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CRM in Indian enterprises
The Indian experience
Although CRM is not very widely used
in Indian companies, its relationship with India Inc has
been sweet. by Soutiman Das Gupta
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The major users of CRM are
companies in the telecom and financial services
verticals. Both have a large number of users who
need to be supported through call
centres Pranav Kumar, Research
Director, APAC, Gartner |
Indian companies have traditionally
focussed on processes and technologies, with the
objective of optimising these processes using enterprise
applications such as ERP. The focus has always been
inwards. Now as companies become more customer-oriented,
they realise the benefits of including customers and
business partners in their value chain. As a result,
Indian companies are becoming more focussed vis-à-vis
external entities.
However, in spite of relatively mature
CRM solutions being available, its use is not very
widespread. Companies in BFSI, telecom and BPO are the
only ones that use this technology extensively.
The infrastructure strategies survey
conducted by Network Magazine and IMRB among Indian CIOs
reveals that only 13 percent of the companies have
CRM as an IT priority. Among companies which have
already invested in enterprise applications or are
planning to invest, only 23 percent say yes to CRM. 19
percent of the companies plan to dedicate part of their
planned investments to CRM.
The figures are not very high
considering that ERP is the second-highest IT priority
for 41 percent of the total respondents, and that 69
percent of companies which have already invested in
enterprise applications or are planning to invest want
to go with ERP.
Slow to gain Popularity in
India
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CRM is also about getting your
wealth-creating processes in place, which are the
back-office processes that address customer needs
Subhomoy Sengupta, General Manager,
Applications Sales, Oracle India
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Indian companies are on a journey that
can only end with them becoming more customer-centric.
It’s only now that the use of technology to automate
customer processes such as sales, marketing, and
after-sales service is getting due attention.
“The reason for the slower adoption of
CRM software is that many companies do not have adequate
IT infrastructure to support these solutions. Also, many
companies try to first automate their back-end processes
such as accounting, inventory and ERP before embarking
on front-end processes like CRM,” explains Ashish
Kamotra, Chief Executive Officer, ADAPT Software IAP
India.
Increased competition, margin
pressures and demanding customers are forcing companies
to look at CRM in a big way. However, it is interesting
to note that while the CRM software market is indeed in
comeback mode, growth may not come from increased
purchases of the enormous CRM suites as in the past.
Says Girish Krishnamurthy, General
Manager, India, Talisma Corporation, “Enterprises will
focus on adding specific functional modules and new
business models to their application portfolios. Instead
of powerful, complex software, large and small
enterprises are choosing CRM applications that are easy
to launch and easy to use.”
The growing market
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Company |
Solutions |
Contacts |
Adapt Software Applications
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ADAPTcrm |
ADAPT Software IAP India Phone:
91 124 5050 621, 5050 622 Website:
www.adapt-india.com
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| Business Objects |
"BusinessObjects
Enterprise "Web Intelligence "Crystal
Reports
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Sonata Information Technology Phone:
91 80 2657 5800 Website:
www.businessobjects.com businessSolutions/crm
/default.aspx |
| Microsoft |
Microsoft CRM |
Microsoft India Phone: 91 124
5158 000 Website: www.microsoft.com/
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| Oracle |
Oracle CRM |
Oracle India Phone: 91 124 2549
250/2549 260 Website: www.oracle.com/
applications/crm/index.html |
| Siebel |
Siebel CRM " Sales Force
Automation " Marketing Automation "Call Centre
and Service " Business Analytics " Hosted
CRM
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Siebel Systems Software
India Phone: 91 80 5136 7505
www.siebel.com/crm/customer- relationship-management.shtm
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| Talisma |
Talisma Multi-channel CRM
solution |
Talisma Corporation Phone :
91 80 2361 3377 Website: www.talisma.com
/tal_products/default.asp
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Talisma quotes Frost & Sullivan’s
findings that India is the fastest-growing market for
contact centre systems in the APAC, with a projected
CAGR of 19.5 percent. According to IDC, the CRM market
will touch $11 billion by 2008, marching at a CAGR of
8.9 percent in the 2004-2008 period. The market for
Customer Interaction Management is currently estimated
at $400 million, and predicted to grow to nearly $1
billion by 2008 (Source: Gartner).
