FEATURE STORY Casinos are great examples of CRM. Casinos proactively identify high margin customers (called high rollers) day in and day out throughout the operation. Everyone from the security guards, to the dealers, to the waitresses are aware that they are responsible for finding and catering to high roller clients. Once high rollers are identified, casinos go all out to ensure that these customers are given extraordinary service.Why? The casino makes most, if not all, of its profits on this handful of customers. The casino will continue to deepen its understanding of their habits and preferences to further cater to the high roller’s interest in returning to the casino to spend more money. CRM IN FINANCIAL SERVICES A financial institution with $500 million in assets would typically have between 50- 75,000 customers. For a community bank or credit union, this is a huge number of individuals to keep track of. However, 20% of those accounts mean that fewer than 15,000 customers generate all of the profit. From studies done on Fl profitability, it is also known that typically only 10% of the customers will have an account portfolio that is completely profitable. Perhaps more amazing is that 20% of the overall profitable customers will have only one profitable account! Therefore, who are those 15,000 customers? What are they buying to make them profitable and what else can you be selling them to make them more profitable? In terms of customer retention, a Harvard Business Review Study claims that by retaining 5% more customers, financial institutions can boost profits by as much as 100%. In the above example, you can make a significant profit contribution if you can focus on retaining 7,500 customers. M&T Bank recently stated that the loss of one top customer meant that they needed 20 new customers to replace the profit. If this is the case, it is important for you to know whom these people are that may leave your institution (and take potentially half of your profit with them). What can you do to help keep them? What products or services do they have or should they have to make them more likely TOOLS TO TARGET THE LOYAL CUSTOMER However, over 60% of enterprises are not using these systems according to a Sedona Study.Why? Let’s go back to the simple CRM examples. If the casino marketing team know who their most profitable customers are, but the dealers don’t, how does this really help the organization? Sure, marketing can send out nice offers in the mail and give you pretty membership cards to indicate that you are special - but if the front-line personnel don’t recognize you as “special”, the data analysis efforts are moot. Additionally, in a true CRM environment, the front-line personnel not only need information to service the customers, but they can provide critical information and Take this a step further. Financial institutions want to know what to cross sell and what is the “next best product.”A CRM system can analyze an individual’s existing purchases, behavior and other people’s purchases that are similar to recommend the next best product to sell to that customer. If you have ever bought a book on Amazon.com and have seen the message that suggests you might be interested in other related books or books that were purchased by people who bought similar book(s) - this is a good example of “next best product”. What most institutions don’t realize is that without the integration of interactive Doing something with it is the next requirement. As noted before, CRM’s second differentiator is the ability to share information across the organization. In the example above, you must get this mortgage lead to the right person, and fast! The Internet affords you a means to pass information around easily - via email or Webbased applications.Whether leads/referrals are generated on the front line or by marketing The information needs to be easy to access and must be customizable to fit each individual’s specific needs. Internet portal technology offers a great way to implement this. Think of a portal as a way to have a company Intranet that can be customized for each user and authorized users can add or change information on the fly. This can not only make everyone’s job easier but it can save an organization significant money in saving paper and the time and effort associated with information distribution. The third part is the one most important to the customer but usually the one ignored by most companies.When a request or issue is raised by the customer, it is absolutely mandatory that it does not go unanswered. Even if you don’t have the answer itself at first, acknowledging that you received the request, are following-up on it, and eventually closing it out, can be the most challenging for the typical organization composed of many individuals touching the customer and relying on colleagues for closure. In essence, don’t drop the ball. Most CRM systems do not embrace the idea of process or the not-so-new concept of workflow. Having a systematized way to ensure follow-up and track the timeliness as well as the overall process itself can help optimize customer service and identify opportunities to improve productivity. So perhaps the definition of CRM should be expanded to: the ability of an entire organization to effectively identify, acquire, foster and retain loyal, profitable customers. Truly successful organizations are able to communicate and share information about their customers and ensure personnel are responding to customer needs in their efforts to achieve the best possible service and profitability. Don’t feel bad if you’ve been confused about all the hype about CRM. As with any industry trend, many vendors have jumped into the arena with many definitions offering differing ways to improve customer relations. The bottom line, however, is know your customers.Who is making you money and who is not? Next, know your products and operations.What is making you money and how? Finally, take that knowledge and apply it to programs and directives to allow the rest of the organization to participate in creating more profitable customers and anticipating the best way to service customers and prospects. In many ways, we’ve been doing this all along...it is, in fact, as fundamental as perhaps the ABC’s. Alyssa Over is a respected expert in financial services Customer Relationship
Subscribe Now—to secure your own personal editions
|


e