Module 2
Module 2
CRM Cycle,
Types of CRM.
E-CRM
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Types of customers
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Types of customers
3.The Mercenaries-
– Defies Satisfaction- Loyalty rule
– Maybe completely satisfied but not loyal
– Expensive to acquire, quick to depart
– Chase low prices,
– Pursue Fashion trends
– Buy on Impulse
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Types of customers
4.The Hostages
– Customers are stuck in virtual Monopoly
– They usually belong to companies operating in
monopolistic environment.
– Or Habitual of particular brand
– Shows inertia in brand switching
– Complain frequently,
– Create low morale with employees
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Customer satisfaction and
Behaviour type
Hostages Possibility of
Loyalist
(expectation <
Terrorists experience)
Competitors’ discounts
Defectors offering or benefits
1 2 3 4 5
Strong dissatisfaction so – so (10~50%)Strong satisfaction
Coming and
Mercenary High Medium
Going
Unable to
Hostage Low to Medium Low
Switch
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Types of customers on basis of
profitability
Short term
Long term
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Customer Groupings
Butterflies True Friends
(high profit;short term) High profit- long term
Milk these accounts
as long
Invest maximum time and effort
Customer Profitability
Strangers Barnacles
(Low profit-short term) Low profit –long term
Do not invest in these Analyze the size of potential
customers business
Maximize the profit on each Cross sell if potential is large; else
transaction minimize investment
Period of Association
– The Reinartz & Kumar Model
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Type of relationships
1. price centered relationship -mercenaries go for
best deal in terms of prices
2. Need centered relationship- when personalization
is done, it is with apostles in favorable
circumstances & with defectors in case of service
failure.
3. Value centered relationship- a collaborative
relationship between firm & customer, only with
apostles.
4. Product centered relationship -focuses on delivery
of customized products, services & solutions. Need
to segment precisely. Involve customers in product
designing. with apostles or hostages
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Types of CRM
• Operational CRM
• Analytical CRM
• Collaborative CRM
• E-CRM allows customers to access company
services electronically
• M-CRM allows customers or managers to
access the systems for instance from a mobile
phone or PDA with internet access, resulting
in high flexibility.
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1. Operational CRM
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Business Benefits
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Components of Operational CRM
• Sales force automation (SFA) automates critical
sales and sales force management functions. It
requires a well designed database in order to store
and retrieve customer details & customer preference
tracking.
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Customer segmentation
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3. Collaborative CRM
• Collaborative CRM's ultimate goal is to use
information collected from all departments to
improve the quality of customer service
• This requires a clear contact management
strategy which enables everyone in an
organisation to see who is talking to who
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Business Benefits
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Aim of collaborative CRM
• Collaborative CRM aims to get various
departments within a business, such as sales,
services and marketing, to share the useful
information that they collect from interactions
with customers.
• Feedback from a technical support center, for
example, could be used to inform marketing
about specific services and features requested
by customers.
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Aim
• Collaborative CRM facilitates interactions with
customers through all channels (personal,
letter, fax, phone, web, e-mail) and supports
co-ordination of employee teams and
channels.
• It is a solution that brings people, processes
and data together so companies can better
serve and retain their customers. E.g.
customers to check in for their flights by SMS
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CRM Value Chain
CRM value chain identifies five key steps in the
development and implementation of a CRM
strategy :
These five primary stages of the CRM value
chain represent three main sequential
phases of CRM strategy: analysis, resource
development and implementation.
1. customer portfolio analysis,
2. customer intimacy,
3. network development,
. Customer portfolio analysis
• This involves an analysis of the actual and
potential customer base to identify which
customers you want to serve in the future.
• Top of the list will be strategically significant
customers, including those that will generate
profit (value) in the future.
Customer intimacy
• you will get to know the identity, profile,
history, requirements, expectations and
preferences of the customers that you have
chosen to serve
• Customer portfolio analysis (CPA) and
customer intimacy (CI) are primarily analytical
activities. CPA involves using customer and
market data to decide which customers to
serve; CI involves getting to understand
customers and their requirements.
Network development
• you will identify, brief and manage
relationships with your company's network
members.
• These are the organizations and people that
contribute to the creation and delivery of the
value proposition(s) for the chosen customers.
• The network can include external members
such as suppliers, partners and
owners/investors, as well as one important
internal party, employees.
Value proposition development
• this involves identifying sources of value for
customers and creating a proposition and
experience that meet their requirements,
expectations and preferences.
• Network development and value proposition
development are focused on building or
acquiring resources to create and deliver
value to customers.
Manage the customer lifecycle
• The customer lifecycle is the customer's
journey from 'suspect' towards 'advocate
status'.
• Managing the customer lifecycle is about
implementing CRM by acquiring and retaining
customers, and developing their value.
• Managing the lifecycle requires attention to
both process and structure:
- process: how will the company go about the
important processes of customer acquisition,
• These steps are iterative and reflexive. They
are iterative in the sense that the five-step
process is repetitive and continuous.
• It is not a one-time process that leads to a
strategy that is serviceable for ever.
• In a dynamic environment in which
competitors keep improving their value
proposition it is important to review
periodically which customers to serve, what to
serve them and how to deliver the value.
• The process is reflexive in the sense that there
is backwards and forwards interdependence
between the five stages.
• Analysis at stage 1 (customer portfolio
analysis) leads to a decision about which
customers the company will serve.
• This decision determines the composition of
the value proposition (stage 4).
• If the company does not have the
competencies to deliver, either alone or in
partnership with other organizations, the
proposition that customers want, then the