understands the importance of the implementation from the company's side, says LorieGoudie, director of customer support for Tarantella. After all, there's nothing more motivating than somebody who always has that can-do attitude. Want proof? Just watch a RichardSimmons video.

    16| Deputize wisely. A strong second-in-command, the person "who makes all your glossy words actually happen," is critical, says SadieBaron, marketing project manager at Eversheds.

    17| Set goals. Setting predefined and mutually agreed upon goals with your CRM team prior to selecting the CRM vendor will give an organization an idea of how well the CRM solution performs once it is installed. How can a company succeed if success cannot be measured?

    18| Set attainable goals. Simply because one salesperson has an 80 percent close rate does not mean all salespeople can come anywhere near that. "Not all customers write business cases. Not all business cases have metrics. Not all metrics are reasonable," says BartonGoldenberg, president of ISM. Determine a department's average performance levels and aim for 5 percent to 10 percent increases in areas like sales, customer retention, or lead generation.

    19| Cleanse preemptively. Identify your key client data set before you flip the switch and make sure it's accurate and up-to-date. Do the data audit from day one.

    20| Keep it simple. Don't buy what you don't need. The fewer bells and whistles, the less time and money you'll need to devote to training. People don't like change as it is; keeping things simple only makes the switchover that much easier.

    21| Success can be contagious. In baseball they say that hitting can be contagious. Implementing CRM is no different. With a full-suite product in particular, starting an implementation with a department you know will find success can make other departments start asking, "Hey, why can't we do that?" If one department finds success with CRM, others will want to as well.

    22| Train early, train often. Give your employees as much time as possible to learn the new application. They don't like change any more than other people do, but the sooner you begin, the sooner they realize they're a part of the process and the quicker they will realize the benefits. Repeat and augment training as necessary to keep those skills fresh.

    23| Identify quick wins. Tackle the smallest, easiest task straight away and save the hard stuff for later. Success early on gets the ball rolling and motivates employees.

    24| Take baby steps. Sales teams, like cats, can be finicky. When automating the sales force, roll out the CRM system in small steps. With many sales teams, the number one concern is, What's in it for me? Dump or force
    a strategy on them and they'll get cranky.


    25| Focus on ROI. "CRM should provide salespeople with better pipeline reporting, rather than only make it easier to sell more. The latest CRM solutions are forcing salespeople to enter more administrative numbers than before. As a result, firms find they spend millions in sales automation only to learn that sales reps are still using ACT!," says ScottNelson, Gartner vice president and distinguished analyst.

    26| Slow down, Speedy. Don't get too far ahead of your customers in introducing CRM technologies--changing human behavior is tough, and takes time. Recognize that customers and employees may be struggling to keep up with the pace of technological change. New applications are best served up in small, measured doses, says JimJohnson, director of information services at Master Lock Company.


    27| Find superusers. Why fight uphill all the time? Get the most enthusiastic people to use the system first.

    28| Keep your eye on the prize. Measure the results and soothe the inevitable hiccups by showing people the benefits of the new CRM system, says Stephanie Ledoux, assistant vice president of customer and provider service at Blue Cross Blue Shield--Rhode Island.

    29| Test the waters. Make sure your email and other communications are actually being delivered to the right people at the right time. Troubleshoot with test customers before making your services generally available.

    30| See your customer through the same glasses. Various departments in your organization may see your customer as diversely as they would walking past a fun house mirror--attractive and valuable from one angle, unappealing from another. Using one integrated set of analytical data throughout the company can help executives to make key decisions about how much to invest in a particular customer.

    31| Keep things uniform. Unify your message across all communication channels, including television, radio, newspaper, email, regular mail, Web site, and the telephone. Try to have the same look and feel throughout the company. Don't send mixed or conflicting messages--you will confuse the customer.

    32| Walk a mile in your customers' *****. Getting complaints from customers about how horrific it is to do business with you? Put yourself in their ***** by role-playing the typical customer experience. Once you suffer through what you dish out, you'll be shocked into a more customer-centric mindset. Guaranteed.

    33| Keep your promises. Just like relationships with your friends and loved ones, relationships with your customers should be based on trust. Reminding customers of promises kept--and taking responsibility for promises unfulfilled--simply requires openness.

