CRM Architecture Whitepaper
CRM Architecture Whitepaper
CRM Architecture Whitepaper
hp executive overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 evolution of CRM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 what is advanced customer relationship management? . . . . . . . .6 principles for building strong customer relationships . .11 hps customer relationship model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11 basic CRM is step number 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12 principles based CRM value chain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 CRM architecture for an effective customer experience .15 CRM reference model for the telecom industry . . . . . . .17 critical success factors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22
executive overview
crm architecture
The paradigm shift from business focus to a customer focus has resulted in Customer Relationship Management (CRM) being on the corporate agendas across all major industries, and most visibly in consumerbased businesses. Forester and Gartner predict that business will spend $11B by 2002. What is driving this level of investment? How did we get here? Where should we focus our expenditures and resources to get the most out of CRM initiatives, and not fall victim to the latest technology spending fad? Electronic business has grown at an exponential rate such that the latest forecast is that by 2003, the amount of commerce conducted over the web will top $3 trillium (Gartner Group). Merchants can get to market faster with new products and services, expand revenue channels, extend reach globally, improve customer service, enhance customer loyalty and reduce cost. Many definitions of CRM exist and therefore HP has taken the many definitions of CRM and defined Enterprise CRM to be a business strategy that involves focusing knowledge business processes, and organizational structures around customers and prospects enterprise-wide. As the customer relationship becomes more electronic in nature customers want innovative, clever and convenient ways of doing business. Industries are experiencing the challenge of ATM machines not remembering that the preferred language is English or that a telephone switch has no concept of customer. Therefore a second paradigm shift towards effective and electronic Customer Interaction, which provides the ability to have a personalized dialogue/conversation with each individual customer seamlessly across channels/touchpoints and over time has evolved. Based on this definition, Hewlett Packard has developed an industry-based Reference Model accompanied with a principlesbased Functional Architecture for CRM and Customer Interaction. These are the topics that this paper will discuss.
introduction
crm architecture
evolution of CRM
Significant changes in the last fifty years have occurred through time, target market, and the value proposition as various customer and product marketing approaches have evolved.
Re De la ep tio e ns r hi p CRM
Time
Re
Target Marketing
Tailoring
W ha t
la No tio ns hi
Mass Marketing
Who
Mass
Individual
Target
introduction
applications sifted through mass populations and potential clients. This still resulted in multiple channels generating their own unique marketing potential client lists. This business strategy was also measured by market share(daily product sales) and not the lifetime value of relationship. Target marketing has improved results over mass marketing; but now consumers mailboxes are clogged and the ability to create targeted outbound messages was diluted by the industrys tendency to over-communicate. The final result for Target Marketing is that it is expensive, ineffective, and irritating to the customer. In addition, marketing to the averages resulted in average marketing results.
Peppers & Rogers in their book have the following methodology for relationship marketing
introduction
Relationship Marketing
Peppers & Rogers Methodology
Identify
customer, individually & addressably
Differentiate
by value then needs Valuable customer
product/service/info
Figure 2: Relationship Marketing
Customize
(and remember)
Interact
The first stage is to identify the client and understand client behaviour with attributes in order to understand their needs, habits, and desires. The knowledge obtained in this stage is fed into marketing campaigns, treatment plans, and business strategies. The second stage is to start managing the customer relationship by first performing direct customer interaction and then continually integrating all relevant interaction or dialogue that occurs across passive and active network of client channels or touchpoints. In order to dynamically maintain the client life cycle, the relevant client dialogue must be captured and customized for the best possible future action. Ultimately, the vision is to build a one-to-one Enterprise such that the most valuable customer is treated differently by providing customized products and services.
introduction
Functionality
Campaign Management Management Customer Customer Valuation Valuation
Technology
Analytic Analytic Processing Processing
Secure Client
Nuture Client
Statistics Statistics
Account Account Data Data Demand Demand Deposit Deposit Savings Savings Brokerage Brokerage Retirement Retirement Mortgage Mortgage Consumer Consumer Loan Loan Credit Card Card Insurance Insurance
Extract
External Data Data Demographics Demographics Credit Credit Bureau Bureau Prospect Prospect Lists Lists Preferences Preferences
Condition
Integrate
Enhance
Household
Customer Information
Transactions Transactions 1998 Hewlett-Packard Company, All rights reserved. Reproduce only with written permission.
Information
The information box at the bottom effectively highlights the extraction from the core transaction data, account data, and external data. And then the various steps required to build the customer information system. The functionality box highlights the five key aspects of studying the customer relationship through target marketing and campaign management as one box. Behaviour modeling, profiling and segmentation, customer risk analysis, and customer valuation all surrounding the customer environment. Various technologies are utilized for implementation of CRM functionality such as Data Mining, Analytic processing, Query & Reporting, Statistics, and Information Access, which all surround the core content-base: Data warehouse. There are a variety of definitions that exist in the marketplace: Some say CRM is supply chain management process such that all processes related to customer and supplier relationships are integrated. Some say CRM is having the ability to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of enterprise marketing automation or direct marketing campaigns and lead generation Some say CRM is implementing customer service automation so that customer service representatives have access to detailed customer profiles and content scripts for customer service provision
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introduction
Some say CRM is sales force automation that assists sales people to better manage their sales forecasts, customers, opportunities and contact information. In fact, Hewlett Packard has seen that CRM actually represents an enterprise business strategy that involves focusing knowledge, business processes and organizational structures around customers and prospect for the whole organization. Surrounding this business strategy is an information technology infrastructure consisting of data warehouses, decision engines and integrated middleware for touchpoints/channels in order to better understand customer behaviour and respond in a timely and relevant manner.
