February 2006


Mystery power behind IT throneAustralian IT, Australia - 20 minutes ago… Accenture pipped IBM for the Comverse/Siebel billing and customer relationship management project and is understood to be in line for key roles with Mr Winn's …Compiere appoints new CEOPortland Business Journal, OR - 3 hours ago… source business automation applications for accounting, supply chain management, enterprise resource planning [...]

Hosted CRM is next big thing - analyst
Australian IT, Australia - 20 hours ago
In 2005, analyst Frost and Sullivan says, revenue from hosted CRM applications in Australia totalled $13.2 million, or 13 per cent of total CRM revenue.

In the wake of several service outages in recent weeks, Salesforce.com has created a Web site to update users of its hosted CRM software on system performance and any problems it encounters.


Experts have applauded Oracle’s attempts to “have it all ways” as it develops its customer relationship management software after buying Siebel. Although Siebel will be the figurehead CRM product in the future, Oracle will also push the CRM components of its E-Business Suite for the construction, manufacturing and professional services sectors, according to analysts briefed during a conference call. Oracle will also continue to support and develop the CRM capabilities in PeopleSoft and JD Edwards application suites.

Spatial to Use RightNow CRM for Sales, Customer Service
Ten Links, CA - 22 hours ago
Belgium, January 18, 2006 - RightNow® Technologies (NASDAQ: RNOW) today announced that 3D software developer Spatial has selected RightNow CRM™ to improve

“Cashing in” on Aspective Microsoft CRM Version 3.0
CRM Today - 22 hours ago
Aspective, provider of Microsoft CRM solutions in the UK, announced the addition of TTT Moneycorp Ltd (TTT) as its latest customer for Microsoft Dynamics CRM
New Microsoft Tools Link Outlook and Applications ComputerWorld
all 2 related


Earthtimes.org
IDC: 2004 Was A Good Year For CRM
TMCnet - 1 hour ago
According to a recent IDC study, the Western European market for CRM applications reached $2.55 billion in 2004, evidently the proverbial last year for which
Siebel and SAP Dominate Western European CRM Destination CRM
SAP, Oracle In European Market-Share Dance: Study InformationWeek
Oracle, SAP continue power struggle iT News
Earthtimes.org - all 6 related

CRM, ERP Fuel SMB GRW — Growth, Sorry
TMCnet - 1 hour ago
Fueled by continued demand for ERP and CRM equipment, small and medium businesses in the United States are on track to spend $2.2 billion on enterprise
SMBs Getting Picky About Their Software Choices E-Commerce Times
all 4 related

ERP Manufacturing Software Encompix Replaces MRP and CRM Systems
CRM Today - 1 hour ago
Inc., headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, has licensed Encompix ERP software to replace a series of non-integrated systems including Caelus MRP and Goldmine CRM.


Earthtimes.org
First Coffee - CRM Studies from IDC, AMI Partners, Real-Life CRM
TMCnet - Feb 27, 2006
Fueled by continued demand for ERP and CRM equipment, small and medium businesses in the United States are on track to spend $2.2 billion on enterprise
IDC: 2004 Was A Good Year For CRM TMCnet
SAP, Oracle top ERP and CRM market share list in Europe Earthtimes.org
all 4 related

Mahmud Hassan Mansur, post and telecommunication secretary, inaugurated the 14th customer care centre of the company on Friday, says a press release.

By Doug BeizerGenesys software cures what ails VA call centers It doesn’t get much more annoying than dealing with bad customer service over the phone.

It is always interesting to compare CRM in Greater China and CRM in the United States. The main differences are the quality of data—or lack thereof; the differences in uniform prosperity; and even the way CRM is viewed. Still, there are similarities. The same vendors seem to lead the market, and there is a blurring between local business and multinational corporations.

As we begin a new year, here’s how I see the shape of CRM in Greater China in terms of five challenges for the market.

Data quality
The credit card penetration rate is under 1 percent in China, compared to more than 90 percent penetration in the United States, according to Visa International (2004).

Data quality in China is a matter of extremes. Ask anyone who works in data management in China, and he or she will tell you how difficult it is to get clean data and how frequent and dynamic the changes of Chinese people are, no matter what their economical status, geographical moves or demographical changes.

If you have a business in China, you can expect half your data to go obsolete in 12 months. This is why credit card penetration is so low. However, if you are willing to buy data at all costs, regardless of the types of channels and your purpose for the data, you could get almost any level of data. That’s because there is a loophole in the data privacy law, and the general public does not have strong sense of privacy protections. Because data is of primary concern when you’re dealing with CRM, it can be a thorny issue.

