Archive for the ‘Web 2.0 Strategies’ Category

“Did I catch you at a bad time?”

I wanted to take the time to analyze how Microsoft Dynamics CRM 2011 can optimize the performance of an Inside Sales professional.  When I think inside sales, I think telemarketing, email marketing and appointment setting.  Telemarketing is tough enough as it is; therefore, it’s essential to have the best resources available for your telemarketers/inside sales people.  CRM itself, really is the number one tool an inside sales professional relies on to achieve their goals.  I took a step back to flesh out how MSCRM 2011 has leveraged our own telemarketing efforts and the typical duties of an inside sales professional.  Here is what I came up with. 

MSCRM 2011 has brought efficiency to the overall telemarketing effort in the following ways:                                                                                                                                                                        

  • TRACKING: The ability to track calls, campaigns and emails more effectively.   Without having to manually track everything, more phone calls and overall productivity has been achieved.  (i.e. the integration with Outlook and SharePoint)

 

  • NAVIGATING:  Navigation has been easier with the ability to create and customize a personal dashboard.  Follow ups and warm leads are easier to manage; therefore, creating a higher % for closing opportunities.  We can also utilize some other features such as the use of Favorites to flag important records and the ability to few your recent history of calls.  Overall, navigating around the tool has been more efficient.

 

  • PERSONALIZATION:  All of us have a different approach.  Going back to the dashboards, this feature has been impactful as we have formatted our dashboards to cater to our style/approach to telemarketing.  With this we can track our progression, stay current with our follow ups and make sure we reach our defined goals. 

 

  • VISUALIZATION:  The BI application provides an ability to utilize visual components within CRM without having to use external tools.  This can be everything from creating graphs which document daily calls to bar graphs providing month to month appointment totals.

 

  • UNITY:  We’ve streamlined the telemarketing efforts with recruiting and sales more efficiently.  This has given us a true ability to stay on track with the entire sales effort and create an information/data warehouse for all sales staff to access.  This has also allowed us to modernize our weekly meeting process by allowing us to access everything we would need right through CRM.

 

  • GOALS:  This can also tie in with many of the categories already referenced.  With the ability to visually access and manage daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly and yearly goals, the entire sales team can improve the probability of actually achieving them.  We would not have to go through the many steps it takes to formulate an excel spreadsheet.  See my previous blog below, “AUTOMATE YOUR GOALS…,” for more information.

 

  • TRAINING:  It has been an actual training resource.  With the guided dialogue feature, we’ve customized certain conversations in order to achieve optimal results and qualify leads more effectively.  The dashboard function has helped increase the learning curve by providing all pertinent information right at your fingertips.  Easier navigation and tracking has shortened the time it takes to learn shortcuts.    

The overall functionality and adoption of Microsoft Dynamics CRM 2011 has allowed the telemarketing team to reach their fullest potential.  If information is entered correctly then the features and applications MSCRM 2011 offers should allow all users to have better conversations the first time around.  With the ability to bring new team members up to speed, track calls and email with ease, personalize/customize to our individual sales approach, visualize our production, maintain defined goals and unify our efforts with the rest of the sales team, we’ve become a cohesive unit and are going above and beyond what we set out to accomplish.

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From The Cloud to On-Premise: Microsoft Dynamics CRM 2011 Is On the Market

Straight from the release party in Redmond, Washington!  Today, Microsoft announced its newest CRM tool, Microsoft Dynamics CRM 2011, is now available for on-premise and partner-hosted deployments.  This launch accompanies the earlier release of Microsoft’s Dynamics CRM Online in January.  It’s now available worldwide and can be downloaded through the Microsoft Download Center.

According to Microsoft’s recent press release, “Microsoft Dynamics CRM 2011 provides customers and partners with a wide range of benefits, including point-and-click configurability, enterprise scalability, and easy interoperability to existing applications and databases.”  There seems be a significant emphasis on some major upgrades through powerful dashboards, user personalization and customization, optimal integration with Outlook and SharePoint; as well as, new intelligent experiences with guided dialogs, goal management, and business intelligence functionality.

This innovative CRM solution promises to makes some waves and catapult Microsoft into the upper echelon of the CRM industry.  The full version of the press release can be found here: http://www.microsoft.com/Presspass/press/2011/feb11/02-16OnPremisesPR.mspx

Also, be sure to sign up for our Microsoft Dynamics CRM 2011 Webinar on 2/24/11 @ 10:00am MST Here.

