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Actual for You - CRM for the SME Market: More than Just Technology
10 Tips To Keep Your Cleaning Staff Motivated ressed in order to properly invest in the right CRM technology and maximize return on that investment.In any cleaning operation the cleaning supervisor or company owner is probably the most important person who can motivate cleaning crews to take pride in their work. But how one can motivate, instruct, communicate and lead the cleaning staff?In every job that I have had from cleaning floors to managing teams across the nation – I have used motivation to drive high performance and results from my teams and myself. Motivating and leading is what I love to do.Often time cleaning company owner face the problems keeping his supervisors and cleaning crew member motivated. Cleaning crew member start outs doing a great job from the first day, but when cleaning company owner starts trusting him, his performance goes downhill.This makes the company owner to think how can he motivate, instruct, communicate and lead the cleaning staff to have the same interest that one do have as a owner?Here are some basic tips for the cleaning business owner to motivate their crew members:1. Find out the strengths and weaknesses. 2. Praise them for their “strong” points and reward them publicly. 3. Identify their weak points and encourage them for improvement. 4. Give them recognition as things happen. 5. Provide interactive discussions, fast paced meetings, and up to date equipments. 6. Emphasize on the importance of taking breaks. 7. Bring in temporary help to support your team during peak workloads. 8. Offer competitive salaries and commissions.< After you have defined your CRM strategy the next step is likely to be to select a suitable CRM technology, adherence to the following step-by-step approach will ensure success: Define technology needs at the outset: Draw upon the knowledge and experience of both IT and business professionals within the organisation to compile a user and technical requirements report taking into account both current and future needs of the business. Select the correct IT partner: Credibility and experience is everything – not just in technology but the market that you operate in and in understanding the business processes to be impacted by the change. Integration: CRM software used in isolation will be less effective than software that can integrate with your financial accounts, email and other ERP packages Scalability: Can your existing IT infrastructure cope with a growing CRM system, for example, can it be accessed remotely with mobile employees? Ensure that the ‘IT roadmap’ aligns with business expansion plans Flexibility: consider ways to optimise your CRM solution, including such as, scanning, eforms, imaging, telephony and workflow User acceptability: Ensure ‘buy-in’ with a system that is familiar and intuitive Summary ROCC have partnered up with strategy consultancy Vantage Strategies, specialists in CRM, to offer you a free CRM workshop to support you in delving deeper into how CRM can benefit your business and s A Guide For First Time Business Buyers Are your customers at the centre of your organisation? Are you confident that you can optimize your CRM strategy to maximize value from your CRM technology investments? This White Paper by ROCC outlines just some of the principles of implementing CRM strategies within SMEs and touches upon the role technology plays.Owning your own business can be very rewarding both financially and emotionally. Business ownership provides innumerable opportunities to put ideas into action and reap the rewards (and sometimes the pain).Buying a business, rather than starting a business from scratch, has many advantages:The business should have established customers who will provide revenues for the business almost immediately. Unlike a start-up business that needs to find customers and take them away from another business, the business buyer must retain it's existing customers. It's always easier and less expensive to retain customers than to try to find new customers.The business you buy will have systems in place that you do not need to invent. Although it's rare for any business to have perfect systems, the business you buy will certainly have a certain way of doing things. Business buyers should always make certain they understand why the former business owner did things BEFORE changing it. The laws of unintended consequences are inescapable. Make sure you know exactly what effect changes will have before you make changes.Financing the Purchase of the BusinessFinancing a business purchase is important and should be considered carefully. For businesses valued under $2,000,000 the primary financing options are the lenders who offer Small Business Administration (SBA) guaranteed loans or the business seller.What are the advantages or disadvantages CRM is no longer the domain of large corporates. The dramatic rise in sales of CRM technology to SMEs indicates a sea-change in the market. This change is driven by the realization that CRM can deliver ROI in unexpected ways, such as, cost reduction, increasing customer profitability as well increasing advocacy (‘would you recommend us’). But SMEs are falling foul of the ‘cart before the horse’ rule believing