• Monster Mashups

    Posted on March 8th, 2010 Adam Honig No comments

    Where are all the enterprise mashups?

    The concept of the mashup—a composite application built from easy-to-integrate, reusable components—is simple: inside one application, you automatically show, compare or contrast information from somewhere else. Furthermore, you don’t have to provide parameters; the mashup automatically combines the information.

    Some excellent examples involve Google Maps. For example, after the recent earthquake in Chile, mashups provided current information on road closures as well as open supermarkets. In the U.S., meanwhile, one mashup uses data from the Fatality Analysis Reporting System to pintpoint road fatality black spots.

    These are incredibly useful applications, but they’re also quite consumer focused. Which leads me to wonder: Where are the enterprise mashups? In 2008, Forrester Research predicted that the enterprise mashup market would reach $700 million by 2013. Ajax, Web Services and location-based services were all the rage. Experts predicted that mashups would free enterprise users especially from the tyranny of waiting weeks or months for IT to create the reports they needed—if indeed they did ever get created.

    But is this user-driven state of enterprise information liberation still unfolding in 2010?

    Who Wants Mashups?

    In the CRM realm, on-premise Siebel CRM software, version 8.1, added an applet-based services, making it relatively easy to embed some service information into other applications. Salesforce.com also makes using these types of applets relatively easy. For example, you can access a contact’s LinkedIn information from Salesforce.com.

    Perhaps the above is useful, but so far it doesn’t herald an information-access revolution.

    Workplace Mashup Manifesto

    What we really need are mashups with hardcore workplace upsides. For example, if I’m working in a service center and a client calls, I’d like to see all of the trouble tickets the client has open, and know if there are any outstanding issues, before I try to up-sell or cross-sell him.

    From a professional standpoint, this is the information you need. And if it’s delivered via a mashup—meaning that on one page, I can manipulate and close out the trouble ticket, enter the client’s credit card to resolve the billing dispute or automatically dispatch a required part and provide an actual Fedex tracking number—so much the better.

    Liberating Enterprise Data—Or Not

    Technically speaking, however, creating enterprise mashups remains challenging. The sticking point is internal data. Combining your CRM application’s contact list with Google Maps to build better territories is one thing. But generating customer-facing epiphanies (or at least really great service)—for example, by mashing-up your CRM, ERP and financial systems and legacy back-end systems via Web-enabled SOA to manipulate data in any of those systems in real time—is relatively difficult, simply because the information most often remains locked in those various systems.

    Financial Services Firm: We Don’t Need No Stinking Mashups

    Furthermore, organizations that do make the effort to integrate and combine information from numerous systems in innovative ways often don’t need user-driven mashups; they just need the information. For example, Innoveer has been helping a large US financial services firm to extract operational data from numerous back-end systems, combine it with CRM information, and provide agents with a single Siebel CRM homepage—backed by Siebel Analytics—containing, at a glance, everything they need to know.

    Front and center on the agent’s homepage is a report listing recently placed orders. This is vital information because the best way to ensure these orders turn into deals is by reaching out—the agent following up by phone, asking how they can help, and using their sales smarts to close the deal. Another report, to encourage better performance, analyzes the revenue each agent has generated, versus the number of client calls they make.

    The end result: Agents see useful information, without glimpsing the underlying systems complexity that brought them the information. (That’s definitely not “need to know.”) Even better, they didn’t have to build it themselves.

    Not A Quant at Heart?

    Perhaps that’s the ongoing roadblock for mashups: It presumes that end users will want to mashup CRM, ERP and financial information themselves. For a small set of power users willing to get their hands dirty, this may be true. But for salespeople who excel at selling, or who can be encouraged to reach this state, the imperative isn’t to provide them with cutting-edge, self-service Web applets, but simply with the information they need: Who do I sell to, and where do I find them?

    Easy access to essential information is the currency of any great sales organization. Until composite applications can provide that, and professionals have a compelling reason to use them, we won’t see many enterprise mashups.

    Learn More

    When it comes to CRM, less is more—and mashups are no exception.

