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Inforte's CRM Strategy Addresses Key Challenges Facing Small And Midsize Retail Banking InstitutionsCompany BackgroundLocated in one of the wealthiest suburbs of a major U.S. city, this retail banking institution with assets under one billion, competes
against banks with much stronger market presence and wider geographic reach. This is mostly due to consolidation, which continues
to spawn large banks that have the scale to deliver a broad array of products and services to a wide range of individual and commercial
customers. Also, large banks are adopting new tactics such as process standardization and electronic channel usage to drive down
costs and help them compete for the most profitable and highest potential customers. Small and midsize banks face an increasingly
competitive marketplace. Business IssueOf the client bank's 60,000 customers approximately 10,000 have less than $250
in total loan and deposit balances. Some of these 10,000 customers are inactive,
but continue to receive costly paper statements monthly. Other customers do not
even have a checking account, but consistently cash checks at their local branch.
These activities are obviously costly and further diminish the profitability of the
bank's customer base. Surveys indicate that 98% of the bank's customers are
generally satisfied with the service they receive. However, the bank suspects that it
is over-serving less profitable customers and not taking advantage of opportunities
to enhance relationships with higher-potential customer segments. However, the
bank has had difficulty changing its long-standing practice of providing the same
level of very high quality service to every customer regardless of value. This is just
one example of the many challenges facing midsize banks: - Build market share in an extremely competitive geographical area
- Recognize the value of existing customers
- Attract, acquire, and retain the most profitable and highest potential customers
- Increase wallet share of existing customers
- Realize the potential return on a CRM investment
- Comprehend the complexity, scope, and implementation sequence for CRM
processes and technology
- Know the capacity of the existing technology infrastructure to handle a CRM
application
- Educate staff on the importance of providing equitable service
- Train staff on the value of process standardization
The bank understood the importance of increasing market share in its geographic
region. However, they recognized that profitable growth would be most efficiently
achieved through acquiring profitable customers and maximizing the potential of
existing customers. Customer Relationship Management (CRM) was being considered
as a means of carrying out this objective of increased customer intimacy and
profitability. However, the institution viewed CRM as a large scale, high maintenance
technology solution with many integration points. This misperception made the task of implementation seem intimidating and confusing. "We now have the processes and tools in place
to reach the right customers, increase our
presence within our own region and ultimately
will make us more competitive. - Bank Vice President Inforte's SolutionInforte, a proven leader in CRM strategy and technology
implementation has successfully delivered CRM projects for
many companies across diverse industries, including small and
midsize retail banking institutions. Using its proprietary
methodology, Inforte has helped companies answer CRM's most
pressing questions. To develop a successful CRM strategy for the client, Inforte helped
the bank's management team address fundamental strategic
questions that needed to be answered prior to implementing any
new technology solution. These questions included: - What will CRM accomplish for us?
- How can CRM get us closer to achieving our corporate goals?
- What are the characteristics of our current customer base?
- Are we serving the various segments of our customer base with
the appropriate types and levels of service?
- Will the bank's current processes attract and retain profitable
customers?
- Should we build a CRM application around our current
processes, or can we reengineer our customer-facing
processes to tailor service levels more appropriately?
- How do we enforce processes with the CRM application?
- What should be the scope of our CRM implementation?
- What is the most effective means of implementing CRM
technology for our business?
- How do we convince front-line staff that CRM is valuable?
- How do we ensure that front-line staff embraces CRM
principles, processes, and technology?
- How do we change long-standing practices and behaviors that
are inconsistent with CRM principles?
