What Holds Back CRM Success: Executive Fear

What Holds Back CRM Success: Executive Fear By Christopher J. Bucholtz
CRM Buyer
Part of the ECT News Network
01/06/11 5:00 AM PT

If you're sitting around waiting for best practices, it means that someone else -- probably a competitor -- is out there working to develop them. With the speed that customer relationships are evolving, can you wait to copy your competitors? Are you willing to spot them a huge lead? If you're not willing to answer the bell now, will you really be able to catch up later?


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The past year seemed like one of marking time in CRM -- at least to me. The trends are all well spelled out: Social CRM will become a critical tool, service has grown in importance as customer acquisition has become more difficult, and the value of mobile CRM is becoming painfully apparent. So why aren't we acting on the trends?

I've heard the excuses -- most famously, "we need to understand the ROI on this before we launch any projects." That's not a great excuse, because ROI calculators are out there and ready for use, even for social CRM. Great or not, too often the excuses win out.

You've probably heard the mantra that CRM needs executive buy-in to succeed. That's true -- so true, in fact, that the opposite is also true. New trends in CRM need executive apathy and fear to fail.

The people working in the trenches are constantly receiving anecdotal evidence of the value of social CRM in helping with sales, marketing and service. The service team sees only too clearly how deficiencies in their processes are holding them back. The people in the field are relying on mobile devices for many things -- and they know that a capability to use their business software on their mobile devices could make them both more productive and more effective.

So the front-line people are ready, and the technology is ready. What's keeping many businesses from launching a CRM revolution? I like to call it "C-level fear."

Far too many executives operate from a position of fear when it comes to the customer. They continue to debate the idea that the customer is now in control of the relationship, because the loss of control is scary to them.

As a result, they soft-pedal emerging technologies, kicking the can down the road to a time not when their organizations are ready for change -- because that time is now -- but to a time when they have come to grips with how the customer is changing, and how that changes the expectations and duties of a C-level executive.

They're afraid of making investments that don't pay off, and they'd rather find themselves too far behind the competition than seem too far ahead of the technology curve.

The great default is the ROI argument. If an initiative can't produce visible ROI in a short period of time, it doesn't get a go-ahead. Investments should have payoffs, but the way those payoffs are evaluated should be fair and realistic.

A pilot program whose evaluation criteria doom it to failure from the start is not a good investment. An evaluation of an underfunded initiative after six months is not fair to those involved in it.

Worst of all, once a half-baked, half-hearted program based around social media, in-depth service or mobile technologies fails, the executives plagued by "C-level fear" can then use those doomed projects as evidence that all such projects will fail.

Another great dodge is the idea of waiting for best practices to develop. Best practices don't just evolve on their own -- they come about when someone actually tries something and then adjusts what they're doing.

Thus, if you're sitting around waiting for best practices, it means that someone else -- probably a competitor -- is out there working to develop them. With the speed that customer relationships are evolving, can you wait to copy your competitors? Are you willing to spot them a huge lead? If you're not willing to answer the bell now, will you really be able to catch up later?

If you want to succeed -- especially as a C-level executive -- you need to be audacious. You need to realize what the reality is around customer relationships, accept what you have control over, and act decisively to improve those things. What you should not do is default to excuses that merely mask the fact that you're uncomfortable with change.

One audacious move: If you're a C-level executive, get out of the office and talk to the front-line people about these ideas. Find out if social CRM, mobile CRM, new service metrics, or new types of analytics would solve their problems. If the answer is yes, you need to realize that you will not be alone in any effort to improve your CRM efforts -- if you're brave enough to respond by initiating change.

