CRM - Part 1 - Conceptual Foundation
CRM - Part 1 - Conceptual Foundation
Management
Part 1: Conceptual Foundation
CRM: Conceptual Foundation
Customer databases
– Identify and analyze customer population
– Group based on similarities
– Recommend separate marketing campaigns for different groups
• CRM
Customer
focuses on total customer
facing front-end
experience
level:
focuses on customer
Strategy level:
satisfaction
CRM in practice:
• Functional level: Customer relationship management can be
practiced on a very limited functional basis (e.g., sales force
automation in the sales function, campaign management by the
marketing function).
• Customer-facing front-end level: This type of CRM focuses on the
total customer experience. The goal is to build a single view of the
customer across all contact channels and to distribute customer
intelligence to all customer-facing functions.
• Strategic level: This perspective tries to free the term «CRM» from
any technology underpinnings and from specific customer
management techniques. It describes CRM as a process to
implement customer centricity in the market and build shareholder
value.
Why is managing customer critical than ever?
– Consumers
– Marketplaces
– Technology
– Marketing functions
Consequences:
• Changes in customer behavior
• Customers have more power relative to vendor as their
technological aptitude and product knowledge continue to
increase
Changes with respect to the Marketplace
• More intense competition between firms for customers
• Fragmentation of markets
• A company’s very
existence is based on
the premise that it
creates value for its
customers.
customer value:
customer perceived value
• What is value from a customer’s point of view?
• In classical economic theory, customers strive to
maximize utility, i.e. they choose the product/service
that delivers them the highest value.
• In marketing concept: customer perceived value
Customer perceived value