Why Do CRM Systems fail
to live up to their promise?
Gall's law
A complex system that works is invariably found to
have evolved from a simple system that worked. A complex system designed from
scratch never works and cannot be patched up to make it work. You have to start
over with a working simple system.
John Gall
Systemantics: How Systems
Really Work and How They Fail
Most customer relationship management (CRM) implementations fail,
and by most, I mean up to 75 percent. The benefits of CRM, including enhanced
productivity and improved customer satisfaction, have been proven, so why does
it fall short of expectations as much as three-quarters of the time?
Sameer Bhaita
Sept 19, 2014
Destination CRM.com
And this, unfortunately, reinforced
a study done by Bain Capital in 2002 that showed the same results. Companies haven’t learned much in the last 12
years.
So why do they fail?
It’s not the technology. As several
experts put it, “the technology is simple, and it works”. When you cut through the jargon, eliminate
the marketing spin, reduce the technology to the basics, a CRM system centers
on one thing: a database.
It doesn’t matter how you access the
database – on a desktop, on a mobile device, a server sitting in your office or
via “the cloud”. It is just a database.
And while database technology is
faster, cheaper, easier to access, it is still the same as it was 30 years
ago. So, at the end of the day, it is
how you manage the data and how you use the data.
Three issues drive CRM failures.
1) CRM systems were designed as reporting systems
2) Users don't perceive much value in using the system
3) CRM systems create more work for most of the organization
Most CRM systems were originally
designed for management reporting. These systems didn’t provide much use for
the line employees, so the employees viewed them as additional work. At the
heart of it, most CRM systems are still reporting systems. Take a look at the service features from one
of the more popular CRM tools:
Benefits to the Salesperson
·
Identify leads
·
Manage lead distribution
·
Allow the sales team to access the
database from mobile devices
Benefits to Management
·
Track leads
·
Perform advanced forecasting
·
Integrate with the backend systems
·
Manage the sales pipeline
·
Create sales reporting
·
Manage security
·
Allow mass communication via email
or specialized communication
·
Content management of customer
material
·
Provide a single source of
information on each customer
As a note, CRM systems use providing
a single source of information as a selling point. It really isn’t. A CRM
system doesn’t do this. It can allow
anyone who has database access to see the information. But the company has to
do a lot of work before implementing the CRM to achieve this goal.
·
Bring the data into a unified or
single database
·
Create a single structure
·
Cleanse the database to remove
duplicate entries
·
Insure all touch points are captured
and stored correctly
·
Update all contact information
·
Make sure that contact information
can be edited and maintained
·
The information can be accessed as
required within the organization
·
Then it can be exported into the CRM
system
All of this costs additional money,
above and beyond, the basic CRM purchase and implementation. Yet it is one of
the most critical – and often forgotten or ignored – requirements for a
successful implementation.
A highly effective CRM
implementation centers more on cultural issues than technology issues. It
requires the company to change its culture from internal facing to a customer-centric
facing.
"Companies
must instill a customer-centric sense throughout the entire organization to
find success with a CRM practice," says John Freeland, then global
managing partner of Accenture's CRM Services (now president of worldwide
operations at Salesforce.com)
And like it
or not, real cultural change takes a long time.
On average, cultural change requires about five years, not five or ten
months. Companies try to do too much, too
fast.
Rather
than focus on doing just a few things extremely well with a basic CRM system,
most companies want the “latest and greatest” to solve all of their customer
relationship problems with one silver bullet.
According to Linda Hershey, president and
managing partner of LGH Consulting, "All of the reasons for failure can be
summed up into one resulting cause: the belief that you can buy a customer
relationship management solution." Expecting CRM technology to fix all of
your customer relationship problems is putting too many demands on one piece of
software.
Even
using CRM as the term, when purchasing or implementing means that a software
solution is a will "solve" your customer relationship issues. A
better approach, and one better understood by the entire organization, focuses
on using terms centered on:
·
Customer experience
·
Customer lifecycle (or retention)
·
Customer information (or single
source of truth, although this phase is now overworked)
·
Customer management
CASE STUDY – CRM IMPLEMENTATION
A Fortune 1000 company implemented a
CRM system, spending approximately $10M over three years. It developed a business case, talked to all
the users, selected a top vendor and then set up an implementation team. Six
months after implementation, an audit revealed that the CRM system actually
reduced sales force efficiency, rather than improved it.
Why?
Several reasons. The sales compensation report that the new
CRM system didn’t match the Finance reporting system. Finance didn’t use the CRM system, but used
the contract/billing system. Sales couldn’t keep track of their quota
achievements via the new CRM system.
It also required that both email and
the new communications feature on the CRM system be checked multiple times daily
by the customer contact people. The
engineering and support teams didn’t have the budget to buy licensing for the
new CRM system, so they used email; the sales support staff was required to use the
new CRM system. It lead to confusion,
missed communication, confused communication and backdoor channels between the
organizations being developed
The customer data in the new system
didn’t match the billing data due to lags, adjustments, and journal entries.
This meant that the sales team needed both billing information when they talked
to clients as that was the information that the clients had as well as the CRM
information.
In the end, the company allowed the
CRM system to “fade” away. No one wanted to admit it was a failure, but no one
wanted to own it either.
Isolated failure? No, nearly 75% of all CRM system implementation fail. And it isn't the technology. It is the strategy and organizational issues that drive the failure.