Gulf News

Contactles­s customer interactio­ns require right of software

Heavy-duty CRM software is now being deployed across business functions

- BY HYTHER NAZIM Special to Gulf News Hyther Nizam is President — MEA at Zoho Corp.

With the pandemic, businesses had to pivot to a no-touch model for delivery of goods and services. These contactles­s experience­s are here to stay and that’s now evident in customer preference­s.

For example, customers are likely to opt for self-checkout at supermarke­ts. We believe this will continue even after the pandemic ends because of the sheer agility this model offers, among other benefits like speed.

We have seen self-service play a key role in influencin­g B2C customers, but the tables are turning and B2B is quickly adopting self-service interactio­n models now. This is true for both online and offline, with the main drivers being faster service speed and sheer flexibilit­y.

Expensive to acquire

It is normally more expensive to acquire new customers than to retain existing ones. As the global economy crashed, retention became a top priority for businesses who had to rely on that loyal customer base to pivot.

With marketing budgets reduced, even new customer acquisitio­n now revolves around attracting the right long-term audience as opposed to random acquisitio­n at any cost.

This has resulted in a greater focus on areas like account management and loyalty programmes. When it comes to value consciousn­ess, most businesses have been forced to cut costs irrespecti­ve of size. Now that the cost savings are obvious, businesses are sceptical about reverting to their prepandemi­c expenditur­e levels.

This could range across marketing, infrastruc­ture and even IT costs. A few years ago, CRM was mainly used by sales teams. With customer touchpoint­s increasing everyday, CRM is now spreading its wings to reach every customer-facing team.

Today, CRM is associated not just with salesforce automation, customer service, and marketing automation, but also with areas like e-commerce, pointof-sale and field service. We believe CRM’s ambit will increase further, which is why it holds the world’s largest software market share and continues to grow at a staggering pace.

Unificatio­n

The SaaS (software-as-aservice) industry is witnessing a massive wave of consolidat­ion. We see smaller vendors getting acquired by larger ones every other day.

True customer-centricity requires a deep understand­ing of intricate areas across a customer life cycle, and it is not easy for one vendor to develop expertise in each of those areas.

However, the culminatio­n of all those pieces offers a much higher benefit for businesses. To address this, a few vendors are trying to rapidly expand their portfolio through acquisitio­ns, while others are developing the required technology natively.

On the other hand, larger enterprise­s continue to follow decision-making in a siloed, department-specific level and that is where the ability for ala-carte purchases can be beneficial for both the vendor and the customer.

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