    34| Clean your data regularly. Your CRM system is only as good as your data, so keep it clean and avoid duplication. "According to the U.S. Census, about one in seven people change addresses within a year," says DenisPombriant, managing principal of Beagle Research Group. That's why, he adds, "having old data is like having no data."

    35| Big names don't mean big money. While big clients may look impressive on a customer list, they may be costing your organization more money than they bring in. These clients may have special needs, such as customized packaging, special distribution needs, more hand-holding, which take extra time and expenses. Look at overall customer profitability, not just sales, and send unprofitable clients to the competition.

    36| Consider life stages. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, there are roughly 75 million baby boomers (born between 1946 and 1964), more than 49 million gen Xers (born between 1965 and 1976), more than 72 million gen Yers (born between 1977 and 1994), and 40 million millennials (born between 1995 and now).

    37| Know thy customer. Don't assume that an ethnic cohort comprises one monolithic group of consumers. Some consumers are more tied to their culture than others. Within each culture exists subcultures that include a wide range of people who are fully assimilated to those who don't speak English. What's more, country of origin may also play a significant role in buying behavior.

    38| Mass marketing or one-to-one? Actually, it should be a mix that mostly meets somewhere in the middle. Your most valuable customers require one-to-one communication. Just below this requires a one-to-some model, in which your marketing messages are somewhat customized and sent to the bulk of your customer base. The bottom level is your lowest 10 percent, which requires little customization.

    39| Experiment with marketing. Marketing is just as much of an art as it is a science. Recent technological developments are enabling marketers to challenge their segmented marketing campaigns with just a few keystrokes. Consider different data sets like attitudinal, demographic, and behavioral data when reevaluating your marketing campaigns.

    40| Sell what's priceless. The affluent are no longer as interested in material things as they were leading up to the Internet boom. Instead, they'd rather purchase products and service that enhance their experiences. Take heed from Citibank's "Live Richly" and Mastercard's "Priceless" campaigns.

    41| Choose your customers. Find some commonality among your best customers in your database and cross reference that with prospects from external databases to pick the most profitable customers.

    42| "Don't reinvent your relationships," says Joshua Yuster, CEO of BranchIT Corp. Relationship management software from companies like BranchIT, Spoke Software, and Leverage Software can search digital records of customers and potential customers who have preexisting relationships with other members of your team.

    43| Reward team players. In the big picture a happy customer is more important than one salesperson's commission. Provide bonuses or team player rewards for referring customers to the right internal sales agent or business partner who's closer to the customer and can add more value.

    44| Think, partners = customers. "Treat [partners] like they're customers," says CatherineSmith, COO of ING U.S. Financial Services. Partners, like customers, want what they want when and how they want it. So just like you do with customers, identify your partners' needs and wants, and implement processes
    that keep them smiling.


    45| Bundle up. To really reward those loyal customers who turn to you for multiple products and services, cut them some slack with a discounted pricing plan to show your appreciation. You may not pull in as much in the short term, but you'll score lifelong customers--and long-term profits.

    46| They're not lost, just misplaced. Almost every business goes through rough periods, either individually or when the economy sags, and so lose customers as a result. When business picks up again, be sure to attempt to restart your relationships with lapsed customers--they're easier to sell to than brand-new ones.

    47| Automate contract renewals. When focusing on customer acquisition efforts, don't let existing customers slip away. Look to contract renewal applications that will remind sales professionals when clients' contracts are nearing expiration and can also automate contract renewal efforts with customers.

    48| Streamline your checkout process. You wouldn't give your family (except maybe your in-laws) a roundabout route to get to your home if there was an easier set of directions. The same idea applies to your online checkout process. Make it less of a maze and more of an express lane. For example, Overstock.com condensed its checkout procedure from seven pages to three, and retooled its product pages to make it easier to complete the checkout process, bolstering conversion rates and reducing online-checkout customer calls.

    49| Get personal. Customers hate to feel like the sales agent is reading to them from a script. Learn your customers' personal needs and profiles and target your service to each individual. It will make them feel important and that you value the relationship.