Through this line of analysis and questioning, the client became
aware that CRM is much more than simply an application, but
rather a new, more compelling way of thinking, behaving, and
treating customers with strategic, process, people, and technology
applications. The solution was to customize Inforte's comprehensive CRM
strategy Methodology to address the client's challenges. Based on
years of experience working with retail banks, Inforte's strategy
methodology included key deliverables such as CRM business
objectives, customer segmentation analysis, segment value
propositions, customer-facing processes, vendor recommendations,
and a CRM implementation roadmap to help the financial-institution
client prepare for implementation. The strategy also included a
detailed ROI Model to determine investment levels, key metrics and
overall returns. Before initiating the project, Inforte prepared some pre-reading
materials for the management team that gave a basic, consistent
understanding of major CRM principles. The information helped the
client's management team to immediately engage the Inforte project
team in CRM discussions. Having grasped the basics of CRM, the
management team sought to understand how to get from their
current operating procedures to a state of true customer centricity. In order to help the client understand more thoroughly the current
state of their business, Inforte conducted a kickoff meeting followed
rapidly by a set of focus groups for both executive and front-line
staff. These sessions identified key performance metrics, pain
points, and goals of the overall business, as well as marketing,
sales, service, and technology barriers to CRM. In addition to
information collection, these meetings also served to help
executives and front-line staff understand current organizational
myths, misconceptions, and barriers to customer intimacy. Assessing the Current StateFrom a tactical, operational perspective, the following gaps and
conditions were identified: - CRM goals unaligned with corporate objectives and metrics
were not being used to measure performance against the
objectives
- Little knowledge of the customer base's current value,
demographics, potential, product holdings, and life stage
existed
- A desire to understand product and service needs of different
customer groups was unfulfilled
- No differentiated value propositions indicated how to treat
different customers
- Seasonal, rather than targeted, marketing campaigns were in
place
- Sales incentives were aligned with customer needs or product
profitability; only product of the month or products with the
best commission were offered
- No standard customer-facing processes; sales and service
practices varied across front-line staff
- Limited communication and integration between marketing
and sales staff; sales staff was often unaware of marketing
campaigns
- Redundant sales pitches to customers who either already
purchased the product being offered or had continuously
rejected it, e.g., pitching HELOCs to renters or 529 plans to
people without children
- Tracking of service requests and inquiries did not result in a
record of the interaction which limited understanding of the
customers' service experience
- Limited recognition of what application functionality must be
implemented, and in what sequence, to achieve CRM goals
- Current technology infrastructure (servers and databases) had
not been assessed to ensure that it was compatible with and
capable of supporting a CRM application
- No understanding of the potential return on a CRM investment
Aligning Corporate Goals with CRM ObjectivesThe initial assessment of the current state served as an "eye-opener"
for the bank's employees and a call-to-action. Inforte's next step was
to facilitate a workshop with executives to align corporate goals
and initiatives with CRM objectives. In the meeting, Inforte isolated
the corporate goals that could be fully or partially achieved via
CRM. The result was a set of high-level CRM business objective
statements indicating how the institution wanted to grow
(organically or through acquisition, etc.), increase margins, and
enhance service capabilities. The institution decided to focus on
growth through increased product and service penetration within
the existing customer base and acquisition of the most profitable
and highest potential customers through more targeted marketing
campaigns and community outreach programs. The client planned
to increase margins by eliminating inactive accounts and
discouraging usage of costly channels by less-profitable customers.
To measure progress against these objectives, Inforte aligned each
one with performance metrics. Building a Customer-Segmentation ModelOnce the business objectives were clear, Inforte analyzed customer
data to identify trends and used an innovative segmentation model
to group customers into relationship-based segments. The team
used attributes that measured the size, breadth, and potential of
each customer relationship, complexity of product holdings,
primary "relationship products" per segment, and demographics,
along with other tools that identified expressed preferences, needs,
and life stage. Inforte identified six unique customer segments
around which marketing efforts and focus sales and service
processes could be targeted. Some of the major findings follow: - The two most valuable segments represented only 4% of the
customer base, but accounted for 39% of the total operating
income.
- The two least valuable segments, representing 57% of the
customer base, accounted for only 8% of the total operating
income.
- The most profitable customer segment was in its prime working
years and had broad loan and service needs.