The key verticals fuelling the growth
of operational CRM in India are banking, finance,
insurance, telecom, utilities, manufacturing and
healthcare. According to the infrastructure strategies
survey, companies in the verticals of BFSI and
telecom/IT/BPO show the maximum amount of CRM use. 39
percent of BFSI companies and 36 percent of
telecom/IT/BPO companies are among those companies that
have either invested or plan to invest in enterprise
application tools.
After the initial phase of euphoria,
organisations have realised that there is more to CRM
than just setting up call centres or deploying some
sales force automation tools. “It’s about getting your
wealth-creating processes in place, which are normally
the back-office processes to address customer needs,”
explains Subhomoy Sengupta, General Manager,
Applications Sales, Oracle India.
So far, CRM has been more popular with
telcos and financial services organisations, but it is
increasingly getting more attention from mid-size
organisations in other verticals as well.
“The major users of CRM are companies
in the telecom and financial services verticals. Both
have a large number of users who need to be supported
through call centres. There is an increasing importance
of churn and customer profitability issues,” says Pranav
Kumar, Research Director, APAC, Gartner.
Growth inhibitors
An organisation’s inability to get a
quick ROI is a hurdle in the adoption of this
technology. The high cost involved in deploying
CRM—hardware, implementation, software, and expertise to
handle the implementation—acts as a barrier to proactive
adoption by Indian enterprises.
“The Indian market is characterised by
a pool of small and medium-sized companies. These
companies lack awareness and the necessary
infrastructure to deploy full-scale solutions,
inhibiting the growth of CRM,” says Prachi Kanekar,
Research Analyst with Frost & Sullivan.
Not much CRM here
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The reason
for the slower adoption of CRM software is that
many companies do not have adequate IT
infrastructure to support these solutions
Ashish Kamotra, Chief Executive Officer,
ADAPT Software IAP India |
In the conventional sense, any
mass-distributed product where the company has no direct
contact with the end-user would not find much value in
CRM. “However, if the partner is treated as a customer
then there is no vertical that can remain untouched by
CRM,” explains Kamotra.
The infrastructure strategies survey
reports that companies in verticals such as FMCG,
consumer durables, government and PSUs use CRM the
least, with only seven percent of those who have either
invested or are planning to invest in enterprise
application tools giving it the go-ahead. Companies in
the chemical, pharmaceutical, services, auto and auto
components verticals show relatively less use as well at
19 percent.
“Manufacturing organisations,
especially small and medium ones, have not been so far
much interested in CRM, largely because of
pre-occupation with ERP, which is usually more important
for them,” says Pranav Kumar. However, in companies
where conventional CRM components such as sales force
automation and after-sales-service automation are not
really needed, CRM finds its place in terms of data
mining, cross-sell and up-sell opportunities.
New verticals
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Segments with increasing
competitive pressures and high-value sales will
deploy sales force automation systems.
Support-oriented organisations are the next big
gainers if they deploy CRM Rajeev
Mittal, Director, Small and Medium
Solutions and Partners, Microsoft
India |
Companies that are likely to deploy
CRM solutions in the future are pharmaceuticals, BPO,
retail, FMCG, healthcare, airlines and the government.
Manufacturing is also showing potential for CRM
deployment with a focus on maintaining relationships
with dealers and helping them enhance their sales and
service capabilities.
“Segments with increasing competitive
pressures and high-value sales will deploy sales force
automation systems. Support-oriented organisations are
the next big gainers if they deploy CRM. A typical
example of this would be IT resellers and systems
integrators, since they need both sales and service to
remain competitive,” says Rajeev Mittal, Director, Small
and Medium Solutions and Partners, Microsoft
India.
Quality, consistency and customised
care to the patient help the healthcare service
providers to retain the patient as well as the entire
family for their lifetime. “CRM technology is
implemented to minimise cost and time in healthcare, and
ultimately enhance the customer relationship,” says G
Radhakrishnan Pillai, Head, IT, SRL Ranbaxy.
It helps to re-use the information
available with business in order to analyse the
customer’s behaviour and expectations. Technology can
play a role to make this process a lot easier.
New application areas
Along with maturity of enterprise
applications such as ERP and databases, companies will
want to integrate their ERP systems with CRM and supply
chain software. This will bring about, in the true
sense, what is known as an extended enterprise. It will
enable more enterprise users to look at CRM as an
enterprise-wide software solution with back-end
integration, rather than being understood as a
stand-alone software module for functions such as call
centre automation, sales force automation, and selling
on the Web.
Soutiman Das Gupta can be reached at
soutimand@networkmagazineindia.com |