Info
re ctu
Business Process
During the last 10 years, a major shift from a mass market culture of standardized products and options to a dynamic market culture where many products and options can be customized to satisfy specific needs and preferences of an individual has occurred. Todays consumers can no longer be treated as a homogenous collection of revenue generating units, but rather as individuals whose specific wants and needs determine unique behaviour (buying patterns, channel usuage, etc.). As the customer relationship becomes more electronic in nature; customer loyalty has been impacted; since the personal service has
introduction
slowly diminished. In John Naisbatts new book: High Tech High Touch, he describes our society as being in a Technologically Intoxicated Zone, such that high-touch, high-tech time and high-tech simplicity are part of our daily routines. Therefore, today industries have to maintain consumers interests by providing them with innovative, clever and convenient ways of doing business. For example: Telcos offering incentives to switch to their products and services, personalized product notices via email Manufacturing connecting systems that track purchase agreements and order processing for high valued customers Financial services offering personalized financial services such as personalized product notices via email, mortgage, investment and loan account solutions based on usage patterns, mutual fund automatic options notification service based on customer profile. The rapid convergence of CRM and e-commerce has changed the face of enterprise customer relationship management and marketing, enabling customer to virtually purchase any item and obtain services continuously throughout a day. It has been estimated that U.S. companies will realize benefits of profit improvement ($360billion to $480billion) from e-commerce cost-side benefits. (Giga, July 26, 1999).
tenets of customers
Two tenets of customer actually exist. The first is that a customer focused company needs to have a single, unified view of each customer. Conversely, customers need to have unified view of business regardless of the business unit or channel with which they are working. This bi-directional view is critical for true relationship marketing. Regardless of touchpoints or channels (customer support centers, direct mail, telesales, direct sales, e-commerce, Web), clients want recent contacts (including complaints) or interaction to be known and reasonable personal recommendations to be made.
introduction
As a result, the need for this bidirectional view has also promoted a paradigm shift towards effective and relevant customer interaction, which provides the ability to have a personalized dialogue/conversation with each individual customer seamlessly across channels/touchpoints and over time with the following attributes of engage customers in a constant conversation customize conversations to the individual coordinate all conversions centrally deliver conversations on any channel (preference of the customer) The ability to support customer interactions consistently across channels or touchpoints is the prerequisite to sustaining the customer experience, customer loyalty and profitable customer relationship
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crm architecture
Principle 2: Consolidate and make available all customer interaction information from all channels/touchpoints Principle 3: Develop a customer centric infrastructure that can consistently support the customized treatment of each customer. Principle 4: Assign dedicated people, process and technology resources to achieve profitable results
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Relationship Pricing Life-Event Based Marketing Cross-Selling Relationship Marketing Mass Customization Target Segment Marketing Aftermarketing
Retain Strengthen
Acquire
Continuous Measurement
Lifetime Value, Prospective Value, Current Value Fully Costed, Risk-Adjusted Profitability Analysis Life-Event Consumer Behavior, Predictive Modeling, Receptivity Vulnerability Analysis, Attrition Modeling Customer Segments, Micro Segments, Householding
Continuous Measurement
aging information as a strategic asset. For example, call center agents can look to CRM to supply them with information on the customers calling them with their purchases, transaction history and complaint history. Alternatively, a sales force can have customer contact and demographic information as part of their sales force automation. BasicCRM acts a foundation to move quickly to Step2 CRM, which provides integrated contact history, customer profile, channel integration, etc. In addition, decisioning technology develops knowledge from information used to determine the best recommended actions for a customer regardless of touchpoint/channel.
Basic CRM
Step 1
Marketing Models Product Systems Dynamic Customer Profiling Customer Data Warehouse Contact History Proactive Leraning Customer Profitability Engine Channel Integration Decision Engine Event Mgmt
Step 2
Customer Systems
External Data
Resource Management
Learning
Identify
Differentiate
Customize
Interact
ing business expectations for the functionality and operation of the solution. They give constraints and objectives for technology use, much like a building code provides guidelines for the construction industry. In parallel the enterprise organization is examined for allignment of Marketing, Sales, Customer Care and Performance Management. Various discovery mechanisms are also used to define and articulate the strategic vision for customer interaction. This includes the assessment of where the enterprise is today in relation to that vision. In addition, one customer segmentation model is decided upon for all products and services. The second part is to develop the Technical or Physical CRM Architecture, which makes recommendations and provides some decision methodology to the actual deployment of the Conceptual Architecture. Therefore, there would be one CRM architecture that would enable anyone who impacts the customer at any channel or touchpoint to provide the best customer experience. The architecture also includes the documentation of the real software, hardware and methods that will be deployed to address the components documented in the Conceptual Architecture.