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The CRM Game Changer Webinar: 2/24/2011 10:00am

February 24th, 2011 will mark the third webinar TopLine Strategies will host regarding the latest version of CRM from Microsoft.  What makes this event so special is the fact that not only have we had the opportunity to polish our presentation, but everyone will have an opportunity to download a beta and start utilizing the newest features after the webinar as Microsoft Dynamics CRM 2011 is now available on the cloud.  For the less adventurous, our webinar will cover the newest features and applications this version has to offer.

The webinar will focus on the complete integration Microsoft Dynamics CRM 2011 offers with Microsoft Outlook and SharePoint, new powerful dashboards and the advanced ability to personalize and customize.  Not to mention some of the unique applications, such as a dialogue and goal management feature.  So if you’re in the market or just looking to gain a better understanding of this particular CRM solution, our webinar should be informative.  Sign up for our webinar today!

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The New Kid On the Block: Microsoft Takes An Aggressive Marketing Approach

As of mid-January, Microsoft has released its latest version of CRM to the cloud.  It’s been a long time waiting, over four years to be exact, since Microsoft has released a version of Customer Relationship Management.  Microsoft Dynamics CRM 2011 is currently available for cloud users and is expected to be on-premise February 28th.

With this exciting new software, Microsoft expects to become an even bigger player in the CRM game.  Judging by their marketing strategies, it looks like they are trying to make a big splash.  According to a December press release, entitled “Microsoft Dynamics Introduces ‘Cloud CRM for Less’ Offer,” on December 6, 2010, Microsoft released an open letter to Salesforce.com users stating “Don’t Get Forced.”  It goes on to state, through this offer, Microsoft will rebate eligible customers up to $200 for each user that makes the switch to Microsoft Dynamics CRM Online between now and June 30, 2011. The offer can be applied for services such as migrating data or customizing the solution to meet unique business needs. Check out their Offer here.

It looks like the gloves are off and Microsoft is aggressively looking to place their new CRM solution up there with the other heavy hitters.  According to Michael Park, Corporate Vice President, Sales, Marketing and Operations, Microsoft Business Solutions, and author of the Open Letter, “ At Microsoft, we do not believe you should be forced to pay a premium to achieve business success.”

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CRM’s Big Role in Enterprise Enrollment Management

Doorway

Part of the revenue story is getting end users in the door after you’ve sealed the deal, so the revenue can be realized.  Health insurance is a case on point.  CRM/xRM can play a huge role in this process, as can the right BI tools.

Tim Fargo, and Bill Jentarra, I recently put together a white paper on  Enterprise Enrollment Management (EEMS) for small group health insurance applications, which covers the issue set that enrollment plays in this space, including how CRM can fit into the picture.
“Health insurance carriers are targeting the small group enrollment process for optimization,” says lead author Fargo, TopLine Strategies’ CEO.  ”Most small group employer and employee enrollment processes are encumbered by hand-written forms, parcel delivery services, and four or more layers of redundancy.”

Co-author Grollman, the firm’s COO, added “To realize the promise an optimized enrollment process can deliver to health insurance carriers industry-wide, the broker, employer, and employee must embrace the carrier’s new enrollment workflow with enthusiasm. To achieve targets on stakeholder adoption, leading carriers will implement tools that provide value, usability, control, security, and ready access to services .”

Bill Jentarra, EVP of Service Delivery at TopLine Strategies and co-author, notes that “Integration of the small-group employee enrollment process into a carrier’s health management portals provides critical advantage. If insurance carriers effectively re-engineer their enrollment process and increase adoption of personal health management portals, all constituents will be rewarded. What follows—particularly for the carrier—will be higher returns on investment, productivity increases, and improved first impressions by their insured clientele.”

The paper hits on all the following items and more:

  • Small Group Health Insurance Enrollment 2010: A Process in Transition
  • Requirements of a Solid Enterprise Enrollment Management Process (EEM)
  • Effective EEM to Focus on Employer/Employee Adoption
  • Health Portals Connected to Enrollment and CRM
  • Project Risk Management for EEM Initiatives
  • Strategic Opportunities, Strategic Threats
  • Critical Functionality of an Enterprise Enrollment Management System

You can get a free copy here: http://www.toplinestrategies.com/eem.  Use the “Enrollme2010” password if you need it.