that purchasing a CRM package will ensure a customer focus. It is the same pitfall that the large corporates suffered in the 1990s. It is vital to set your strategic objectives regarding CRM before you evaluate a software solution – the software is only one of a number of tools to support your strategy, it should not dictate your strategy. CRM is a management philosophy that places the customer firmly at the centre of a business. Technology is the enabler which should support the business process to deliver the appropriate level of service keeping the customer happy, loyal and, above all, profitable. What is CRM? The heralded failures of companies that implemented CRM technology in the 1990s can be largely attributed to the absence of a coherent customer centric strategy. Missing at the outset was a clear understanding of the strategic objectives and business processes to be enabled by the technology in the first place. Strategic vision, therefore, is critical. It provides the compelling motivation for change and guides operational actions that companies need to execute to achieve their business objectives. Why bother with CRM at all? The research indicated that CRM programmes do lead to increased customer loyalty and increasing revenues but that cost reduction through the streamlining of business processes - as well as higher ‘advocacy’ (“would you recommend us to someone”) - are the main outcomes of CRM initiatives. These gains in operational efficiency are usually the result of a ‘unified view of the customer’. In essence this means that at every ‘touch point’ every staff member can access the same information about that customer – when last invoiced, purchase history, complaint letters, feedback forms, personal details, etc. Such a unified view leads to less duplication of effort, faster reaction times, speedier decision making and ‘seamless’ interactions with the customer. ROI ROI from CRM typically comes in two forms. The first is cost reductions from increasing efficiency. For example, when customer data helps a sales team maintain productivity levels with fewer resources, cost reductions result. When sales agents in the field need to spend less time manually entering data into slow legacy systems, companies save time and money. When access to customer data helps service representatives resolve inbound calls more quickly, savings roll up. The second form of ROI is revenue enhancements, which also come in many forms. Complete purchase and service histories of top clients help sales teams make the right offer at the right time across the right channel. Timely access to valuable information increases “selling time,” shortens sales cycles, improves closure rates and keeps sales resources focused on valuable customers. Marketing teams send more targeted campaigns to customers more likely to make a purchase, while avoiding irrelevant contacts that breed dissatisfaction. Accurate customer data allows service representatives to recognize and confidently act on cross-sell and up-sell opportunities. How do you ‘manage’ your customers? The unified view of the customer enables more efficient and effective customer management in part due to a better insight into customer behaviour (buying patterns, lifetime value, churn likelihood). It is also possible, though challenging, to measure the profitability per customer. Here, much depends on cost allocation methods. The promise of this approach lies in developing a deep understanding of the actual and potential value of customers by measuring their individual contributions to the organisation. Actual value is a measure of a customer’s lifetime value - or the stream of future contribution if the customer’s relationship with you does not change. By contrast, potential value represents unrealized opportunity - a measure of how much more business might be generated if treatment of a particular customer is modified. A better appreciation of customer behaviour should lead to ‘relationship marketing’ which, in essence, prioritizes the lasting, profitable customer relationship as opposed to the short-sighted view of selling as a single-step process. The tools of relationship marketing include the utilisation of the media, mailings and newsletters, maintaining and evaluating databases and, of course, evaluating customer data via CRM systems. Leadership and organisational change in CRM Cultural change is vital to achieving strategic objectives and rolling out a CRM initiative. When organisations overlook the importance of cultural change, they increase the likelihood of CRM failure. To overcome this challenge, companies must be prepared to lead, communicate, train, motivate and support employees to ensure they engage in the desired customer-focused behavior. Employees must clearly understand the objectives of the initiative and be rewarded for utilizing new customer-focused processes and technologies. A significant factor influencing the support of users in using new processes and technology is the perceived personal benefits they gain from any proposed change. The Technology After you have defined your CRM strategy the next step is likely to be to select a suitable CRM technology, adherence to the following step-by-step approach will ensure success: Define technology needs at the outset: Draw upon the knowledge and