Disparity in prosperity
The difference in the gross domestic product of the first-tier Chinese provinces is 13 times that of the bottom-tier provinces, according to the National Bureau of Statistics of China and International Monetary Fund. This is compared to Europe, where the GDP of the first-tier countries is 3,000 percent of the bottom-tier countries.

More and more foreign enterprises realize they’re not only entering into a big country, but also they’re entering into a European-style market with diverse and dispersed segments. Consider the different levels of wealth, customer maturity, infrastructure, culture, languages, customs of different regions in China, not to mention growth, and you might have trouble surviving. You can’t apply one single policy or strategy to a market of more than a billion people. The fast and unbalanced economic development and growth of customer maturity further accelerate the gaps and intensify the two ends. The demand of on-target segmentation is another challenge for CRM in China.

Tough (but not impossible) road for local enterprises
Six foreign and four Chinese brands ranked in the top 10 of advertisers in 2004, according to Nielsen Media Research.

When you consider that, the competitive advantages of multinational corporations compared to local enterprises become a blur. In the past decades, the MNCs had the advantages of global branding, expertise and capital wealth over local enterprises. Nowadays, the gaps between the two are narrowing. With more and more capital influx from being listed in various stock market and more resources spent on building and enhancing brands; innovating new products with their own design; recruiting high profile professionals with global and MNC experiences, local enterprises are improving and expanding very quickly. On the other hand, the MNCs are gaining advantages in channel management while picking up local market knowledge. As the differences between local enterprises and multinational corporations lessen at the same time as customers are becoming more mature and expecting quality as well as low prices, companies large and small must focus on customer experience to win loyal customers and good profits.

Foreign vendors controlling all but niche industries
The reported sales revenue in 2004 of Oracle was $12 billion (in U.S. dollars); Siebel was $1.34 billion; and SAP was $2.8 billion. The top three Chinese software companies had a combined sales revenue of only $300 million or just 2 percent of the three foreign vendors, according to the Chinese Ministry of Information Industry.

Local vendors are too weak to compete with the foreign corporations, no matter which market segment you’re talking about—even in many industry-specific areas. They are just too weak in R&D, branding and professional industry experiences. Big ticket projects will still be won by ERP-oriented CRM vendors, benefiting SAP and Oracle. However, there is some room for local vendors that specialize in some niche industries—like real estate, telecom, media—that require unique local experiences and relationships to break the ice and close the deal.

Perception of CRM as an application
CRM sales revenue in the China market will have hit $54 million (in U.S. dollars) in 2005, according to the Chinese Center for Information Industry Development. That’s still less than 1 percent of global spending ($8.8 billion in 2004, according to Center for Information Industry Development).

Just as people often mistakenly perceive only advertising builds a brand, quite a large portion of people still think CRM means software or even a call center. So what are the natural results? The truth is no brand could be built successfully if you focus only on advertising, and no successful CRM can be done if you focus only on software or the call center. My opinion is that the perception in China that CRM is nothing more than software is too strong for simple education to change. There are two ways out: Change the term "customer relationship management" to something else or be patient and wait for enterprises to learn bitter lessons before they "get it." China enterprises have to invest (translate: lose) more before they learn those precious lessons.


Sampson Lee is the president of GCCRM, an independent CRM evaluation organization. He could be reached at sampson@gccrm.com. For more details, visit www.gccrm.com.

Alliance Data Stretches Relationship With New York & Company
DM News, NY - 4 hours ago
traffic into the stores. Melissa Campanelli covers postal news, CRM and database marketing for DM News and DMNews.com. To keep up

Extract not available.

Business intelligence lies beyond IT: Dresner
ZDNet.com.au, Australia - 8 hours ago
"Some CRM vendors have suggested that they can give you a 360 degree view of your customer. Ok well how many degrees of my business is that? Is it 90 degrees?

man has begun Get Human, which he calls a grassroots movement to change the face of customer service — or get a human to answer the phone.

Advertise | Site Map RSS | Search BOSTON, Feb. 26 (UPI) — A U.S. man has begun Get Human, which he calls a grassroots movement to change the face of customer service — or get a human to answer the phone.

Users scramble as Blackberry shutdown loomsCMPnetAsia, Singapore - 4 hours ago… European enterprise resource planning (ERP) applications market, but lags behind its closest rival Siebel in the customer relationship management (CRM) market …


As airlines have slashed the number of workers to cut costs, they’ve increasingly substituted automated services for jobs humans once did. Travelers are becoming used to the technology, and they’re doing more of the work themselves, including shuffling luggage through bomb detection. “Airlines have trained us, and now it’s second nature to us,” says Steve Morrison, a Northeastern University professor who studies the airline industry.




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