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Hand
in?
Kallol Das
CRM Consultant, Professor of Management & Author
The Smart
Company
We are going through a very bad
phase with sales and profits falling sharply. We
attribute our poor business performance to overall
recession in the market, says Mr. CEO of a
Traditional Company.
What
is recession?
We are continuously increasing our
sales and profits year after year, says Mr.
Leader of a Smart Company belonging to the same
industry.
Strange,
isnt it?
Two companies giving two very conflicting opinions
about the business climate.You will meet the first
kind of companies quite often. The second kind of
companies the smart companies is a
minority community. They are the jewels in the corporate
world. They are very successful and will always
remain successful.
The Traditional Company works for immediate profits.
They have a short-term approach to business. Someone
has nicely said, Working for profits is like
playing tennis with your eyes on the scoreboard.
They look at customers as a by-product of the business.
They may be doing very well. But their success is
short lived.
Let us take the example of Fortune 500 companies.
These are the largest and most profitable corporations
of the world. But if you consider them to be invincible,
then think again. According to a research study,
only 3 of the Fortune 500 companies from year 1900
still exist, without merger or acquisition.
The Smart Company works for customers. They have
a long-term approach to business. Customer retention
is the purpose of their business. Profit is just
the by-product. And my God! They make huge amount
of by-products.
John Stubbs, CEO of the UK-based The Chartered Institute
of Marketing (CIM), spoke to one Indian business
magazine: We started five years ago by sponsoring
research through the London Business School to establish
the relationship between customer focus and business
success. From a statistical base of 5,000 companies,
where we wrote to the Chief Executives and analysed
the responses from around 500 companies, we were
able to establish that the greatest correlation
is between companies that cared for their customers
and also gave highest returns to their shareholders.
McDonalds is an example of a smart company.
It has Indianised many offerings to suit local needs.
It came out with Mr. Shahkahari Treat that included
Chatpatey Potato Wedges, McAloo Tikkas, McVeggies,
etc.
Patricia Seybold, renowned Customer Guru in her
seminar at Mumbai had this to say: Until we
redesign our entire business to be customer-driven,
we wont be able to meet the needs of the 21st
century customers.
Now, the big question:
How do you retain customers for life?
Simply by
building lifelong relationships with them. What
does that mean?
Well, let us understand what relationship really
means. First, it is just not knowing each other
or liking each other. It goes beyond. It is all
about loving and trusting each other. A strong relationship
will create a bond that no outside attraction can
break.
In business context, building lifelong relationship
between the supplier and the customer means creating
a strong bond - a strong bond of love and trust
that cannot be broken by any competitor; a strong
bond that grows stronger everyday. Simple words
but how often do we see them happening?
Scott Bedbury, global brand consultant and former
head of marketing at Nike and Starbucks, says, Companies
have been disrespecting peoples intelligence,
with product claims they dont back up, horrible
customer service
People are saying, why trust
corporations that dont respect us anyway?
Consider LG India. It advertises wrinkle free
eyes promising lower eye strain from watching
its TVs, but apparently uses the same picture tube
as its rivals. All the airlines treat economy class
travellers shabbily. And the service quality of
most of the ISPs remains pathetic.
Now, if you are the supplier, you cannot build lifelong
relationship with your customer just like that.
You need the active involvement of your employees.
In other words, you need to build lifelong relationships
with your employees towards building lifelong relationships
with your customers.
Ashank Desai, chairman, Mastek, one of the top IT
companies of India, says, We encourage warm,
friendly, honest and co-operative relationships
among the employees. Only when the relationships
within the company are warm and friendly would we
be able to extend the same to our customers.
Understanding Business
Before trying to understand business,
let us understand customers. We overlook our customer
because we dont have a clear definition of
this creature.
We all know Mahatma Gandhi as the Father of our
Nation. However, very few know him to be the Father
of Customer Care. Gandhiji came out with a revealing
description of customer. (See Box Mahatma
Gandhis Definition of Customer)
Unfortunately, very few companies look at customers
this way. In fact, there are many well-known firms
who were late in understanding their customers and
had to pay a heavy price for that.
Dominos started their Indian operations in
1998 with a lot of hustle and bustle. Its then CEO,
Pawan Bhatia (now no more with the company), had
an ambitious dream of being the first chain to have
100 outlets. However, the hurry to open 100 restaurants
left holes in the companys planning. The outlets
ate into each others business, quality suffered
and promotions got the customer hooked onto discounts.
