Courtesy of
Technology News
Is it fun to work at your company? If it is, it's likely
that employees will be more inclined to enjoy talking to your
customers. Encourage them to seek out customers and find ways to
learn about them. CRM in the social era needs to be less about
someone in sales and marketing collecting data and interpreting who
customers are, and more about real knowledge based on genuine
interaction and engagement.
I just wrote a note to a friend of mine
thanking him for his participation at a conference I recently
helped organize. It was a thank you note, and he's a CRM industry
influencer; I won't divulge names, because it's not important to my
point, nor do I want to seen like too much of a suck-up.
In any event, I was grateful for his participation in the show
-- not just for his session, but for his behavior at this and every
other CRM event he goes to. When he's at an event, he's not wrapped
in a bubble of superiority, nor does he retreat into private
meetings and become impossible to find for those who wish to ask
him questions. He's out there, socializing with the masses.
His behavior is an object lesson in what CRM should be at its
most elemental levels: It's about connecting with customers -- and
customers are people first.
When my friend's at an event, he embodies three great things
that good people have going for them -- and that great companies
have going for them, too.
No. 1: He's There for People
I've done a lot of CRM events; it can be very enticing to
disappear for a nap, or to cut out early, or to hit the links one
afternoon. However, that comes at the expense of interacting with
your peers; you cheat them of the chance to learn from you, and you
cheat yourself out of the chance to learn from them. Those are,
ostensibly, the two major reasons you'd go to a trade event.
Businesses do the same things: They keep strange hours, often
including customer service; their online presence in social media
may be inconsistent; and the attention they pay to their customer
community can wax and wane with changing internal priorities.
Customers don't expect that -- they're seeking answers or help,
and they think your business is present and aware enough to help
them. Your business probably already communicates that idea to
them. So figure out how to be there for people -- or set
expectations, especially if you're a small business. If you're
straight with your customers, they will surprise you with their
willingness to work with you.
No. 2: He Listens to People
It's got to be rough hearing the same things from people over
and over again. When you're thought of as an expert, folks come to
you -- and as one CRM practitioner once lamented, "Everyone seems
to think their situation is absolutely unique -- and they never
are."
After a while, you do start to hear the same tales of woe again
and again. You may think it's not that important for you to hear
these stories once more. But guess what? It's probably very
important to the person telling you the story to be able to tell it
to someone who understands.
Most of the things you hear from your customers will be
repetitious. You may hear the same complaints, or the same requests
for service, or even the same product recommendations. However,
every customer expressing these things is not viewing the
communication as part of a larger, redundant trend (as you might).
Rather, the customer is voicing that concern or suggestion to you
for the very first time as an individual.
That makes it important for you to do two things: One, provide
the channels of communication so these messages can reach you; and
two, develop answers that address these questions or concerns
appropriately. You need to forget every previous time a message
came your way and treat this conversation as new and unique -- but
recall how you addressed your past interactions on the subject.
Empathetic people can do this -- the answers they give feel like
they're given for the first time, but behind the answers is a set
of accumulate knowledge.
3. He Enjoys People
My friend deliberately puts himself in settings where he'll meet
people. He's gregarious even as he works the busy schedule of a
show. He works at it -- not as a schmoozer, but as a person who
genuinely relishes the company of others.
Does your business do that? Are you excited to engage with
customers, even when you're not collecting lead data or signing a
contract or cashing their checks? It's not necessary to like all
your customers, but being inclined to like them puts you in a much
better position to convey a winning attitude through the customer
lifecycle.
That translates into a greater likelihood of loyalty; it breaks
down barriers during the sales process; it puts you in a better
position to anticipate buying needs -- and it's a lot more fun to
go through business this way than to be in an adversarial,
hunter-and-prey mode.
A lot of this hinges on corporate culture. Is it fun to work at
your company? If it is, it's likely that employees will be more
inclined to enjoy talking to your customers. Heck -- encourage them
to seek out customers and find ways to learn about them. CRM in the
social era needs to be less about someone in sales and marketing
collecting data and interpreting who customers are, and more about
real knowledge based on genuine interaction and engagement.
Those are three extremely broad CRM traits, but they work. My
friend does pretty well for himself; he knows the people he runs
into may become customers, so he gets to know them, and he allows
them to know him.
Can those traits be learned or taught? That is another matter
entirely. I would submit, however, that if you plan on being a CRM
leader in your company, you must embody these traits -- or make a
darned good effort to learn to do so. And if you're looking to hire
someone to manage your CRM efforts, watch for people like my
friend. Even if they are not authorities on the technology yet,
you'll benefit from their innate understanding of the concepts of
forming relationships.