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<span class="pro_member_name">Christine Ely</span>
Christine Ely
WordPress and vTiger CRM Developer and Consultant working in Seattle and Phoenix
Seattle, Washington
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Maximizing Profit through CRM and Networking

Customer Relationship Management (CRM) is invaluable in acquiring new customers, reactivating dormant accounts and retaining clients. It’s totally affordable by any business, sole proprietor or networker.
Written Jan 19, 2009, read 2236 times since then.
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Although the term CRM is now synonymous with software it is a concept that has been utilized for decades by companies that operate customer centric policies.  It basically involves the processes and methodologies employed in managing the relationships between the company and the customer.

Customers are fickle creatures.  They want to be looked after, nurtured, and made to feel special.  A typical customer's basic instinct is to be loyal.  It's like any relationship.  It may not be everything you want but it's familiar and comfortable.  But just like a relationship, if you ignore and neglect your customers, they may get a roving eye... and your competitors are always out there trying to snap them up.

If you only have a few customers, it's possible to remember and manage them with a minimum of technology.  Provide a good service, keep track of their orders, call them every now and again to see that they're happy, send them thank you cards and so on.  That's effectively customer relationship management.

But what if you have ten customers, fifty?  Will you remember every aspect of every transaction?  Will you remember to follow up on every call?   

The purpose of CRM software is to enable you to manage multiple customers personally.  To automate processes that 'touch' your customers on a regular basis and then to remember every instance of every conversation, email, appointment, or transaction of any kind.  All of these transactions are stored directly in your customer's unique record so that your total relationship with that customer is always available.

Good CRM systems feature 'Activity Managers', which can automatically create a sequence of tasks and events. 

Let's say you meet a bunch of people at an event who express an interest in your service.  You'll enter them into the CRM system and then apply an 'Activity' from the Activity Manager Library.  A typical activity (series of tasks and events to be posted to the client's record) would be:

  1. Do immediately:  Send an email to express how happy you were to meet the person
  2. In 1 day:  Send a flyer or brochure of your services by mail
  3. In 3 days:  Make a phone call to reconnect and confirm that your flyer was received and is there anything more you can do at this time.
  4. In 10 days:  Send eNewsletter (and add to monthly newsletter mailing list)
  5. In 21 days:  Invite to your own network meeting
  6. And so on...

Multiple activities can be created and applied to existing customers, new prospects, network partners or anyone else in your database.  The whole series of events is immediately applied to the customer record and the system updates all the relevant task lists, to-dos and appointment schedulers.   

No matter how many customers or prospects you have, the CRM system will be managing the relationship, sending out reminders and thank you cards, scheduling phone calls, remembering renewal dates and so much more.  And all of these events and transactions will be neatly filed against the individual customer records.

Good CRM systems offer full synchronization with portable devices like your PDA, Blackberry, iPhone or Windows Mobile device.  Synchronization works both ways so that if you're at a meeting and enter an appointment into your Blackberry, it will synchronize and update your CRM system.  If you constantly use Microsoft Outlook to schedule appointments, then it too joins the party and synchronization becomes a 3 way process.

CRM software has evolved over the years to accommodate new technologies and methodologies.  It used to be the preserve of big companies but nowadays, highly intuitive but hugely powerful systems are affordable by the smallest of businesses.

In my experience, a fully utilized CRM system typically increases business by over 30% because it encourages you to treat your customers the way they expect.  Where, in the past, you may have neglected to follow up, thank, send out renewal applications, cross sale and up sale notifications, special offers, anniversary cards, newsletters and so on, your CRM system will methodically churn out personalized materials and your customers will continue to love you and do business with you.

CRM software has become an incredibly important category.  How well you know your customer will determine how much business he or she will do with you.  As Sir Francis Bacon once said, "Knowledge is Power".  That knowledge can be contained in your CRM system.

 

Learn more about the author, Christine Ely.

Comment on this article

  • Instructor/Trainer 
Phoenix, Arizona 
Rolland Lawrenz
    Posted by Rolland Lawrenz, Phoenix, Arizona | Jan 25, 2009

    Excellent article, I have such a system. Still trying to fully understand it. This helped me some.

  • Supplier/installer of solar and security window films 
Covington, Washington 
Brian Wilder
    Posted by Brian Wilder, Covington, Washington | Jan 29, 2009

    Nice article. Makes it clear the benefits if CRM.

  • Startup and New Venture Consultant 
Tacoma, Washington 
Sue Oliver
    Posted by Sue Oliver, Tacoma, Washington | Feb 02, 2009

    Great job Christine. Helps me think through this important topic. I have Prophet, which integrates with Outlook, but the HARD part is getting the data in, making the time. Thanks for breaking it down for me.

  • WordPress and vTiger CRM Developer and Consultant working in Seattle and Phoenix 
Seattle, Washington 
Christine Ely
    Posted by Christine Ely, Seattle, Washington | Feb 02, 2009

    Thanks Sue,

    We're doing a CRM event on the 12th at the Mosiac. Although we do use a particular CRM product, the concepts will benefit anyone wanting to get more from their CRM system. It's more about the CRM (Customer Relationship Management) philosophy than product specific.

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