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How to Think Like a Bootstrapper

How to Think Like a Bootstrapper
Scott Allen

I just read this article by Scott Allen and, although it is directed to small businesses, I believe every point he makes applies to most of us and our businesses.

Bob

Jun 18, 2010 –

It may be the high-growth, venture-funded companies that get a lot of press, but the fact of the matter is that the vast majority of businesses are started for under $10,000, usually provided by the entrepreneur’s friends and family, credit cards, or their own pocket. While it’s true that bootstrapped companies have a slightly higher failure rate than better-funded companies, the difference isn’t significant, and there are lots of bootstrapped businesses that succeed, just as there are many well-funded companies that flop. Good management practices are far more important to your success than big piles of cash are.

Here are a dozen tips to help you start and grow your business with little or no capital.

The most important question before you start is: how much will it cost to make your first sale? Consider everything: product research and development, operational overhead, marketing, cost of goods, etc. If it all adds up to more money than you have, you’re not bootstrapping. Rethink your model – can you really bootstrap, or do you need a bigger stack of working capital?

Cash flow isn’t the most important thing — it’s the only thing. For the bootstrapper, cash is like oxygen. When it stops for more than just a brief period, you die. Learn everything you can about accelerating cash flow and apply as much as possible to your business. Focus on cash — not on profits, market share, or anything else. Be super-realistic — even pessimistic — when it comes to revenue projections. You have no margin for error on the back end — you have to build it into your estimates on the front end.

Start with partners, not employees. Payroll is most companies’ biggest expense. Without a big pile of cash, you can’t afford it, period. Find people who are willing to work for equity, or at least deferred salary, when first starting out. Don’t hire any paid employees until profits allow you to pay them. Of course, this means that you have to have all the core competencies for the company covered in your core team. Find people whose strengths cover your weaknesses.

Develop continuous, passive income, even if that’s not your core business. Your main business may be big-ticket, one-time sales, or project-based services. These are rollercoaster rides that may be wildly successful, but may also frequently bottom out for extended periods. In your business model, be sure to include an offering that creates steady positive cash flow — subscriptions, consumables, automated product sales of information products, etc. It may seem like a distraction at first, but the first time that rollercoaster bottoms out, you’ll be glad you made the investment.

You’re not in the business of lending money. So don’t. If a customer says they have cash flow issues themselves, that’s what credit cards are for. If payment plans are common in your market, find a financing company to partner with and let them handle it. Get payment — even partial — up front whenever possible. Require a deposit that at least covers your hard cost of the sale. Don’t make excuses — just make it your policy and be clear about it up front.

Use credit for cash, not capital. It’s perfectly sensible to borrow money to manage short-term gaps in cash flow, such as using vendor credit to delay payment until you can receive payment from your customers, or paying for something that will quickly generate profits that exceed the interest, such as a marketing campaign. What you don’t want to do is borrow money to gamble with. You wouldn’t (or shouldn’t) put a cash advance on your credit card to gamble in Vegas…don’t do the same in your business. You may very well have to personally guarantee those loans, and that’s how entrepreneurs end up in personal bankruptcy, not just closing the business and moving on.

Do without it until you can no longer do without it. Postpone any and every purchase as long as you possibly can. Share office space, supplies, equipment, etc. The longer you can wait to make the purchase, the more time you have to discover the best deal, or to clarify your needs and find which product or service is best suited to them. Also, particularly with technology purchases, prices tend to go down, not up. This also may mean doing things like having a founder’s spouse keep the books and using free contract templates instead of hiring accountants and lawyers at first. Sure, it has risks, but so does spending available cash on those services rather than on things that will generate revenue.

Don’t try to beat the big boys at their own game. Large companies have access to capital, massive distribution channels, widespread brand recognition, and established customer relationships. They also have baggage — bureaucracy, formalized risk management, overhead, massive investments in their current business model and brand. Forget about massive retail distribution (for now) — sell direct and/or focus on close relationships with a small number of niche resellers. Take advantage of your ability to be agile, to make decisions quickly and put them into action immediately.

Don’t sell what you can’t deliver. Manage your growth. Big companies can deal with manufacturing capacity, customer service problems, or even major product issues by throwing cash at the problem. You can’t. While it may not feel like it when you’ve been struggling, there really is such a thing as too much business. Make your current customers your top priority. While potential new customers may be disappointed about not being able to obtain your product or service, they’ll understand. Sure, you may miss out on some potential business, but you won’t risk crashing and burning because of reduced quality control or poor customer service. I recently heard a business owner tale a cautionary tale about his experience of growing too fast. At one point, he called his own customer service line to see just how bad the problem was, and the automated attendant told him his expected hold time was 14 hours!

