CRM success relies on managing a project post-implementation
Barney Beal, News Director
Ensuring a successful CRM project requires following through and adjusting.
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href="http://searchcrm.techtarget.com/news/1193888/CRM-failed-because-hellip">According
to Kaila, companies that have the most CRM success assign a CRM manager to steer the project. Those
responsibilities don't end with the completion of the project either; rather the managers continue
to oversee CRM, conducting similar work to what they did during the implementation. In a recent
research note, Kaila defines a CRM manager's role as falling into four categories: functional
management, operational management, change management and strategic management.
Additionally, organizations may have more than one CRM manager and draw from the IT or business
side of the organization depending on the company or the project.
"They are usually experts from some process area with an idea of end-to-end business processes
like quote-to-cash or hire-to-retire," Kaila said. "Depending on the scale of the program, some
organizations will have multiple experts in a domain. Generally speaking, the rule of thumb is for
every 15 to 20 resources you've leveraged, you're looking at one to two subject matter experts for
CRM. For some, a CRM program involves four people; for others it can involve 200 people."
In the functional management area, CRM managers should have visibility into all systems that
interact with the CRM application and allow them to see how customers interact with the
organization through various channels, business units or transactions. From the business side, this
should be business process managers, and IT would involve a CRM technology manager.
Operationally, managers should monitor service-level agreements, maintenance and modifications
to the application, how data comes into the software and how it effects applications that take
information from the CRM system.
On the change management side, CRM managers must oversee enhancement requests and ideas for
improving the customer experience and prioritize changes. Kaila advises organizations to create a
template for change requests.
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, a CRM manager should align CRM stakeholders, such as
sales, finance and marketing, so that all get benefits from the system. Where each group needs
customization, the CRM manager should be responsible for assessing, coordinating and implementing
that work. Additionally, the CRM manager should be responsible for calculating ROI.
The market is poised for growth according to AMR.
Part of that spending will be going toward consultants and systems integrators, but Kaila
recommends organizations look inside when possible.
"The best practice is to promote from within," he said. "There are a lot of independent CRM
practitioners and boutique firms, but CRM comes from within the organization. It is evolving. Good
CRM, or rather effective CRM strategies, have to involve folks within the organization."
Gartner suggests establishing a center of excellence to not only launch CRM projects but stay
involved afterwards and look for the right partners in the market for help.
"CRM is a core capability but in launching CRM programs, it's vital enterprises understand that
a lot of the value and effort begins on the day following an implementation," Kaila said.
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