experience of both IT and business professionals within the organisation to compile a user and technical requirements report taking into account both current and future needs of the business. Select the correct IT partner: Credibility and experience is everything – not just in technology but the market that you operate in and in understanding the business processes to be impacted by the change. Integration: CRM software used in isolation will be less effective than software that can integrate with your financial accounts, email and other ERP packages Scalability: Can your existing IT infrastructure cope with a growing CRM system, for example, can it be accessed remotely with mobile employees? Ensure that the ‘IT roadmap’ aligns with business expansion plans Flexibility: consider ways to optimise your CRM solution, including such as, scanning, eforms, imaging, telephony and workflow User acceptability: Ensure ‘buy-in’ with a system that is familiar and intuitive Summary ROCC have partnered up with strategy consultancy Vantage Strategies, specialists in CRM, to offer you a free CRM workshop to support you in delving deeper into how CRM can benefit your business and su Shock And Vibration Testing technology in the first place. Strategic vision, therefore, is critical. It provides the compelling motivation for change and guides operational actions that companies need to execute to achieve their business objectives.Shock and vibration testing is a division of product as well as component testing. This test has a wider and larger category that involves life, exposure, electrical, ergonomic, dynamic, and other specialized and significant tests.Whenever you need it, there are many of shock and vibration testing services for you. Companies typically test and screen finished components or products by means of shock and sine as well as random vibration and other vibrant test conditions. These shock and vibration testing services conduct a series of tests in conformity with the published standards from various organizations.Shock and vibration testing is capable of simulation and testing, comparison of the device and the product, confirmation and qualification, acquisition of data and interpretation, DVT or design verification testing, FMEA (failure mode and effects analysis), and preparation of sample as well as research and development.The series of tests that are carried out during shock and vibration testing can also help in verifying the effects and results of bounce, stress, ultraviolet light, aging, decompression, pyrotechnic shock, sterilization, fatigue, thermal cycling, radiation, humidity, and weathering.If you're planning to come up with a design for shock and vibration testing, it is advisable to have first a detailed and comprehensive understanding of the environment in which the test item will have to survive. Vibration can either be sinusoidal or random. Sinusoidal vib Why bother with CRM at all? The research indicated that CRM programmes do lead to increased customer loyalty and increasing revenues but that cost reduction through the streamlining of business processes - as well as higher ‘advocacy’ (“would you recommend us to someone”) - are the main outcomes of CRM initiatives. These gains in operational efficiency are usually the result of a ‘unified view of the customer’. In essence this means that at every ‘touch point’ every staff member can access the same information about that customer – when last invoiced, purchase history, complaint letters, feedback forms, personal details, etc. Such a unified view leads to less duplication of effort, faster reaction times, speedier decision making and ‘seamless’ interactions with the customer. ROI ROI from CRM typically comes in two forms. The first is cost reductions from increasing efficiency. For example, when customer data helps a sales team maintain productivity levels with fewer resources, cost reductions result. When sales agents in the field need to spend less time manually entering data into slow legacy systems, companies save time and money. When access to customer data helps service representatives resolve inbound calls more quickly, savings roll up. The second form of ROI is revenue enhancements, which also come in many forms. Complete purchase and service histories of top clients help sales teams make the right offer at the right time across the right channel. Timely access to valuable information increases “selling time,” shortens sales cycles, improves closure rates and keeps sales resources focused on valuable customers. Marketing teams send more targeted campaigns to customers more likely to make a purchase, while avoiding irrelevant contacts that breed dissatisfaction. Accurate customer data allows service representatives to recognize and confidently act on cross-sell and up-sell opportunities. How do you ‘manage’ your customers? The unified view of the customer enables more efficient and effective customer management in part due to a better insight into customer behaviour (buying patterns, lifetime value, churn likelihood). It is also possible, though challenging, to measure the profitability per customer. Here, much depends on cost allocation methods. The promise of this approach lies in developing a deep understanding of the actual and potential value of customers by measuring their