CRM
CRM
CRM
Relationship Marketing
is a philosophy of doing business that focuses on relationship/retention does not necessarily emphasize acquiring new customers CRM means attracting, maintaining and enhancing customer relationship CRM is a business philosophy and set of strategies, programs, and systems that focus on identifying and building loyalty with a service providers most valuable customers.
Customer-Firm Relationship
Todays marketers seek to develop long-term relationships with customers. Relationship marketing includes:
Enhancing
Retaining Satisfying
Acquiring
Benefit
Confidence benefits
less risk of something going wrong, less anxiety ability to trust provider know what to expect get firms best service level mutual recognition, known by name friendship, enjoyment of social aspects better prices, discounts, special deals unavailable to others extra services higher priority with waits, faster service
Social benefits
Economic Benefits
Increased revenues over time from customers Reduced marketing and administrative cost Ability to maintain margins without reducing prices Free advertising through word of mouth communication Customer voluntary performance Social benefits to other customers Contribute to co-production Employee receiving social benefits Employee retention
Customer Loyalty
A customers willingness to continue patronizing a firm over the long term and recommending the firms products to friends and associates. Customer loyalty is all about attracting the right customer, getting them to buy, buy often, buy in higher quantities and bring you even more customers.
keeping touch with customers using email marketing, thank you cards and more. treating their team well so they treat their customers well. showing that they care and remembering what the customers like and dont like. by rewarding the customers for choosing them over their competitors. by truly caring for the customers and figuring out how to make them more happy and joyful.
Customer Loyalty
Customer Loyalty
User behavior
when, where, how services used quantity/value of purchases frequency of use profitability of relationship sensitivity to marketing variables
Create a mix of segments to reduce risks of volatility during swings of economic cycles
Timing of service use (e.g., by hour, day, season) Level of skill and experience as co producer/self-server Preferred language in face-to-face contact Access to electronic delivery systems (e.g., Internet) Attitudes toward use of new service technologies
Which segment sees high value in our offer, spends more with us over time, costs less to maintain, and spreads positive word-of-mouth?
Which segment costs us in time, effort and money, yet does not provide the return we want? Which segment is difficult to do business with?
Loyalty (Retention)
Zone of Affection
80
Near Apostle
60
40
20
Terrorist 0
1
Very dissatisfied
5
Very Satisfied
Satisfaction
services makes switching a major effort that customer is unwilling to undertake unless extremely dissatisfied with service provider benefit from consolidating their purchasing of various services from the same provider
Customers
Reward-based Bonds
Incentives
that offer rewards based on frequency of purchase, value of purchase, or combination of both Financial bonds
Discounts
on purchases, loyalty program rewards (e.g., frequent flier miles), cash-back programs
Non-financial
Priority
rewards
to loyalty program members for waitlists and queues in call centers, higher baggage allowances, priority upgrading, access to airport lounges for frequent flyers
Intangible
Special
rewards
Reward-based loyalty programs are relatively easy to copy and rarely provide a sustained competitive
Social Bonds
Based on personal relationships between providers and customers Harder to build and imitate and thus, better chance of retention in the long term
Customization Bonds
Customized service for loyal customers
e.g., Starbucks
Customers may find it hard to adjust to another service provider who cannot customize service
Structural Bonds
Mostly
seen in b2b settings Stimulate loyalty through structural relationships between provider and customer
Joint
Can
AirlinesSMS
check-in, SMS e-mail alerts for flight arrival and departure times
Difficult
for competition to draw customers away when they have integrated their way of doing things with existing supplier
Discrete transactions: Each usage involves payment to service supplier by an essentially "anonymous" consumer Membership cards: Capture transactions, communicate customer preferences to frontline Loyalty reward programs increasingly used by all businesses in response to competition
Frequent fliers programrewards dominated in miles For example: Feel excluded from rewards program because of low balances, rewards seen as having little value, cumbersome redemption process
Dont lose sight of broader goals of offering high service quality, nor allow service to other customers to deteriorate
Timing
Understand reasons for customer switching Churn diagnostics common in mobile phone industry
Analysis
a short set of questions when customer cancels account; in-depth interviews of former customers by third party agency
Churn
Alert Systems:
Monitor
activity in individual customer accounts to predict impending customer switching Proactive detention effortssend voucher, customer
Value Proposition
Pricing
High Price Price Increases Unfair Pricing Deceptive Pricing
Service Switching
Inconvenience
Competition
Others
Involuntary Switching
Customer Moved Provider Closed
Ethical Problems
Source: Adapted from Susan M. Keaveney, Customer Switching Behavior in Service Industries: An Exploratory Study, Journal of Marketing 59 (April 1995), pp. 7182.
Delivery quality
Cellular phone industry: Handset replacement a common reason for subscribers discontinuing servicesoffer proactive handset replacement programs
Reactive measures
Save teams: Specially trained call center staff to deal with customers who want to cancel their accounts Be careful about how save teams are rewarded
Implement effective complaint handling and service recovery procedures Increase switching costs
Natural
For
switching costs
example, changing primary bank account many related services tied to account
Can
Loyalty is Important to Profitability : Index of Customer Profits over Time (Year 1=100)
350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0
Year 1
Credit card
Year 2
Industrial laundry
Year 3
Year 4
Year 5
Auto servicing
Industrial distribution
Recommend new customers to firm (act as unpaid sales people) Trust leads to willingness to pay regular prices vs. shopping for discounts
7
Source: Reichheld and Sasser
Year
exceeding 4 hours
Upgraded check-in
Preferred boarding
Special services assistance Bonus air miles Upgrade for two
Signifies the whole process by which relationships with customers are built and maintained. CRM as an enabler, offering a unified customer interface and allow firms to better understand and segment the customers etc. Applications include:
Data Data
collection analysis
Sales
force automation
automation
Marketing Call
center automation
How should our value proposition change to increase customer loyalty? How much customization or one-to-one marketing and service delivery is appropriate and profitable? What is the incremental profit potential of increasing share of wallet with current customers? How much does this vary by customer tier and/or segment? How much time and resource can we allocate to CRM right now? If we believe in CRM, why have we not taken steps in that direction before? What can we do today to develop customer relationship without spending on technology?