Solving Customer Relationship Management involves addressing a principles-based value chain Data & Applications
Application Specific Data Model External Data Providers Data Hygiene / Enrichment
Technology
Data Warehouse/Data Mart
Extract & Transformation Database OLAP Data Mining Statistics Query & Reporting Warehouse Management Metadata Management - High-End Servers - IT Infrastructure Networking Network & Systems Management Internet Web Warehouse Security - Integration Technologies Operational Data Stores Call Center & Messaging Middleware
Cleansing & Conditioning Householding - Segment of One Marketing Customer Valuation Customer Risk Analysis Profiling and Segmentation Predictive Behavior Modeling Targeted Marketing & Campaign Management
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crm architecture
After addressing and defining the industry value chain, all the CRM processes and functions can be identified. Various processes such as analysis and reporting and functions such as Campaign Management Marketing Analysis & Campaign Value-Based Data Mining & can be identified. It is necessary to tie Planning together various Mgmt databases in Reporting Segmentation Management order to create a single comprehensive view of the customer. This Portfolio hub actually integrates statistical modeling, campaign management, Differentiate Management Data contact Mart history and response tracking components of the customer relationship life cycle. Decisions on whether the processes and functions Product Integration Life Cycle areCustomer Strategic or tactical can also be made. Identify Management Customize Profiles
Contact History
Channel Management
Interact
Electronic Storefront Direct Sales
Customer Feedback
Call Centers
uses Business Rules (a set of Enterprise Rules that define the actions to be taken and are termed as Customer recommended actions or CRA). The Decision engine takes as input the Customer Profile, Contact History and applies the stored Business Rules thereby creating a set of one or more Recommended Actions for the customers. The Business Rules Management component enables the creation, deletion, analysis and storage of the Business Rules in a repository. The Customer Profile component is generated based on the information in the Customer Information File (CIF), Customer Information Warehouse (segmentation, scoring) The relevant customer conversation/contact/dialogue information is captured and stored in Contact Management component. The CRA Effectiveness Analysis component by using Data Mining technology provides a facility to explore rules, recommended actions and customer interaction effectiveness in general. The Treatment provides unique treatment data for customer, products and services.
Functional Components of CRM Architecture for Enterprise Marketing Automation
Business Rules Mgt. Customer Profile Contact Mgt. Treatment
Decision Engine
Product Marketing
h Telep
on e
PC
Customer Information Warehouse Customer Contacts Customer Information File
Customer Interaction
E-mail
Web
Surface M ail
FAX
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crm architecture
Billing
OrderNow
Content Management
Repair Management
Contact Management
Process Layer
Contact Database
Analytics
Reporting Database
Data Warehousing Management Services Read Load Write CLAP Extract Scrub Create
Prospecting
Reporting
Valuation
IT Service Management
user to control the usuage of, or switch between different elements of the presentation surface, e.g., activate a specific window with the mouse, or a select a presentation object specific function with the right mouse button. In addition, this layer will determine the kind of communication channel being used, and will transform the information going to and from the process layer to the required interfacing of this communication channel, e.g., Text-to-speech for Phone/IVR, CGI/Java for Internet, etc. It will also prepare the user identification and process selections required by the next layer.
process layer
The process layer provides services to different communication touchpoint-specific devices, from a single implementation of that specific device. The process layer is separated into a Contact, Context handler and personalization. The user accesses information through a communcation channel-specific front-end; the users authorization and profile togheter form a context under which all interaction between the user and IT functions that form and support a business process are carried out. The Contact and Context Handler initiates and terminates the communication channel/user dependent context with a process/routing engine. It registers the context to the Contact Management, Segmentation, Routing, Resource Management and Channel Management making it known to the underlying layers. Personalization executes the business logic initiated from specific context and selects a set of usiness rules specific to the business process.
CRM layer
This layer represents databases that consist of the single customer view, integrated contact/dialogue, customer profile, and content information. This layer also provides for the ability to perform analytics and
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reporting on the customer experience by using the variety of knowledge gained from all customer activity.
vertical layers
The vertical layers of this reference model provide services that are required by all the horizontal layers.
IT service management
All components in the model will have to be managed for availability and performance (Service Level Agreements). IT management processes and technology must be in place in order for an IT organization to deliver quality services to its customers . Please refer to Hewlett Packards ITSM (IT Service Methodology) definition of services.
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5. Implementation of BasicCRM 6. Implementation of Customer Interaction across Channel/Touchpoints 7. Managing People, Culture and Change 8. Customer Focus
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conclusion
crm architecture
To address todays exploding e-commerce marketplace initiatives, CRM acts a foundation for any successful implementation. Furthermore, the concept of customer interaction and the ability to collect this information across any touchpoint/channel is essential as the learning e curve for who is my customer and what is the best thing for them is to be achieved. Hewlett-Packard has developed various reference models and a methodology to make the CRM vision a reality.
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