Today, Dominos has closed outlets in smaller
towns and is relocating outlets even within metros.
Similarly, erstwhile market leaders of television
sets in the Black & White era, viz. Uptron,
Keltron, etc are extinct species today. They failed
to understand and satisfy the changing needs of
customers.
Many more examples can be cited to show the importance
of customers in any business enterprise. If there
are no customers, then there is no business. In
short, Customers=Business.
Let us find out the participants in any business
and their different relationships.
The participants are normally called stakeholders
who have direct interest in the success of the business.
Let
us understand the information conveyed by figure
1. The customers pay money for acquiring your product.
This money compensates all other stakeholders viz.
shareholders, financiers, suppliers, society and
last but not the least, employees for investments
they have made in the organisation.
If your customers desert you or if you fail to attract
them, your business will close down.
The customer has a special stake in your organisation.
If the product he purchases does not provide him
the desired performance, his hard-earned money is
wasted. Thus, the customer has great interest in
efficient functioning of your organisation. He is,
therefore, a stakeholder of your business.
The employees buy your organisations business
concept and concretise it by providing their knowledge,
skill, effort and time. They interact with all other
stakeholders and satisfy the interest of each of
the stakeholders. Your organisation, in turn, fulfils
the needs of the employees like physiological, security,
social needs, etc.
There is similarity in the interests of both customers
and employees vis-à-vis the business organisation.
If you look at the definition of Customers, you
will find that Employees have many of the attributes
of the former. And, therefore, the Employees can
also be described as Internal Customers.
If the Customer is the purpose of the business,
then the employee as the Internal Customer is the
means.
Organisations having satisfied employees create
satisfied customers. Employees of Infosys are always
proud of their company. Customers of Infosys are
always proud of their supplier.
An enlightened management should try to bring synergy
of all the different stakeholders so that business
is able to flourish. And satisfy to a great extent
the needs of the shareholders, financiers, suppliers
and also the society.
From the discussion so far, we can say that customer
relationship management cannot be successful without
employee relationship management.
The figure 2 says it all. It is not enough to be
a customer centric organisation! A truly smart company
is one that is centred on both customers and employees.
Customers are the primary (core) focus and employees
are the secondary focus of such an organisation.
The management of such companies focuses on building
relationships with their customers and employees.
That makes the relationships enduring and lifelong.
What is h-CRM?
Here we talk
about a very powerful strategy - h-CRM that
can transform your business into a market leader.
But first, what is h-CRM?
h-CRM=
HRM (Human
Response Management) + CRM (Customer Relationship
Management)
So h-CRM is really an amalgamation of
two concepts viz. CRM, which is a very popular but
unfortunately
MAHATMA GANDHIS DEFINITION OF CUSTOMER
- A customer is not an outsider to our business.
He is a definite part of it. A customer is not
an interruption of our work. He is the purpose
of it.
- A customer is doing us a favour by letting
us serve him. We are not doing him any favour.
- A customer is not a cold statistic; he is a
flesh and blood human being with feelings and
emotions like our own.
- A customer is not someone to argue or match
wits with. He deserves courteous and attentive
treatment.
- A customer is not dependent on us. We are dependent
on him.
- A customer brings us his wants. It is our job
to handle them properly and profitably - both
to him and us.
- A customer makes it possible to pay our salary,
whether we are a driver, plant or office employ
a badly misunderstood concept, and HRM (a beautifully
coined Human Response Management by Prof. S. K.
Chakraborty of IIM Calcutta because human beings
are the only resource that can respond), a highly
neglected management discipline.
CRM is understood by
the majority as Database Marketing System. It enables
one to treat different customers differently using
high technology. It is also known as One-to-One
Marketing. This is what most of us know about CRM
today. Right?
Well,
if this is what you had known about CRM, then you
should also know that 75 per cent of all CRM projects
have failed (according to Arun Thiagarajan, Former
Managing Director, HP India). And there is a strong
correlation between this CRM definition and failure
results.Ranjan Banerjee, director of Pune-based
Renaissance Management Consultants, says, The
sad thing about CRM is that it has been packaged
as a technology solution, thereby dehumanising a
lot of the personalization that CRM brings.