individual contributions to the organisation. Actual value is a measure of a customer’s lifetime value - or the stream of future contribution if the customer’s relationship with you does not change. By contrast, potential value represents unrealized opportunity - a measure of how much more business might be generated if treatment of a particular customer is modified. A better appreciation of customer behaviour should lead to ‘relationship marketing’ which, in essence, prioritizes the lasting, profitable customer relationship as opposed to the short-sighted view of selling as a single-step process. The tools of relationship marketing include the utilisation of the media, mailings and newsletters, maintaining and evaluating databases and, of course, evaluating customer data via CRM systems. Leadership and organisational change in CRM Cultural change is vital to achieving strategic objectives and rolling out a CRM initiative. When organisations overlook the importance of cultural change, they increase the likelihood of CRM failure. To overcome this challenge, companies must be prepared to lead, communicate, train, motivate and support employees to ensure they engage in the desired customer-focused behavior. Employees must clearly understand the objectives of the initiative and be rewarded for utilizing new customer-focused processes and technologies. A significant factor influencing the support of users in using new processes and technology is the perceived personal benefits they gain from any proposed change. The Technology After you have defined your CRM strategy the next step is likely to be to select a suitable CRM technology, adherence to the following step-by-step approach will ensure success: Define technology needs at the outset: Draw upon the knowledge and experience of both IT and business professionals within the organisation to compile a user and technical requirements report taking into account both current and future needs of the business. Select the correct IT partner: Credibility and experience is everything – not just in technology but the market that you operate in and in understanding the business processes to be impacted by the change. Integration: CRM software used in isolation will be less effective than software that can integrate with your financial accounts, email and other ERP packages Scalability: Can your existing IT infrastructure cope with a growing CRM system, for example, can it be accessed remotely with mobile employees? Ensure that the ‘IT roadmap’ aligns with business expansion plans Flexibility: consider ways to optimise your CRM solution, including such as, scanning, eforms, imaging, telephony and workflow User acceptability: Ensure ‘buy-in’ with a system that is familiar and intuitive Summary ROCC have partnered up with strategy consultancy Vantage Strategies, specialists in CRM, to offer you a free CRM workshop to support you in delving deeper into how CRM can benefit your business and s Industrial Laser Cutting time manually entering data into slow legacy systems, companies save time and money. When access to customer data helps service representatives resolve inbound calls more quickly, savings roll up.Over time, the use of lasers for various types of cutting jobs has increased several times over. Today, laser cutting instruments and systems are being used in many types of industrial laser cutting jobs.Industrial laser cutting is popular with various precious metal cutting industries, as it allows the precious metal to be cut with high precision. This process results in minimal wastage of precious metals. The precise cut also ensures quality work.Industrial laser cutting has gained popularity because of its many benefits. Both small and large parts can be cut at reasonable cutting speeds while maintaining very high quality standards. The cutting can be done without the need for repeated passes. The laser cutting width can also be kept at a minimum, even as little as 20 microns in fine sheet material. This ensures very small radii and results in excellent and crisp cutting, even in the smallest of instruments or components.Lasers also have high repetition rates and high speed. This means that they have an excellent edge over any other cutting method. Good quality and high speed is a combination that makes good commercial sense. Also, the edges cut by lasers have minimum burr, which means that there is hardly any post-processing work required. Besides this, the laser can also be personalized to suit industrial cutting needs.Apart from this, industrial laser cutting also involves engraving on various systems. This means that industrial laser cutting can also be used f The second form of ROI is revenue enhancements, which also come in many forms. Complete purchase and service histories of top clients help sales teams make the right offer at the right time across the right channel. Timely access to valuable information increases “selling time,” shortens sales cycles, improves closure rates and keeps sales resources focused on valuable customers. Marketing teams send more targeted campaigns to customers more likely to make a purchase, while avoiding irrelevant contacts that breed dissatisfaction. Accurate customer data allows service representatives to recognize and confidently act on cross-sell and up-sell opportunities. How