The Eight Building Blocks of CRM Scott D
The Eight Building Blocks of CRM Scott D
The Eight Building Blocks of CRM Scott D
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ANALYSIS
Customer relationship management (CRM) represents the key business strategy that will
determine successful enterprises in the 21st century. Gartner’s framework, the Eight Building
Blocks of CRM, details the critical components of a successful CRM initiative.
Gartner’s CRM Framework
Gartner defines CRM as a business strategy that maximizes profitability, revenue and customer
satisfaction by:
• Draw a picture of what the enterprise wants to be for its target customers
The next step is to create a set of competitively differentiated brand values that are important to
the customer. They should be determined from the customer’s viewpoint, not the company’s
perspective.
The final step is to outline what the customer experience should be for different situations and
customer segments.
Developing the CRM Strategy
A CRM strategy takes direction and financial goals from the business strategy, and revisits the
marketing strategy to customize it (see Figure 1). It provides an overview of how the enterprise
will build valuable customer relationships and customer loyalty.
Business Strategy
How do we deliver stakeholder value and build competitive advantage?
Source: Gartner
The first stage in developing the CRM strategy is to segment customers into categories, and to
set objectives and metrics for each segment.
The second stage is to assess the state of the customer base when viewed as an asset. That can
be achieved by plotting the strength and value of customer relationships along two perspectives:
High
Protect Invest to Invest to Damage
Key Position Protect Win Over Limitation
Strength of Relationship
High Low
(Value to Customer)
Source: Gartner
• Leadership: Today’s CEOs should seek to develop organizations that are less
hierarchical and that have a strong sense of purpose, and they must know how to
motivate their staffs.
• Incentives: Targets must be aligned with customer goals, but recognition and
celebration of contributions are more powerful motivators. There are numerous ways to
recognize people.
Redesigning Processes
A customer-centric approach to processes is likely to affect many applications. The key is
deciding which processes present opportunities for the enterprise to differentiate itself and
enhance its value to the customer.
Enterprises should use the following framework in their customer process re-engineering efforts:
• Audit and map the touchpoints and processes that affect customers.
• Identify the key processes from the customer’s perspective — find the processes that
cause the most dissatisfaction and focus on them first.
• Quantify and prioritize these processes according to their impact on strategic CRM
goals.
• Implement changes in the front office and back office where necessary.
• No process should be left without ownership. Ensure that each key process has a cross-
functional owner.
• Examine how these changes may affect suppliers and other enterprise partners. The
processes that matter most to customers may be entirely internal and within the control
of the enterprise, but they often impact other enterprises.
• Using customer input, set meaningful, measurable targets. Set up a customer service-
level agreement (SLA) for the key processes.
• Segment the customer base, reassess key processes and redefine SLAs.
Action Items:
• Audit the business processes that affect the customer and map them by touchpoint.
Solicit feedback from customers about their priorities.
• Prioritize processes based on their importance to customers and their impact on the
enterprise’s strategic CRM objectives.
Creating a Customer Information Strategy
Successful CRM demands the creation of a customer information “blood supply” that flows
through the organization, and tight integration between operational and analytical systems.
To achieve their CRM objectives and gain a competitive advantage, enterprises must establish a
business plan for sourcing, maintaining and leveraging their customer information assets.
The sharing of customer information within the enterprise must be part of a coherent
organizational strategy that is used to determine:
• Which areas of the enterprise’s customer value chain are opportunities for competitive
advantage, and where the enterprise feels “pain”
Action Items:
• Identify and strengthen the weak links in your enterprise’s customer relationship value
chain.
Enabling CRM Through Technology
Enterprises have many sources for CRM applications. They range from homegrown systems to
enterprise application suites that include CRM. In between are integrated CRM suites, CRM
frameworks and best-of-breed applications.
The fully integrated enterprise suite guarantees that the data and processes are integrated
internally, but its horizontal and vertical functionality tends to lag behind the best-of-breed
applications and CRM suites.
Action Item: Review your enterprise’s skill levels, its technology outlook, and its process, data
model and integration requirements before evaluating and selecting CRM applications.
Defining and Monitoring Metrics
CRM metrics have a number of applications, including:
• Corporate metrics are set by board-level executives. They have a direct bearing on the
CRM strategy.
• Customer strategic metrics monitor the success of the CRM strategy. They should have
clear links to corporate objectives. The most important ones are connected to the
customer life cycle.
• Operational and process metrics measure tactics and feed customer strategic metrics.
Establishing the right ones requires determining the most important drivers of the
strategic measures.
• Create a hierarchy of CRM metrics for the purposes of defining key CRM strategy
objectives, and of tracking progress in meeting those objectives. Build processes to
continuously monitor customer feedback, and conduct ongoing market research.
• Build the hierarchy of CRM metrics from the top down, with bottom-up checking, and
ensure that the different levels are interlinked. Communicate the purpose of the metrics
system internally. Work with other parts of the business, particularly finance, to help
them understand and integrate CRM metrics into the broader set of corporate metrics.
• Ensure CRM metrics are key to the business intelligence competency center. Appoint
someone in the center to focus specifically on mapping and defining the linkages
between CRM metrics.
Bottom Line
• To achieve the long-term value of CRM, enterprises must understand that it is a strategy
involving the whole business, and therefore should be approached at an enterprise
level. Many enterprises still attempt to implement CRM as a series of unintegrated,
departmental projects — but that is not “true CRM,” and will not yield benefits or long-
term value for the enterprise.
• True CRM is not easy. It requires board-level vision and leadership to drive a relentless
focus on the customer; otherwise, it will remain fragmented. It involves potentially
difficult changes to processes, culture and organization. Technology staff must grapple
with the challenges of multichannel alignment, system integration and data quality.
• “Management Update: The Real-Time Enterprise at the Customer Front Line,” (IGG-
05282003-01)
This research is part of a set of related research pieces. See "Inside Gartner Top View" for an
overview.
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