    50| Get cozy. When people come to your retail store, financial institution, or garage, make them feel comfortable. Many kinds of companies provide coffee and cake in the mornings for customers who must come in before work. Others provide free Internet access to people while they wait. Retail stores increasingly are adding in-store cafes to keep hungry shoppers around longer.
    . VodaWebs....Luxury Group
    * Success Is Potential Realized *
  • Vasili
    Moderator

    • Mar 2006
    • 14683

    #2
    Re: 100 Proven CRM Ideas You Can Use , Parts I and II

    100 Proven CRM Ideas, Part 2


    51| Know when to back off. Give people time to figure out what they want. Especially in brick-and-mortar companies, don't attack people the moment they walk in the door. They may get intimidated; even friendly dogs can be scary.

    52| Manage time appropriately. No one wants to stand on line or wait on the phone to make a purchase. Let time build relationships for you, not damage them. Train sales staff and invest in the parts of the customer relationship that matter most--keeping customers engaged with the company and speeding them on their way once they've made a decision.

    53| Always know more than your customer. The Internet has created smarter shoppers, so the sales and support teams need to know more than product specs, service details, and competitor information. Knowing new-
    product ship dates and upcoming sales and promotion dates will create a more grateful and loyal customer.

    54| Balance your agent pool properly. If you decide to outsource your contact center operations, don't choose offshoring just because labor is cheaper. Consider your and your customers' needs (e.g., follow-the-sun support and bilingual agents) to find the right mix of offshore, onshore, and near-shore agents.

    55| Step out of the ivory tower. CSRs are often the best link between a company and its customers. Have the top brass step out of the executive suite and don agent caps for a day or, at the very least, shadow an agent. This simple effort will expose them to paramount issues facing CSRs, the contact center, and customers.

    56| Be environmentally aware. Maybe it's time you jazzed up the beige cube farm you call a contact center. Your call center agents spend most of their time on the phone and in front of a PC, but that doesn't mean that their space has no impact on their morale or performance. Rejuvenate your agents and their surroundings by retooling the design of your center.

    57| Hire creatively. Every team needs a squad of reserves to pitch in during tight situations, but why not step outside the box when bulking up your reserve lineup? When managing call spikes in your contact center, consider Voice over IP to enable stay-at-home-moms and retirees who wish to work part-time flexible hours from the comfort of their own homes.

    58| Consider one architecture. Combining voice and data onto one VoIP network enables agents to work out of the comfort of their own home. These virtual contact centers provide lower operational costs, but still use the same call queue and customer data, which keep costs down. The beauty of it is that it's transparent to the customer.

    59| Be proactive with surveys. Waiting for customers and partners to tell you their opinions is like waiting to be told to throw a live grenade. Ask before you act on a new strategy, or at least roll a survey out alongside
    the implementation. Keep the initiative with structured interviews to continue to capture every possible customer insight and need.

    Complaint Department, Take a Number
    60| Take constructive criticism. Your least satisfied 10 percent of customers are likely some of your most vocal, and in their eyes you're doing something wrong. Make the effort to engage them to find out how to improve your service--your more profitable customers will thank you, and you just might rescue some of the bottom tier.

    61| Create agents of change. Consider a system that manages good customer ideas. Call center agents should be able to capture customer complaints or suggestions electronically, which can then be reviewed and passed on to an executive who can implement change, according to Lior Arussy, president of Strativity Group.

    62| Follow up. Let customers know when their ideas have been implemented. When customers take the time to suggest change and the company follows up and tells them those changes have been implemented,
    it makes the customers feel appreciated and important.

    63| One and done. Solving your customer inquiries on the first go-round to avoid repeat calls and additional costs will delight customers and keep costs in check. Empower agents with scripting and reporting tools, call flow and routing management tools, and order-tracking software. But keep a close eye on your hold times. You may
    be resolving issues on the first call--accompanied by outrageously large doses of piped-in music.

    64| Dial 0 for assistance. Taking the IVR route can be effective and easier on your wallet, but some customers have complex inquiries that require a live agent or simply prefer the human touch. "That zero-out option...gives customers a choice," says Rosanne D'Ausilio, Ph.D., president of Human Technologies Global and author of Humanizing Your Interaction Hub. So make your employees available to customers.

    65| Make information free and easy. If your objective is to minimize the number of times your customers press zero to wait for a customer service rep, don't just prevent them from interacting via a live agent. Instead, make information easily available through cost-savvy touch points like the Web or email.

    66| Unify contact queues. Customers, regardless of channel, need to be consciously prioritized by the company, rather than punishing email, fax, and mail users.

