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T H E H I N D U O P P O R T U N I T I E S A Guide to Better Positions and Better Performance Wednesday, January 17, 2001 |
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WORKING TRENDZ Customer royale!: Key to good account management
MARKETING IS an achievement- oriented profession and promises
quick upward mobility as well as enhancing personal and
professional growth. The journey from the producer to the
consumer is the one often traversed by the marketer and involves
a great deal of planning, test marketing and sales forecasting
before the product is actually made available to the consumer.
The last few decades of the millennium have seen more changes in
marketing than at any other time. Competition among numerous
brands for the finite sales in the market have led to more and
more features being added to the product to make a difference to
the sales. However these 'augmented products' soon became
`expectations' of the customers.
TQM (Total Quality Management) has become all-pervasive, with
every department in the organisation looking to incorporate
standards to benchmark and be benchmarked for performance. BPR
(Business Process Reengineering) began to be implemented in order
to improve the market- focus, and to stay competitive with tight
cost control and optimum resource allocation.
Through all this, with the focus on enhanced product functions,
the cost of production went up and margins dwindled. Due to the
growth of parity products, the only way to stand out was to serve
the customers better. The corporate had to become "customerised"
or customer-focused. The shift of the marketer now was on TCM
(Total Customer Management).
Neil Borden's four Ps (product, price, place & promotion) that
formed the basis of traditional marketing strategy were no longer
sound. The four Ps had been propounded for industrial products,
where a segment of many consumers was treated with one formula of
mass production, mass distribution, and mass communication at
more or less one price. The seller could get away with `body-
count marketing', i.e. making volumes per sale and many such
sales calls per day.
With the shift to a service product, the emphasis changed to
"customisation" (making the product to the specifications of the
customer) and "one-to-one marketing"(dealing with one customer or
a small group of similar customers at a time). Personalisation
became important, and the need came for relationships with the
customer in order to assure the long- term survival of the
marketer.
CRM or Customer Relationship Management caught on in the 1990s.
The customer had to treat you as a friend to conclude the
transaction and renew the bond. The focus was on delivering
better and better value to the customer, through a better
understanding of his needs. Selling became more of listening than
talking, and feedback was all-important. Contact management
software allowed the documentation of every interaction, and
computing technology supported the strides into data warehousing
and mining for customer information.
The existing customers have to be made clients and then advocates
for the products. This could only be done by delighting them
beyond their expectations, not just satisfying them.
In recent years, however, this has become unmanageable. With the
ever-increasing demands of customers, and the premium on time and
manpower, organisations have found it unviable to put in so much
effort in every customer relationship. Besides, the Pareto 80-20
rule had proved itself here as well - 80% of a company's profit
comes from only 20% of their customers; just as 80% of the
margins come from only 20% of the products in its portfolio. The
only way out was through KAM or Key Account Management. KAM
requires a focus on the 20% customers, the important key accounts
who add 80% to the bottom line, and satisfy them to a 100%,
bonding with them so that they are retained as loyal customers
with captive referral power.
This is easier said than done, however. The human implications
are tremendous! It is heartbreaking for those salespeople who
have nurtured relationships with the 80% who are not to be
fostered any longer. How does one let go? More importantly, how
do we choose these 20%? Each company evolves their own criteria
for this selection. Whatever the measure, find these key accounts
and focus on them. Eighty percent of the sales team's time must
dwell on the information analysed about the client, in order to
meld the corporate's goals with that of the marketer.
The marketer should now be seen as a partner, not just a
supplier. An alliance that wants the best for the client
corporate, that understands the client's needs and always looks
out for the best interests of the client. Not the marketer's! The
client's goals come first. In the pursuit of this, the perception
of the supplier-marketer as a partner will force the client
corporate into a win-win situation. He has to help the marketer
grow to keep growing himself.
One corporate that has successfully implemented KAM is ITW
Signode. The company has found that this programme has helped to
motivate and retain its sales team.
Key sales teams, selected from the best and most experienced, are
placed in position to interact with these key accounts.
Incentives to the sales team are based on the deliverables to the
key accounts, the rise of the CSI (Customer Satisfaction Index),
and the retention of these accounts.
Other prospects are regularly fostered by a second sales team,
the field engineering team. Their performance is evaluated on the
basis of the conversions to key account status of potential
customers, and the time span this is achieved in. A great KAM
system worth emulating! Concentrate on the satisfaction indices
of the key accounts. Enhance the Lifetime Value (LTV) or the CLV
(Customer Lifetime Value) that these Most Valuable Customers
(MVCs) can bring to your growth potential! This is the overriding
mantra for marketing success today!
LEKHA SISHTA
lekha.hyd@careercommunity.co.in
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