The future of CRM: The next evolution in customer relationship management
CRMs in use today have the same frameworks and tech from the last 20-30 years. The future of CRM requires companies to modernize.
The future of CRM demands answers to some important questions: Is your CRM serving your customers or just serving your sales management? Does it make a difference?
From a long and medium-range perspective, it does matter – and it’s going to matter a whole lot more as we enter into the world of the next generation of buyers.
CRM has truly changed the way sales is managed. The first digitization of sales account information and pipeline occurred in the 1980’s. In the 1990’s the promise was a ‘customer 360 view.’
Cloud-based CRM started in the early 2000’s, but this was no more than taking the same empty promises of the 90’s and moving them to the cloud, and the future of CRM requires more.
CRMs in use today have the same frameworks and tech from the last 20-30 years. The future of CRM requires companies to modernize.
So, ‘modern CRM’ is really just a place for managers to go to try and pull together a forecast, piece together a part-fact, part-fiction account of their reps’ deals, and bring the new reps up to speed when they replace the current rep who fails to hit their quota. And we wonder why there’s an adoption problem for CRM …
Adoption isn’t the only problem with CRM. The other problem is that the current incarnation of CRM doesn’t actually help you sell more either. Since 2011, the percent of reps attaining quota has been dropping. In fact, the drop has recently accelerated.
So, what happened?
The point here is it’s simple and it adds value to your task. If Amazon was designed like today’s CRM, finding a product to purchase would consist of these tasks – write about what you plan to search for, search for something else, write a note that you searched for something entirely different, increase your probability of purchasing and update your likely purchase date…you get the idea. The exact opposite of the Amazon experience.
We believe that a static and passive database of contacts only adds so much value and does pretty close to nothing to spur new sales. And if the system of truth isn’t actually delivering truth, it’s making it far harder to diagnose problems and solve them.
CDP solutions offer businesses an answer to the consumer privacy concerns that fueled data privacy laws and the customer data revolution.
With 4th generation CRM and Sales Cloud, you’ve got a modern day flight deck that sales people need to run sales campaigns to inform and help buyers – not alienate them.
At the heart of SAP Sales Cloud is the customer and their history with your company, across both the front-office and the back-office. This information is enriched with additional data and made actionable via analytics, recommendations, and embedded artificial intelligence, including generative AI content. To gain a complete and actionable view of each customer, you need to bring the back-office to the forefront, and only SAP can deliver this – 77% of the world’s transactions touch SAP.
This is what a true customer-centric solution is: Customers are not opportunities, or leads, or accounts. They are people. People with interests and connections who are trying to get something done, quickly.
If the heart of the Sales Cloud is the customer, then the brain is the machine learning and artificial intelligence that is constantly analyzing the data and highlighting concerns and suggesting actions to better serve the customer and advance their decision.
From one interface, the sales rep can access all the training and enablement content they need, and have suggestions served up to them to ensure that when they’re in front of the customer, they’re not searching for answers. They can quickly fire out a quote with all the right recommendations and discounts ready to go. They can breeze through contracting with the right terms and all the necessary controls built-in. And every step of the way, they can see how much they will make on the sale, all to help them focus on closing.
But it doesn’t end there. All these tools leave a trail of data that we harvest to show the real story of progress in the sale. No more guessing on probabilities, no more manual updating of stages. Managers can immediately and accurately see the health of the sale and help coach the rep on the key next steps. This is the blood that feeds the brain.
This is the anatomy of the future of CRM and next generation CRM, but its DNA is also key. It is not a mish-mash of apps from fifteen different vendors, with all the headaches of integration, analytics and reporting. It’s not a product built on someone else’s platform where we pay millions in rent for legacy third party database technology.
And so back to the question I posed at the start of this piece, is CRM serving your customers or just your management or your sales people? Today marks the day where CRM now serves everyone – the consumer, the manager, the seller. It becomes the data backbone and the flight deck that enables you to truly understand your customer and provide them with the experience they’re demanding.
We believe a great customer experience is seeing – live as the order is being configured – how the options affect delivery times. A great customer experience is seeing how the delivery is progressing and proactively suggesting ways to accelerate.
A great customer experience is being treated like a person, not an opportunity. This is the new battleground.
When it comes to the future of CRM, price, product and presence are no longer enough to win.