CRM Buyer columnist Chris Bucholtz blogs about CRM at Forecasting Clouds. He has been a technology journalist for 15 years and has immersed himself in the world of CRM since 2006. When he's not wearing his business and technology geek hat, he's wearing his airplane geek hat; he's written two books on World War II aviation, and his next two are slated for publication in 2010. Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Christopher J. Bucholtz

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Skype acquires Qik mobile video company

Zubair Ghumro (L) speaks to his friend Sheeraz Qazalbash using Skype software at an internet cafe in central London August 10, 2010. REUTERS/Paul Hackett

Zubair Ghumro (L) speaks to his friend Sheeraz Qazalbash using Skype software at an internet cafe in central London August 10, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Paul Hackett

SAN FRANCISCO | Thu Jan 6, 2011 3:45pm EST

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Internet telephone service Skype said it acquired mobile video company Qik for an undisclosed amount.

Qik's service -- available on more than 200 mobile phones, including Android and Apple's iPhone -- lets users capture and share video across smartphones and the Internet, Skype said in a news release.

Skype, partly owned by Web retailer eBay Inc, is expecting to raise up to $1 billion in an initial public offering, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters in November.

Skype said the transaction to buy Redwood City, California-based Qik, with 60 employees, should be completed this month.

(Reporting by Noel Randewich; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)

Samsung seeks 15 percent TV sales jump

A reporter touches a 75-inch, full HD 3D LED television by Samsung Electronics during the first day of the 2011 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Nevada January 6, 2011. REUTERS/Steve Marcus

A reporter touches a 75-inch, full HD 3D LED television by Samsung Electronics during the first day of the 2011 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Nevada January 6, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Steve Marcus

By Miyoung Kim

LAS VEGAS | Thu Jan 6, 2011 8:02pm EST

LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - Samsung Electronics Co is targeting 15 percent growth in 2011 sales of flat-screen TVs to 45 million units, and hopes to more than double shipments of pricier LED sets.

The world's largest maker of TVs aims to quadruple sales of 3D TV sets to around 8 million-9 million units this year, while aggressively promoting Internet-enabled TVs to goose up margins as severe price competition keeps profits razor-thin.

Shaken by their failure to inspire consumers in a recession with a new generation of TVs, major producers from Samsung, LG Electronics Inc to Sony all showed improved versions of 3D and "smart" TVs at the Consumer Electronics Show, hoping to grab a bigger slice of an emerging market where no single player dominates.

The fight over the connected living room, which enables viewers to hook up TVs to Web shows and software stored in the cloud and on personal computers, is not short of aspirants with technology heavyweights from Google Inc and Microsoft Corp to Apple Inc all joining the fray.

Samsung this year aims to sell 12 million Internet-enabled TVs, which sport access to its TV Appstore, video-streaming site Hulu and social networking sites such as Twitter. The 12 million figure would make up 27 percent of its total TV shipments this year.

"Smart TV is not a simple Internet-enabled device or a computer with a large screen and no keyboard," said Kim Hyun-suk, senior vice president at Samsung's TV division.

"It allows consumers to lean back and have access to all kinds of applications and content, and connect with other devices in the home."

SMART VS DUMB TVS

Samsung booked the biggest showing area among CES participants this year in Las Vegas to showcase a plethora of products from smartphones and tablets to TVs and cameras. It dedicated a large portion to Smart and 3D TVs in particular, betting the global Smart TV market would grow to 30 million units this year.

DisplaySearch estimates that 21 percent of all TVs shipped in 2010 have Internet connectivity, and the segment is expected to grow at double-digit rates over the next four years, swelling to 122 million units by 2014.

On 3D, Samsung attributed its slow takeoff last year to a combination of high prices, a lack of available content, and the discomfort of having to watch TV with heavy glasses.

"Most of those issues will be resolved to a large extent and the market will really take off," said Yoon Boo-keun, head of Samsung's TV division. "3D premium has fallen to an affordable level, content keeps growing and glasses have also become much lighter."

"When people buy a TV, they look for a product they can use for the next six to seven years. With all those issues addressed, consumers are now very likely to buy 3D sets."

In addition to a lack of 3D content, however, one of the biggest obstacles for the new technology to take off is different 3D formats.

Samsung, which controlled more than 50 percent of the global 3D TV market last year, is pushing for active-shutter glass technology, which requires special glasses with batteries, chips and switches to synchronize 3D signals from TV sets.