Archive for June, 2006

a self made astronaut…

Thursday, June 8th, 2006
As I touched on in an earlier post we are moving close to live day on one of our major projects. This week we got to see the fruits of the development work that’s been ongoing for the last month or so. We put a lot of effort into gathering requirements and designing systems and it’s always a gratifying moment when we get to see the finished article. Which is not to say there’s not a lot of work left to do; there’s an extensive testing programme now underway to check that what’s been specified is what’s been developed, and indeed whether what’s been specified does actually meets the user requirements – which is of course the ultimate acid test.



This testing process is actually more demanding on time and resources than it might initially appear. There was a nice line in an article in the latest edition of Fortune magazine on teamwork where it was noted that ‘Neil Armstrong didn’t get to the moon through rugged individualism; there is no such thing as a self-made astronaut’. The testing process is certainly no solo endeavour, and the project team are having to pull together well to get through it. It doesn’t matter how well written the specification or the code, issues will inevitably crop up. Identifying them, logging them, communicating them back to the vendor, retesting the fixes, ensuring the fixes haven’t broken something else, is time consuming, and it’s easy for the project to drift off schedule if you haven’t made sufficient allowance for just how long it can take. That said it’s not an area to cut corners. Users have a fragile faith in technology, and if they are greeted by a host of bugs the first time they use the system, it may also prove to be the last.

Success is never final…

Friday, June 2nd, 2006
It’s a much hackneyed phrase, but we live in a world of unparalleled change. A couple of random facts derived from copies of The Economist currently sat on my desk – a feature on Goldman Sachs, notes that 30% of the company’s revenues in 2005 (i.e. a small matter of $7 billion), came from activities that didn’t exist when the company floated in 1999. An article about Nokia – in the era of the camera-phone, Nokia sells more cameras than any other company (I can’t say I saw that coming when I got my first Nokia phone in 1995).



The pace of technological change, the impact of the internet, the rise of China and India, the splintering of the media, global warming, global terrorism, the increasing concentration of retailing power, to name but a few influences that are putting our businesses into increasing flux. Thinking about our customers, I can’t think of one client who isn’t facing significant new business challenges, whether it’s a major new competitive threat, absorbing an acquisition, being absorbed through acquisition, moving into a new market, moving out of an old market, etc etc.



I make these obvious points to highlight a key challenge from a CRM standpoint – while we have to build systems that positively support our strategic initiatives (and market success in this endeavour has been spotty to say the least) we also have to maintain those systems so that they continue to support the business as it addresses new threats and exploits new opportunities over time. As Winston Churchill said - ‘Success is never final’, and I think too often efforts in this respect mimic the plight of the novice skier executing a turn where the strategic leg of the business goes right, and the systems leg carries straight on.

Scripting cartoon

Thursday, June 1st, 2006

The greeting is a crucial portion of the call, as it sets the tone for the rest of the interaction.  Greetings should be loaded with genuine concern for the caller’s issue, empathy and lots of enthusiasm. Instead some companies feel that greetings are just another place to market their products or services.  This approach only shows that the caller’s money, not their satisfaction is what is really important to the firm.

Call center cartoon from www.callcentercomics.com

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