- The next most profitable segment was of retirement age with high
deposits, but very low loan balances; this insight represented a
huge opportunity to sell investment services to seniors by
convincing them to use the investments services group to move
their money from savings and CDs to mutual funds.
Creating Unique Value Propositions for each Customer SegmentEquipped with a clear picture of each segment's value and life
stage, Inforte worked with executives to create a unique set of
value propositions that indicated exactly what the customer
should expect to gain from a relationship with the bank, how
they should be treated, and why this was a better solution to their
needs than competitive alternatives. This exercise enabled the
client to go beyond just understanding their customer base to
defining and executing a strategy for each segment. This was the
first step away from misaligned service levels and toward
tailored service in which customers received service levels
proportionate to their value and potential. Standardizing and Improving Customer-Facing ProcessesTo support the movement toward customer centricity, Inforte
developed a set of marketing, sales, and service process maps to
lay the foundation for standardization. These processes were not
only aimed at eliminating excess costs, but more importantly, at
ensuring consistent, fast, and more effective execution. Both top
management and front-line staff collaborated with Inforte to ensure that processes met business and customer needs and were
integrated across channels and functions. This, again, served to
educate employees on the value of consistency and crossdepartmental
integration. The next step for this institution is to tailor
these base processes for each customer segment. Assessing Current Technology Gaps and Creating a CRM Implementation RoadmapFrom a technology perspective, Inforte educated the bank's
employees on the gaps between their current technology
capabilities and those required to implement a fully functional CRM
solution, including servers, databases, and resources. Using the
information gathered during the technology assessment, Inforte
analyzed the complexity of implementing different types of
functionality. CRM functionality was organized into numerous
categories including campaign management, account
management, contact management, lead management, order
management, and service requests, among others. This "complexity
analysis" estimated timeframes, required resources, and costs of
implementing each category of CRM functionality and was used as
an input to both the ROI Model and the technology aspects of the
CRM Implementation Roadmap. The CRM Implementation Roadmap laid out the entire sequential
CRM implementation program including required process
refinement, technology architecture, CRM technology configuration
and programming, the required organizational/ behavioral
changes, and the project governance approach. The plan served
as the blueprint for full CRM implementation at this institution. Creating an ROI ModelTo answer the most important question, "what return should we
expect," Inforte engaged the CFO and the leadership of the bank's
branches and call centers to define a series of expectations for
growth and savings resulting from new CRM capabilities. These
projections, as well as the estimated total investment, were
integrated into a comprehensive ROI Model designed to calculate
expected rate of return. Even with extremely conservative
assumptions around improved marketing effectiveness, increased
referrals, and increased sales, the expected return was strong, with
a five-year net present value of about $1.5 million or a 112%
internal rate of return (IRR). Slightly more aggressive estimates
indicated a five-year net present value (NPV) of about $3.2 million.
Due to economies of scale and implementation efficiencies, a $10B
institution should expect an NPV of 75% and an IRR of 110%. Business Benefits DeliveredInforte helped the client increase the profitability of their customer
relationships and differentiate itself from the competition by
implementing the following CRM capabilities: - Increased customer penetration and wallet share of existing
customers
- Improved marketing effectiveness and campaign hit rates
- Increased customer satisfaction and retention
- Reduced sales and service operating costs
- Improved understanding of customer and product profitability
Client ReactionInforte's work was extremely well received at all levels of the
organization. Not only did this institution increase its understanding
of CRM but it also helped customize a strategy for the entire
organization in a matter of weeks and obtained an understanding
of next required steps with a strong financial rationale for moving
forward with CRM. CRM principles have already spread
throughout the organization, facilitating positive change and
enhancing the relationships of front line staff with their customers. Words of AdviceThough these results were extremely positive and the culture has
begun to change, this institution still needs to build and implement
process-enabling technology to support its new customer segments.
While continuing to enact cultural change, they plan to continue
working with Inforte to develop detailed process designs in support
of segment strategies and value propositions, and then, implement
a full-scope CRM solution that supports sales, service and marketing
across multiple channels. |