Patricia Seybold recently said about CRM: The
problem with CRM is that capturing customer
information and acting upon it is only one piece
of a much larger challenge confronting todays
businesses. Customers dont just want to be
marketed to; they want to be well served. And companies
are notoriously ill-prepared to meet todays
challenges.
Time has come for us to look at CRM in a holistic
manner. And the solution is h-CRM. The h
stands for the human element needed to make CRM
successful.
h-CRM is all about People: Customers andv Employees.And
there is only one objective: build lifelong relationships
with them.
THE h-CRM MODEL
Figure
3 shows the h-CRM model. As shown in the diagram,
h-CRM is all about people. People here mean customers
and employees. The end objective is to build enduring
relationships with your customers and employees.
Only this can lead to a prosperous business organisation.
Let us study the model in brief. The model has four
elements viz. Leadership, Delight, and Loyalty with
People at the centre. On interpretation, it means
following three things:
1. Lead people
You have to Lead People to Delight
and Loyalty. Thats Leadership. Thats
the foundation of a strong relationship building
exercise. Only a leader (and not a CEO) can make
a company customer-focussed and make its customers
supplier-crazy.
But what makes a great
leader?
A leader has an attitude, which makes
him do things differently. The right attitude is
the key to success both in life and in the
business world. According to a recent survey by
Princeton University, success rate depends on 85
per cent attitude and only 15 per cent ability.
Only the right attitude towards customers and towards
employees will yield the right behaviour essential
for proper relationship building.
Now the biggest question is how to develop a positive
attitude towards customers and employees and thereby,
start the h-CRM program?
The answer is simple and logical. The right attitude
will come from right core values the right
moral principles. According to Stephen Covey, The
road to high quality product is paved by individuals
who are not only competent, but whose lives are
centred on enduring timeless principles.
Some leadership examples from the corporate world:
U Sundararajan, former chairman of Bharat Petroleum
Corporation Ltd (BPCL), transformed his companys
culture and performance, even while it has remained
a public sector corporation. Kumar Mangalam Birla
leads an old, family-promoted conglomerate, two
of whose international companies have done Indian
management proud by winning the Deming Prize.
2. Delight people
Relationships are made only when promises
are fulfilled consistently. Or better still over
delivered. That creates happy customers and happy
employees. That creates good business as well.
Want to experience delight? Then, visit a car showroom
today. Soothing ambience, well-trained staff and
a host of conveniences provided by the auto dealers
make car shopping so comfortable. As you watch your
favourite movie or surf through the Internet, the
customer service staff clears your paper work and
hands you over the car keys!
At Eli Lily India, the boss (the supervisor) meets
every fresh recruit or transferred territory manager
at the railway station. The supervisor also arranges
accommodation for the newly arrived executive. Some
even go to the extent of making arrangements for
laundry and ironing of clothes in a conscious effort
to make the move into a new city as smooth as possible.
Great, isnt it? Dont you feel like joining
them?
3. Make people loyal
Relationship building needs investment
of time and efforts. All relationships are not equally
profitable. You have to focus on those relationships
with your customers and employees
which are profitable or which have a great profit
potential. And then strengthen those relationships
so deeply that no outside attraction can shake those
bonds.
Citibank has a special set up called CitiGold, which
is meant only for its cream (Key) customers. The
CitiGold office is the height of luxury. The people
handling - sorry, pampering these customers have
the highest professional qualification and finesse.
CitiGold offers special and exclusive Wealth Management
Consultancy, exclusive telephone numbers and special
web page for its customers, plus many other benefits.
The A V Birla Group has a fair performance appraisal
system that ensures that exceptional employees are
rewarded. BPCL has a differential compensation system.
Both these organisations have today become role
models for other Indian companies.
To Sum Up
Businesses misunderstood CRM as a technology
solution. The answer to this problem is h-CRM, which
focuses on the human dimension with technology acting
only as the enabler. Leadership, Delight and Loyalty
are the three mantras of h-CRM that will help companies
achieve lifelong relationships with their customers
and employees. And that means lifelong happiness
and prosperity.
References:
1. Chakraborty, S. K. (1989), Foundations of
Managerial Work: Contributions from Indian Thought,
Mumbai: Himalaya Publishing House
2. Covey, Stephen R. (1992), The Seven Habits
of Highly Effective People, London: Simon &
Schuster
3. DeVrye, Catherine (1999), The Customer Service
Zoo, Hyderabad: EastWest Books (Madras) Pvt. Ltd.
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