Don’t gamble what you can’t afford to lose. Don’t finance your business with a second mortgage on your home unless you’re willing to be homeless. Don’t bet the whole company on one opportunity. No matter how much you believe, no matter how good the opportunity looks, until you have the money in the bank, nothing’s a sure thing. That said, take advantage of the fact that you don’t have nearly as much to lose as big companies do. You won’t destroy billions of dollars of market value with a poor quarterly report. Employees who come to work for a startup know they’re taking a risk, while those working for a large company are usually expecting more stability. You can take chances that they can’t because you really don’t have as much at stake.

Establish relationships to support your growth before you need them. Sooner or later, you’re going to have an urgent need for resources or expertise outside of your company. It may be your first business tax return, a big order that requires additional resources to deliver, an urgent legal question, etc. Figure out who you want to use and establish a relationship with them in advance, so that they’re ready to go when you call them. If you have to scramble to figure it out when the need or opportunity presents itself, your risk of problems goes up dramatically.

Focus on the customer. Create raving, passionate fans by consistently exceeding their expectations. It’s far cheaper to keep customers than to acquire new ones. And happy customers are both your cheapest and most effective advertising. Develop your relationships with them above and beyond the sale. Learn about their business and refer people to them. Connect with them on LinkedIn. Check in with them on a regular basis with no sales agenda – just to see how things are going.

Bootstrapping is really more of a business philosophy than it is just about a shortage of capital. Even if you have capital at your disposal, or if you’re well past the startup stage, applying these ideas will help you reduce your risks and achieve smart business growth.

Scott “Social Media” Allen is a 25-year veteran technology entrepreneur, executive and consultant. He’s coauthor of The Virtual Handshake: Opening Doors and Closing Deals Online, the first book on the business use of social media, and The Emergence of The Relationship Economy. His latest venture, NFN8 Media, maintains a growing portfolio of niche content and community sites. He enjoys working with entrepreneurs and serves on the advisory board of several startups.


How to Leverage the Pain vs. Gain Mentality

How to Leverage the Pain vs. Gain Mentality
August 20, 2007 by Stephen Shapiro

I came accross this blog by Stephen Shapiro–about the power of language. His articlecasued me to think about my choices and word selections. I hope you find this valuable.

Bob

In an earlier blog entry, I discuss the power of language. I want to explore this a bit further today.

Here’s my variation of the “Asian disease problem” mentioned in that earlier blog entry:

Which would you prefer?

■OPTION 1: A guaranteed gain of $75,000?
■OPTION 2: An 80% chance of gaining $100,000 with a 20% chance of getting nothing?
When I give a speech and ask the audience this question, 75% choose Option 1. This percentage is consistent across all groups, regardless of who is in the audience.

Ok, what about the following? Which would you choose?

■Option 3: A certain loss of $75,000?
■Option 4: An 80% chance of losing $100,000 with a 20% chance of not losing anything?
When audiences answer this one, 99% choose option 4.

This once again supports the premise that people will take risks to reduce losses, yet will be more risk averse when it comes to increasing gains.

Interestingly, when you look at these options, even though most people choose options 1 and 4, options 2 and 3 give you better returns. On average, you will gain $80,000 with option 2 and will lose $80,000 with option 4.

Look around and you may begin to see examples of advertisers focusing on losses rather than gains, with stellar results. For example…

How many mattress commercials have you heard that say, “Buy our xyz bed and you will get your best night’s sleep ever.” Yawn. Boring. The commercial may put me to sleep, but it’s not going to get me to buy a bed.

Consider this actual advertisement. “If your mattress is 10 years old, it weighs twice its original weight due to the dust mites that accumulate over the years.” Ouch! This makes me want to replace my mattress now.

Instead of selling customers on how great your product or service is, show them the downside of using a less reliable alternative. As a friend of mine says, “If you need open heart surgery, would you shop for a cardiologist based on price?” She then launches into the risk associated with not getting it (your product/service) right.

What examples have you seen of great sales pitches, advertisements, or anything else that uses this concept?

