Posts from — February 2009
The Mutation of CRM
Much is being made this month of the birth anniversary of the evolutionary biologist Charles Darwin on the 12th February. So it is appropriate to look at how the new economic and social environment will affect CRM.
The climate of 2009 will see the nature of CRM mutate from ‘what customers give us’ to ‘what we give customers; and get back’. The idea of providing value for money to customer ‘tribes’ will begin to dawn as communities are explored. A notion quite distinct from the previous view of CRM as individual cross-selling and retention for shareholder profits.
“2009 is a big year for CRM and a big deal. Transformational might actually be more than a political term.” Paul Greenberg
Customers well understand their ‘premium’ status, and those who give their time and money to companies will want more back to solve personal requirements. Companies who helpfully seek to alleviate the emotional and practical issues of recession will build trust. If companies continue to take the profit from customer knowledge, customers will just opt out of relationships.
Reciprocity for mutual benefit - not only between company and customer, but between customer and customer - is a fundamental part of this new thinking. Here, North America, with its strategic use of social software and experiential marketing, definitely leads the way.
Organisations that see themselves as ‘service platforms’ and build facilitative skills will have tuned into the right wave length. Which is why there is a growing emphasis on new business models utilising both technology and partnerships. Stephanie Seakins, principal consultant at OgilvyOne Hong Kong stresses that Asian companies “are now prepared to consider new thinking in order to recover lost reliability and credibility.”
Other signs of the CRM mutation are a change from ‘customer management’ to the more co-creative ‘customer engagement’, and the popularity of sales through service - where service is an entree, rather than an afterthought, that leads to the provision of a personalised solution. If you don’t listen more carefully to your customers your competitors and other consumers will.
According to Paul Greenberg, US author of CRM at the Speed of Light, CRM in 2009 is about understanding, involving and benefiting customers, and I would agree that that is a good summing up - as long as profitability is also added on the end. The secret of corporate sustainability is the constant balancing of benefit between company and customer.
February 7, 2009 No Comments