do you ‘manage’ your customers? The unified view of the customer enables more efficient and effective customer management in part due to a better insight into customer behaviour (buying patterns, lifetime value, churn likelihood). It is also possible, though challenging, to measure the profitability per customer. Here, much depends on cost allocation methods. The promise of this approach lies in developing a deep understanding of the actual and potential value of customers by measuring their individual contributions to the organisation. Actual value is a measure of a customer’s lifetime value - or the stream of future contribution if the customer’s relationship with you does not change. By contrast, potential value represents unrealized opportunity - a measure of how much more business might be generated if treatment of a particular customer is modified. A better appreciation of customer behaviour should lead to ‘relationship marketing’ which, in essence, prioritizes the lasting, profitable customer relationship as opposed to the short-sighted view of selling as a single-step process. The tools of relationship marketing include the utilisation of the media, mailings and newsletters, maintaining and evaluating databases and, of course, evaluating customer data via CRM systems. Leadership and organisational change in CRM Cultural change is vital to achieving strategic objectives and rolling out a CRM initiative. When organisations overlook the importance of cultural change, they increase the likelihood of CRM failure. To overcome this challenge, companies must be prepared to lead, communicate, train, motivate and support employees to ensure they engage in the desired customer-focused behavior. Employees must clearly understand the objectives of the initiative and be rewarded for utilizing new customer-focused processes and technologies. A significant factor influencing the support of users in using new processes and technology is the perceived personal benefits they gain from any proposed change. The Technology After you have defined your CRM strategy the next step is likely to be to select a suitable CRM technology, adherence to the following step-by-step approach will ensure success: Define technology needs at the outset: Draw upon the knowledge and experience of both IT and business professionals within the organisation to compile a user and technical requirements report taking into account both current and future needs of the business. Select the correct IT partner: Credibility and experience is everything – not just in technology but the market that you operate in and in understanding the business processes to be impacted by the change. Integration: CRM software used in isolation will be less effective than software that can integrate with your financial accounts, email and other ERP packages Scalability: Can your existing IT infrastructure cope with a growing CRM system, for example, can it be accessed remotely with mobile employees? Ensure that the ‘IT roadmap’ aligns with business expansion plans Flexibility: consider ways to optimise your CRM solution, including such as, scanning, eforms, imaging, telephony and workflow User acceptability: Ensure ‘buy-in’ with a system that is familiar and intuitive Summary ROCC have partnered up with strategy consultancy Vantage Strategies, specialists in CRM, to offer you a free CRM workshop to support you in delving deeper into how CRM can benefit your business and s The 9 Golden Rules to Successful Sales ilisation of the media, mailings and newsletters, maintaining and evaluating databases and, of course, evaluating customer data via CRM systems.1. Put yourself in your client’s shoes Understanding as much about your clients perspective is vital in developing rapport. Growing a strong & positive relationship where you focus on your clients needs, problems, challenges & desires will ultimately lead to the successful matching of your products or services…and for the best possible motives...THE WELFARE OF YOUR CLIENT. Be sure to use ‘YOU’ language – this is where you talk about them and not yourself. As soon as you hear yourself saying ‘we’ or ‘I’ you need to switch. This will be much more engaging for your client and they’ll feel you are more interested in them than selling yourself.2. Ask open questions Asking closed questions will give you 1 – 2 seconds before having to come up with the next question. Your client’s response will either confirm or decline your question, and won’t give you any information about them or their needs. Asking open questions which start with When, Where, How, What and Who will give you useful information that will help you provide exactly what your client wants. Avoid questions starting with Why, as they are very confrontational – no matter how fluffy and soft you make them sound. When you ask a Why question you are asking for justification of their response. Your client will automatically become defensive and give you an emotive response. It’s far better to ask about the facts around the decision such as: “What is it about this service that makes you think this is not a perfect match for y Leadership and organisational change in CRM Cultural change is vital to achieving strategic objectives and rolling out a CRM initiative. When organisations overlook the importance of cultural