    67| Balance agent schedules with call volumes. If you have only a handful of agents on deck to field massive amounts of incoming calls, or if you're overstaffing against a modest call volume, map out your anticipated highs and lows and then staff the right number of agents at the right time. This will mean less stress on your staff at peak times, and you won't bore them into oblivion during lulls.

    68| Play to agents' strengths. "Be careful not to assume that a good phone agent makes a good email agent," says Maggie Klenke, founding partner with The Call Center School. Instead of forcing agents into roles where they are likely to fail, maximize their skills by identifying strong points and matching them to their best roles.

    Take a Load Off, Fanny
    69| Give me a break! Take a long road trip without any breaks on the way and you're likely to get tired of it. Your agents' eyes may not be heavy from hours of driving, but they might be closing from staring at a computer screen or from endlessly answering calls with no time to kick their feet up. Incorporate time away from the computer and phone into their schedules to spur productivity and reduce at-work aggravation.

    70| Back off, big brother. Your agents are under enough stress interacting with sometimes infuriated and rude customers, so don't add to it with supervisors hovering over their shoulders. Monitoring your agents is essential to determine if they are meeting company standards and objectives, but consider quality-monitoring tools to decrease that unnerving overseer element that may be affecting their performance.

    71| Reduce stress with levity. Smiling in person shows a customer you want to be there for her. Smiling on the phone comes through with the tone of your voice and your attitude. This is more than a p********--it's been proven in studies. If you look and sound friendly, they'll want to seek your help in the future.

    72| Stay ahead of the communication curve. The gen-Y sect isn't the only group that's attracted to some of the newer channels like instant messaging and blogging. Trendsetters come in all ages, so take heed and communicate with your customers the way they want to, and familiarize yourself with the lingo and trends to show that you're in line with their needs.

    73| Listen! Communication no longer is a one-way street going from marketers to consumers. Companies need to focus on their inbound messages as much as their outbound ones. Listening to consumers' complaints, concerns, and desires will help enhance the customer experience and could result in additional revenue streams or just some bright ideas.

    74| Anticipate customer needs. Focusing on the quick sale does nothing for relationship building. So think long term: For example, someone shopping for a newborn might appreciate a promotional offering a month later for a four-to-eight-week-old.

    75| Tchochkes go a long way. Trinkets, swag, premiums--whatever you call them, people love to get them. Not only will a bottle opener or notebook with your logo make customers happy, but it also provides free advertising. Why do you think so many companies print T-shirts?

    76| Consolidate communication. Yes, it's your job to interact with your customers, but don't pelt them with information from all angles. For instance, make sure that your sales departments and marketing departments are not sending your customers the same information. You hate hearing the same things over and over again. So do your customers.

    77| Quality over quantity. You're in the driver's seat when it comes to building customer relationships, but speeding through your interactions with them can crash a developing relationship. Whether on the phone or in a face-to-face meeting, don't risk losing a cross- or upsell opportunity by rushing through customer correspondences for speedy completion rates. When flowers and chocolate won't help build long-lasting relationships, time and effort will.

    78| Automate processes. Having customers enter their personal information on a Web site versus providing it to an agent over the phone reduces the potential for human error. Also, customers may feel uncomfortable revealing personal data like medical and financial information to another person. But be careful, customers are more likely to lie online, as agents have a keen ability to determine whether or not the caller is Donald Duck.

    79| Everyone owns the customer experience. The CCO may quarterback the customer experience, but you can't complete a sales play without linemen, backs, and receivers. In a recent destinationCRM.com poll, 46 percent of respondents indicated that customer service is in charge of owning the customer experience--that means that marketing, sales, and IT comprise the other 54 percent. Whichever department it is, promote individual responsibility there so that everyone has a hand in building customer loyalty.

    80| Learn to Adapt. Businesses change, so CRM and its related technology must also. From regulatory changes to mergers and acquisitions, every shift in the external business climate can require corresponding moves in strategy and business processes. Businesses need technology infrastructure that can respond to rapid change, and be agile and flexible.

    81| Respond quickly to customer queries. Whether they send an email or leave a message, or come to the service counter, customers' time is precious. No one wants to sit around waiting for an answer. Even if the immediate answer is "I don't know, but I'll find someone who does and I'll get back to you," that at least says you've heard them. Studies show that most customers are happy with a response within 48 hours.

