Professional Documents
Culture Documents
What Is CRM
What Is CRM
What Is CRM
H=AACffht_IUX0DRMmOy7CEC6HUWV7IO5FhhU%3D&Subsidiary=1&Vid=JpGLf1NHAoD2krrR&Chrole=17&Ck=DYKNr1xHAv-44Rnv&Cktime=149335&Cart=1467293&Promocode=&Promocodeaction=Overwrite)
(/Portal/Home.Shtml?Noredirect=T)
Company (/portal/aboutus.shtml) / Educational Resources (/portal/resource/overview.shtml) / Business Solutions Articles (/portal/resource/business-solutions-articles.shtml) / What is CRM?
WHAT IS CRM?
Tweet
Share 444
CRM solutions provide companies with the customer data they need so that they can provide services or products that
their customers want, provide better customer service, cross-sell and up-sell more effectively, close deals, retain current
customers and better understand who their customers are.1
CRM Capabilities
Sales force automation (SFA): This integrates and automates sales processes, including opportunity
management, quote and order management, sales forecasting, order management, fulfillment, and incentive
compensation management.
Marketing automation: This software automates the entire marketing process, with capabilities that include
campaign and email management, lead reporting and analytics, website search engine optimization and landing
page and form creation.
Customer support and service: These capabilities include case and ticket management, customer portals, time
tracking and knowledge management.
Some CRM solutions also allow companies to better manage their channel relationships with functions such a secure
partner portal and analytics.
CRM applications can trace their roots back to the 1980s, when database marketing, which collected and analyzed
customer information, emerged as a new, improved form of direct marketing. Robert and Kate Kestnbaum, pioneers in
this area, introduced metrics such as customer lifetime value, and the application of financial modeling and
2
http://www.netsuite.com/portal/resource/articles/crm/what-is-crm.shtml 1/4
8/20/2017 What is CRM?
2
econometrics to marketing strategies.
(/Portal/Home.Shtml?Noredirect=T)
In the mid-1980s, contact management software (CMS) applications such as ACT! appeared on the business software
market. These programs let companies store and organize customer contact information—basically, they functioned as
"digital Rolodexes."3
In the 1990s, CRM software made some major advances. Contact management software evolved into SFA software, with
Siebel Systems becoming one leading provider. By 1995, the term "customer relationship management" came into use.
In the last half of the decade, enterprise resource management (ERP) vendors such as Baan and SAP entered the
market, and the competition led to more marketing, sales and service features being added to CRM. At the end of the
decade, "e-CRM" vendors came onto the scene, and the first mobile CRM application appeared. Even more importantly,
the first SaaS CRM applications were introduced.
The dot-com bust of the early 2000s hit the CRM industry hard, particularly e-CRM vendors. Influenced by Paul
Greenberg's book CRM at the Speed of Light, the industry began focusing on more comprehensive CRM applications,
as well as solutions that could interoperate with legacy systems.
At the end of the decade and through to the present, cloud-based and SaaS CRM solutions began to conquer the
market thanks to their lower cost, speed of integration and flexibility. By the end of 2012, four out of every 10 CRM
systems sold were SaaS-based, and the market experienced 12% growth in 2012, three times the average of all other
enterprise software.4
With the rise of social media, the term "social CRM" came into play, referring to customer relationship management
fostered by communication with customers through social networking sites like Twitter and Facebook.5
Driven by high levels of investment in digital marketing and customer experience initiatives, the worldwide CRM
software market reached $20.4 billion in 2013, up nearly 14% from 2012. More than 41% of total CRM software revenue in
2013 came from software-as-a-service (SaaS) solutions, as "organizations of all sizes sought easier-to-deploy alternatives
to replace legacy systems, implement net-new applications or provide alternative complementary functionality."6
Most experts agree that we have entered the age of the customer. In today's digital, mobile and social world, the linear
sales cycle of previous generations has given way to a customer lifecycle in which buyers hold the power.
As a result, visibility into the entire customer lifecycle is becoming increasingly important. In addition to traditional CRM
capabilities like SFA, customer support and marketing automation, companies are seeking CRM solutions that can also
deliver quotes, order management, commissions, sales forecasting and integrated ecommerce capabilities.
Support for mobile devices—iOS, Android and Windows Phones—is becoming a must-have for CRM solutions. Business
users today require real-time access to the information they need, whether it's the latest metrics, calendar information,
customer details and more. Real-time data and access anytime, anywhere is also a critical component.
Another trend is integration with leading social and productivity tools. Companies want CRM applications that will
integrate with standard social solutions such as Yammer and Qontext, as well as with leading email and productivity
tools such as Microsoft Outlook and Google Apps.
Conclusion
Finding a cloud-based CRM system that delivers all of these capabilities might seem like a daunting task. The previous
having been said, the right solution and provider can help transform customers' experience with a company, increase
sales, provide valuable insights, streamline processes, and make sales organizations more efficient.
NetSuite CRM+ software is the only cloud solution that delivers a real-time 360-degree view of the customer. NetSuite
CRM provides a seamless flow of information across the entire customer lifecycle from lead through to opportunity,
sales order, fulfillment, renewal, upsell, cross-sell, and support.
Take a look at NetSuite CRM+ (/portal/products/netsuite/crm.shtml) to see how we help businesses everywhere grow
their companies with customer-centric CRM.
1 http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/C/CRM.html (http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/C/CRM.html)
2
http://www.netsuite.com/portal/resource/articles/crm/what-is-crm.shtml 2/4
8/20/2017 What is CRM?
2
Direct Newsline, November 18, 2002 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_marketing#cite_note-2
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_marketing#cite_note-2)).
(/Portal/Home.Shtml?Noredirect=T)
3
"A Brief History of Customer Relationship Management," CRM Switch, December 2013.
4
Columbus, Louis, "2013 CRM Market Share Update: 40% of CRM Systems Sold are SaaS-Based," Forbes.com, April 26,
2013.
5
SearchCRM.techtarget.com (http://searchcrm.techtarget.com/definition/social-CRM
(http://searchcrm.techtarget.com/definition/social-CRM)).
6
"Market Share Analysis: Customer Relationship Management Software, Worldwide, 2013," Joanne M. Correia, Yanna
Dharmasthira and Chris Pang, Gartner, May 2014.
Copyright © 2017, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Oracle and Java are registered trademarks of Oracle and/or its affiliates. Other names may
be trademarks of their respective owners.
Privacy Statement (/portal/privacy.shtml) Website Terms of Use (/portal/terms-of-use.shtml) Trademark (/portal/company/trademark.shtml) Site Map (/portal/sitemap.shtml)
Cookie Preferences
(https://www.leadformix.com)
http://www.netsuite.com/portal/resource/articles/crm/what-is-crm.shtml 3/4
8/20/2017 What is CRM?
http://www.netsuite.com/portal/resource/articles/crm/what-is-crm.shtml 4/4