Friday 6th January 2012 - Published by Lara Page - Account Manager

CRM and the Seven Signs of Life.

CRM and the Seven Signs of Life: How to breathe life into your Customer Relationship Management strategy

White coats on, stethoscopes at the ready – Carolyn Bondi, Business Development Director at leading CRM & data agency Blueberry Wave, talks us through the basic biology of CRM campaigns and provides her top tips for boosting your strategy.

This year more than ever, sales figures need to be busily multiplying. But if you suspect that your campaigns could be DOA, it’s time to check your CRM strategy for the Seven Signs of Life.

If you feel your strategy may be falling short, there are plenty of things you can do to administer first aid. Follow our seven-step guide to putting the life back into your CRM campaign:

1.    Movement: Is there movement out there?  Are you harnessing all your customers and prospect touch points and correctly via the web, email, DM response, in-store, social media, delivery and operations? Think about every touch point as an opportunity. It’s imperative you gather the right information in the right format. Make sure you seek permission from customers to contact them, and get their postal address – it makes all the other jobs possible. Email only or badly permissioned data can render your customers unreachable, unhygienic or prematurely ageing!

2.    Respiration: Is your database breathing?  You can only tell if you have a working Single Customer View. Get your individual customers into one place, have one household address, prioritise the household and align everyone’s recorded sales and interactions with you across all your products, brands and channels.

3.    Sensitivity: How sensitive are you to your customers and prospects?  Do you have a thorough understanding of their needs?  If you collected address details it’s now time for some analysis - what do they do (their purchase patterns, buying behavior, channel they use, what they buy) and who are they (lifestyle and demographics)? Build a portrait of your customers that takes everything possible into account, focusing on the areas in your business with the most potential.

4.    Growth: Take the time to assess which parts of your strategy to nurture and grow. Put them in the right order, ranking them from best to worst. Build a propensity model on the area of your business that has the biggest potential to grow or requires immediate focus, as you’ll need to be able to target existing customers who have the highest likelihood to re-purchase.

5.    Reproduction: This is where it gets exciting - a great contact and communications strategy can really help your customer base multiply! Create a bespoke plan that shows you when to talk to them, by what channel, about what and how to position your message or offer to them. This helps your customers feel understood and valued, and ultimately they will buy more. By making your campaign relevant and timely you will increase your likelihood to get a sale. Your plan should give you a basis to springboard into the future with an improved structure and the ability to measure success and report on it.

Carolyn Bondi

Carolyn Bondi