    82| Find cheerleaders. Many elements of CRM strategy focus on locating a company's best customers, typically with hopes of duplicating that success and making the relationship even more profitable. Consider turning your best customers into credible advocates for peers by building a better pool of reference customers--they don't even have to carry pom-poms.

    83| You don't have to be Jack. We've all heard the expression "a jack of all trades, a master of none." If your company has extreme strengths in a particular market, it may be better to focus on your core competency and outsource other areas, such as sales, customer service, or market research.

    84| Don't ignore soft skills. Knowing the product isn't enough, as anybody who's taken meetings with an engineer can tell you. Employees at all levels of your organization, especially those on the front line, should practice people skills.

    85| Come again? Customers opt out if you make them repeat the same information over and over, or type in their information only to have to speak the same details to a live agent. When customers start memorizing the order in which questions will be asked and providing you the information before you even ask for it, things are out of control. The goal should be one and done when giving account information.

    86| Be mindful of corporate culture. "You can have all the talent in the world, strategic and management processes, and incentive plans at a ten, but if your culture is at a three, guess how much of your business plan gets implemented? No more than 30 percent," says Dr. Fred Johnson, CEO of InitiativeOne. "Your culture will set the limits of how far your company will go."

    87| Spy on the competition. Don't shy away from auditing the best processes of your rivals. Looking at your competitors' practices can give you a competitive edge. Trying to reinvent the wheel is counterproductive. Instead, enhance the wheel that's already in motion.

    88| Don't let the "gotchas" get you down. When going through the process of implementation, every unforeseen obstacle is just another opportunity to improve your processes. For this, just watch Chevy Chase in any
    of the National Lampoon's Vacation movies and you'll get the point--you're learning the value of family, and
    your customers and employees are that family.

    89| Don't throw good money after bad. Spending more money on a new application to fix a problem isn't always the answer. Many times, realigning what you already have and leveraging current applications to gain new functionality or services can solve the problem. "Many times, there's a lot of functionality and potential with what you already have, and you don't even know it," says Martin Schneider, enterprise analyst at The 451 Group.

    90| Leave room for expansion. Today you may be a pocket-size startup, but in time your fledgling company may develop into a larger entity. Shy away from limiting yourself by making sure your CRM platform is flexible enough to handle your potential growth.


    DIM IDEAS
    91| Hiding from customers. All you companies that have taken your phone numbers and direct email addresses off your Web sites, or disabled 0-for-operator on your IVRs? Shame, shame, shame.

    92| Pitching adaptive pricing as a consumer benefit. Tell that to California power customers who remember rolling blackouts and sky-high spot prices.

    93| Let the IT department specify and buy the CRM system. This would be a good idea if CRM were only a technology issue.

    94| Out of sight, out of mind. When your kids are off to summer camp it doesn't mean you stop thinking about them. Well, at least we hope not. The same goes for your contact centers and your agents. Neglecting those centers and agents that are located away from your headquarters can lead to customer information slipping through miscommunication cracks, and a feeling of abandonment among dejected agents.

    95| Making the return process a nightmare. You're paying employees by the hour to aggravate customers only to give them, in many cases, what they rightfully deserve in the end.

    96| Overpay for new customers. Paying more to acquire customers than you are willing to spend to keep them is a recipe for churn.

    97| Letting offshoring become political. Fewer people would have noticed if the service
    were better.

    98| Automate only one group of users with the same job title, instead of automating a process that incorporates multiple departments.

    99| Assuming every agent can cross- and/or upsell. To turn contact centers into revenue generators, some managers encourage their agents to cross-sell or upsell whenever possible. The critical slip-up, however, is assuming that every agent knows how. Train your agents to capitalize on these possible revenue opportunities, instead of forcing them into roles that they're not equipped to handle.

    100| Focus on sales and not on marketing. What good is requiring sales reps to enter their leads without integrating their systems with the marketing department's system?

    100 Proven CRM Ideas, Part 1
    ...successful and disastrous: 90 bright ideas for your CRM strategy and 10 dim ones to avoid.

    Edited by David Myron

    by Coreen Bailor, Colin Beasty, Jason Compton, Alexandra DeFelice, Marshall Lager, and David Myron
    From CRM Magazine


    . VodaWebs....Luxury Group
    * Success Is Potential Realized *

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