P.S. One place where this concept apparently does not apply is on TV game shows. I see people on “Deal or No Deal” risk a certain $500,000 for a 50% chance of winning $1 million. Their interviewing process must do a great job at finding the few people who really do take risks to increase their gains.


Cool CRM white papers from Redmound

We picked up some cool mostly CRM white papers today from our friends in Redmond.  The first is about the use of CRM and Social Media here.  Twitter me some CRM, baby.  The second is about why Bing is so cool compared to Google here.  This pitch may need to mature a bit, I fear.  The third one here is just some excel jujitsu, but that comes is handy as well, yes?

But the one I like the most here is about the business case for MS CRM, with a strong focus on sales force automation ROI, marketing automation ROI, and customer service automation ROI.

Good stuff, if you’re into CRM, check em out.  Or jujitsu, for that matter.  And if you’ve got fight-in’ reps that that to use spreadsheets, well, you’re in like flint.

- michael grollman

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Threadsy & Crowd Fusion Spark Web 2.0 / CRM Interest

The TopCRM Vendors site had a nice write-up from TechCrunch50 this week on two new firms with Web 2.0 / CRM related offerings.  Both are start-ups.  The first is Threadsy, which allows CRM and other users to tap into a massive number of inbound and outbound social networks.  The second is Crowd Fusion, which takes features from wikis, blogs, and more to create a unified content management system.

Both are worth a look to be sure, if you enjoy the CRM / Web 2.0 mash-up world.  Check out the details here.

- Michael G

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How to Increase Sales Productivity in a Tough Economy


The moment the economy softened, an end was made to several years of a long “rising tide floating all boats” period. I’m pretty sure your current strategy includes:

* getting closer to your customers
* focusing on your most profitable segments
* curtailing non-performing or not yet performing pieces of your business
* delaying or canceling new programs
* holding on to cash wherever and whenever possible

What I’d like to talk about is adding “increased productiveness” to your list of strategic elements.

We speak with customers every day who are looking for ways to increase productivity at the individual contributor level. Customers appear to fall into two groups in this regard. One group is looking for fast and proven ways to help them and their people do more than they had been doing before. The other is looking for ways to do more than before, but with less expense and resources. Both are seeking quick productivity results.

CRM Needs BPM

Sure, there are customized workflows that can be added to a CRM to help increase productivity; however, if it’s not native to the application it can be somewhat complex. I’ve used, marketed and sold CRM-related technology for a considerable number of years, so I know all about throwing technology at a problem to see what sticks and what it can hopefully fix. Having a CRM that doesn’t incorporate the ability to solve your real business problems with Business Process Management (BPM) will make you less effective with your technology.

We can all agree that employing technology alone without applying proven best practice methods will limit any long-term productivity improvements. The value isn’t in the technology alone, but how you use it to improve your business processes.

SaaS Delivered Enterprise 2.0 CRM

This business principle, if you will, became clearer to me earlier this year when I first heard the phrase “Technology with Methodology” used by a colleague to describe a SaaS (Software-as-a-Service) delivered Enterprise 2.0 CRM solution that helps every single person in small to mid-sized organizations be more productive. Not just the sales department.

The term is now a common reference to PlanPlus™ Online, which touts an xRM™ (Dynamic Relationship Management) technology foundation and FranklinCovey’s world-renown productivity methodology. We know FranklinCovey as the global training organization of Fortune 500 companies for the past 20 years.

Here’s the point, you will always be asked to do more. No matter what position you hold. You will be asked to improve, to increase and to generate more; whether it is to increase quotas, brand better, generate more leads faster, or improve collections. It’s just part of doing business in any economy, it’s just more important than ever right now! So, the challenge is to quickly become far more effective in your personal life or business, and therefore become as productive as possible.

We Need Technology with Methodology

I know for certain, a proven methodology approach with robust technology can increase your productivity with daily, weekly and long-term processes.

FranklinCovey’s “Focus” and “7 Habits of Highly Effective People” methodology is central to managing time and priorities and can be applied to managing contacts, campaigns, and to streamline processes. The way the FranklinCovey methodology is combined with technology in PlanPlus Online makes for a potent combination that you need to thrive and not just survive in a tough economy and beyond.

Technology with Methodology℠ is PlanPlus Online. Check it out. It was conceived, designed and built with an increased focus on productivity, generating results at its core. How have you improved productivity in the past? To survive, you must increase productivity in today’s tough economy…you need to do it now more than ever.

- Bob

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