change, they increase the likelihood of CRM failure. To overcome this challenge, companies must be prepared to lead, communicate, train, motivate and support employees to ensure they engage in the desired customer-focused behavior. Employees must clearly understand the objectives of the initiative and be rewarded for utilizing new customer-focused processes and technologies. A significant factor influencing the support of users in using new processes and technology is the perceived personal benefits they gain from any proposed change. The Technology After you have defined your CRM strategy the next step is likely to be to select a suitable CRM technology, adherence to the following step-by-step approach will ensure success: Define technology needs at the outset: Draw upon the knowledge and experience of both IT and business professionals within the organisation to compile a user and technical requirements report taking into account both current and future needs of the business. Select the correct IT partner: Credibility and experience is everything – not just in technology but the market that you operate in and in understanding the business processes to be impacted by the change. Integration: CRM software used in isolation will be less effective than software that can integrate with your financial accounts, email and other ERP packages Scalability: Can your existing IT infrastructure cope with a growing CRM system, for example, can it be accessed remotely with mobile employees? Ensure that the ‘IT roadmap’ aligns with business expansion plans Flexibility: consider ways to optimise your CRM solution, including such as, scanning, eforms, imaging, telephony and workflow User acceptability: Ensure ‘buy-in’ with a system that is familiar and intuitive Summary ROCC have partnered up with strategy consultancy Vantage Strategies, specialists in CRM, to offer you a free CRM workshop to support you in delving deeper into how CRM can benefit your business and s Life as a Private Enterprise ressed in order to properly invest in the right CRM technology and maximize return on that investment.Consider your life as a business enterprise. Overshadowing everything else is a business goal and a strategy to reach that goal. Also there is a business philosophy, the red thread that gives meaning of existence to the enterprise. Now consider your life. You need one or several goals, immaterial and material ones. What is important to you in life? Consider that which you want to achieve, where you want to be and also what kind of people you want to be around. In this way you can find your way to a life which will yield the things in life that have a high value to you.And so we arrive at the business strategy, how to actually reach that goal. In this world we are bound by several resources, with money being the most obvious one in developed market economies. Whatever your goals are in life, money will surely take you pretty far on the way there. As the definition of the word economy has it, it revolves around management of resources. More specifically in this case, the household budget. So, adjust your household budget over the days, weeks, months and years for those goals you have in your life. Basically, keep yourself in check so as to make sure that you are always on the right path in life.And here’s a question to start with when sketching on your Business Plan for Life: Will you earn enough money to live your life or will you live life to earn as much money as possible?Christian M Writer & Editor for www.network-admin.biz After you have defined your CRM strategy the next step is likely to be to select a suitable CRM technology, adherence to the following step-by-step approach will ensure success: Define technology needs at the outset: Draw upon the knowledge and experience of both IT and business professionals within the organisation to compile a user and technical requirements report taking into account both current and future needs of the business. Select the correct IT partner: Credibility and experience is everything – not just in technology but the market that you operate in and in understanding the business processes to be impacted by the change. Integration: CRM software used in isolation will be less effective than software that can integrate with your financial accounts, email and other ERP packages Scalability: Can your existing IT infrastructure cope with a growing CRM system, for example, can it be accessed remotely with mobile employees? Ensure that the ‘IT roadmap’ aligns with business expansion plans Flexibility: consider ways to optimise your CRM solution, including such as, scanning, eforms, imaging, telephony and workflow User acceptability: Ensure ‘buy-in’ with a system that is familiar and intuitive Summary ROCC have partnered up with strategy consultancy Vantage Strategies, specialists in CRM, to offer you a free CRM workshop to support you in delving deeper into how CRM can benefit your business and support you in putting together an action plan for a successful CRM implementation. Whether you have already implemented CRM or are still considering its benefits and impact to your organization, this short half day review will provide the clarity required to optimize the benefits that CRM can bring.
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