    Even without mashups, organizations have access to great techniques for getting the data they need. In particular, a service-oriented architecture (SOA) help organizations integrate their systems and consolidate information to better manage customer data and ensure a single, definitive source of information.

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  • When Call Centers Go Bad

    Posted on March 1st, 2010 Adam Honig No comments

    Photograph by Ha-Wee.

    Sales force automation (SFA) is thriving, running on-premise and in the cloud, in part because one SFA application can support complex sales activities. Log on, enter or retrieve the required information, and you’re ready to sell.

    The call center environment, in contrast to SFA, is much more complex, even when running service in the cloud. That’s because, instead of your salespeople calling—or calling on—the customer, they call you. So in addition to integrating CRM, back-end systems, your private branch exchange (PBX) for incoming calls, and agents’ landlines or VoIP-based calling (especially for work-at-home agents), you also need:

    • Computer telephony integration (CTI) to do a “screen pop” showing a call center agent the name and details of the person who’s calling.
    • Interactive voice response (IVR) to identify callers, reduce costs and resolve issues with minimal—or no—live agent interaction.

    Providing great customer service, besides having top-notch customer service agents, requires integrating and making all of the above components work well together. But too often, it instead adds up to one big headache.

    The Perfect Call Center Storm

    Several years back, for example, one of Innoveer’s high-technology clients integrated its Siebel CRM software with third-party IVR and CTI software. But about six times per day, often at night when call volumes peaked, the call center software would crash for 10 minutes, booting customers out of call queues. For a company selling items worth hundreds of dollars and taking 1,000+ calls per day, the result was lost revenue and no small risk of customer defection.

    The culprit? Small memory leaks, which in the high-production environment eventually added up to a system crash. These memory leaks resulted from the underlying third-party call center software and components having been designed for slightly different versions of Siebel—one for 7.7.0.1, another for 7.7.0.2, and so on. Meaning, no simple fix existed.

    Murphy’s Law Alive and Well

    Unfortunately, no one offers a great soup-to-nuts call center. Telephony systems are complicated, proprietary, not yet open, and difficult to test at high volumes. Furthermore, your vendor for every required component—CRM, PBX, IVR, CTI and so on—will often differ, and their software not be quite compatible.

    Holding Out For A Hero

    Arguably, call centers are ripe for a savior, and help could be on the way:

    • Oracle CRM On Demand: With version 9, added a virtual CTI connector, which lets organizations more easily bring voice, voicemail, email and Web channels into the on-demand service picture. Meanwhile, IVR enablement via SOA offers new types of self-service and on-demand possibilities.
    • Service Cloud: For this salesforce.com service offering running on Force.com, the company, together with Cisco, announced a Customer Interaction Cloud, aimed at SMBs, which is an out-of-the-box, SaaS-based call center.
    • Asterisk: Run this open source call center software on an inexpensive Linux server, and for a few hundred dollars (including a digital-to-analog converter), you can have a working call center.

    Upsides to cloud-based and open source call centers, besides their relatively low cost, are that they’ve been designed from scratch, which means they could potentially work much better than the call center technology kludge that’s become common today.

    Downsides, however, include a dearth—so far—of plug-ins to make them work with your internal network, IVR software and all of the other modern call center requirements. To integrate SaaS-based service with your on-premise systems, you’ll also need to start opening firewall ports. From a security and privacy standpoint, that can expose you to data hijacking and potential break-ins, including browser cache attacks.

    The Collective Power of Frustration

    Will open source technology and SaaS call centers solve today’s call center technology issues? With so much collective frustration over call centers, they’re the safe bet for how we’ll make the next big step forward toward creating easy to integrate, useful and headache-free call centers.

    Learn More

    Mastering customer service, regardless of whether it’s running on-premise, in the cloud, or as open source software, requires treating the call center as a strategic asset. Furthermore, until you get your customer service business practices and self-service sites in order, from a service standpoint also forget social networks.and don’t worry about Twitter.

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  • Start the Party Right

    Posted on February 22nd, 2010 Adam Honig No comments
    Can you manage to make marketing events memorable? Illustration by Sabrina Campagna.

