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Avoid the Four Perils of CRM
Description:
Customer relationship management is one of the hottest management tools
today. But more than half of all
CRM initiatives fail to produce the anticipated results. Why? And
what can companies do to reverse that negative trend? The authors--three
senior Bain consultants--have spent the past 10 years analyzing
customer-loyalty initiatives, both successful and unsuccessful, at more
than 200 companies in a wide range of industries.
They've found that CRM backfires
in part because executives don't understand what they are implementing,
let alone how much it will cost or how long it will take. The
authors' research unveiled four common pitfalls that managers stumble
into when trying to implement CRM. Each pitfall is a consequence of a
single flawed assumption--that CRM is software that will automatically
manage customer relationships. It isn't. Rather,
CRM is the creation of customer
strategies and processes to build customer loyalty, which are then
supported by the technology. This article looks at best practices
in CRM at several companies, including the New York Times Co., Square D,
GE Capital, Grand Expeditions, and BMC Software. It provides an
intellectual framework for any company that wants to start a CRM program
or turn around a failing one.
Subjects Covered:
Consumers, Customer relations, Customer retention, Customer service,
Customization, Loyalty, Market definition, Market research, Market
segmentation, Marketing strategy, Organizational behavior, Product
design, Product development, Sales & marketing, Service management,
Services.
This article appears in the February 2002 issue of
the Harvard Business Review. Cornerstone Business Solutions will
be pleased to furnish you a reprint that we purchase if you kindly
notify us by telephone at (505) 325-4900. |
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