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01.21.10 How To Make Your CRM Strategy Proactive By Jim Berkowitz Here are several excerpts from an excellent post by Ben Yoskovitz, How To Implement a Proactive Customer Support Strategy: I've said before that great customer support has to be proactive. But what exactly does that mean? The goal of proactive support is to identify and resolve issues before they become problems. In some cases you can be so successful with proactive customer service that you can solve problems before customers even realize they exist. We've all had an experience where a small nuisance grows into a giant, destructive force. Think about the arguments you've had with a significant other; it starts with something small that's irritating you, but you don't say anything about it until it grows and grows and grows, eventually festering to the point that you explode and freak out. Your significant other can't understand why you're so upset, and you've actually lost most of the context as well. But you're mad. Really, really mad. The same thing happens with your customers. A small frustration left unchecked can turn into an absolute disaster. The sooner you implement a policy of proactive customer support, the better. And you can start by using metrics... You need to know what your customers are doing with your product. You need to track key usage metrics of importance (to you and them) and use that data internally, but also share that data with customers. Remember: Think of customer support as a feature of your product. That's exactly what you're doing by tracking usage metrics and sharing them with customers. A few additional things to remember: • Use a good CRM tool. You should have a CRM tool in place that allows you to track all accounts in a very straightforward way. All issues (bugs, inquiries, etc.) should be recorded.
• You can't save every customer. It doesn't matter how proactive you are, you won't save every customer. But proactive support can improve client retention. • Know what metrics to track. You have to put some serious thoughts into the appropriate metrics to track. Some metrics might give you false positives - such as logins. A customer might be logging in frequently but not using the app "properly" and still be unsatisfied. • Don't assume usage means everything is OK. High usage doesn't mean that a customer is totally satisfied. The same holds true with low usage; you have to know each customer's unique expectations and intentions behind using your product. • Implement a regular follow-up schedule. Start with a baseline schedule for checking in on customers (via email and phone), and adjust that for each customer based on usage and feedback. • Build metrics tracking into your application. Think about the value add you can provide customers by making usage and metrics a feature of your product. Also think about the potential for using metrics to increase virality and engagement inside a customer. • Track the Social Web. Your customers are out there complaining. And many of them may not do it directly (to you) but they'll go to Twitter, Facebook, blogs, etc. and complain there. You need to monitor the Social Web and respond accordingly. Continue reading this article. About the Author: Jim Berkowitz is a seasoned executive with more than 30 years of professional services and project management experience related to Customer Relationship Management (CRM) and Financial Management (Accounting & ERP) software solutions for small, mid-sized and Fortune 500 companies. As a Sales Force Automation and CRM Consultant, Jim has assisted more then 100 companies with the design and implementation of custom CRM solutions. Mr. Berkowitz is the founder and President of CRM Mastery, Inc.; a company dedicated to serving small and mid-sized enterprises (SMEs) by offering affordable tools and guidance to help them plan for and succeed with their CRM initiatives. |
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