    Are your events memorable? Illustration by Sabrina Campagna.

    How can your marketing group be more effective? By mastering the art of event management.

    Why Manage Events?

    Event management is the art of generating demand by connecting with prospects and customers at events. Based on Innoveer’s numerous marketing engagements, we’ve found that event management is one of the five capabilities—including marketing strategy, lead management, campaign management and marketing measurement—that organizations must master to maximize the effectiveness of their marketing programs.

    Practice excellent event management, and you will:

    • Spend less time on low-value accounts
    • Help salespeople close more deals
    • Identify how to incrementally improve client relationships, leading to better account penetration

    Best Practices: Event Management

    To increase your event management proficiency, focus on these four best practices:

    • Attendance Management: Using centralized coordination, target, invite and register guests at your event, ideally using multiple channels. The best practitioners use attendance management systems that monitor registration and automatically trigger follow-on campaigns to increase attendance for under-registered events.
    • Speaker Management: Identify, schedule and manage subject matter experts to ensure they deliver targeted messaging at the event. Ideally, also integrate speaker development, including techniques for delivering messages, as well as feedback on presentations.
    • Event Logistics: Plan and track event-related administrative details and accountabilities. The most successful event logistics practitioners track and study event outcomes—attendance volume, speaker ratings, attendees’ overall satisfaction—to learn how to improve future events.
    • Lead Capture: The formal process for identifying prospective buyers at an event by recognizing and capitalizing on their buying interest. Ideally, you should qualify and score leads at the moment they are created.

    File Under: Hot Prospects

    Who excels at event management? Medical device manufacturers, for starters. These organizations sell multi-million dollar MRI machines and six-figure sterilization devices; their salespeople can’t just throw products in the trunk and demo them in a doctor’s office. Instead, medical device manufacturers run events to demonstrate their wares to physicians and hospital administrators. Over time, they’ve become expert at using these events to capture high-quality leads.

    For example, one medical device manufacturer worked with Innoveer to adopt handheld devices for obtaining more information about people attending its events or its booth at trade shows. Now, whenever someone stops by a booth, a marketing person scans the attendee’s conference badge to “pull” their name and contact details. Then, using an application running on the handheld device, they record the attendee’s reactions to what they see and hear. As a result, the company can quickly score and qualify all of its leads to determine each person’s propensity to make a buying decision. Above all, this enables the company’s marketing managers to quickly identify and pursue the hottest prospects.

    Lead Management: How Advanced Are You?

    Innoveer benchmarks organizations’ marketing strategies to determine any given organization’s relative process maturity in that area—namely, whether it’s advanced, lagging, or somewhere in between. Here’s how that spectrum looks for lead capture:

    • Initiating: Leads defined crudely—perhaps as simple as “attended” or “visited booth.”
    • Competitive: Defining leads based on actual interest levels during or after the event. Includes a formal process to test attendee’s interest and capture their contact information.
    • World class: Testing for interest during and after events by using activities, together with segmentation and channel-based strategies to continually identify, capture and target additional leads, using multiple channels.

    Fix Problems First

    By benchmarking their current capabilities, organizations will learn which parts of their marketing program to improve first. And while it might seem counter-intuitive, our advice is to focus first on making your weak capabilities stronger. This approach will give you the biggest improvement in your overall marketing strategy effectiveness, and thus the biggest return on investment.

    Learn More

    Medical device manufacturers typically excel not only at event management, but also managing key opinion leaders. Our Cultivating Key Opinion Leaders white paper details the best techniques and also explores the relationship between key opinion leader and event management.

    At events, many organizations would like to qualify and score leads the moment they’re created. For guidance about how to put this into practice, look to the pharmaceutical industry, which often provides its salespeople with mobile-device-based CRM software to quickly rate physicians’ levels of product awareness and contact preferences during meetings. Using this information, marketing managers can segment physicians based on their interests, plan sales activities, and design more relevant campaigns and increase their sales effectiveness. For more information, see our white paper on Taking a Customer-Centric Approach.

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