Posts Tagged ‘CRM’

Why You Should Care About CRM

Monday, May 17th, 2010

By Adam Ward

Students going back to school

Customer Relationship Management (CRM) software is one of those tools that, once you start using it, you can’t imagine how you got along without it for so long.

So often we get wrapped up in the idea of making money for us or our business that we forget to focus on the specific steps we have to follow to bring the money in. Often, our success is impeded by our lack of (or dread of) organization skills. It is common for us to feel like we have too much to do and not enough time or people to do it. We don’t know whether we’re working efficiently because we don’t have time to evaluate our efficiency.

Using a CRM system is one way to offload some of the day-to-day tasks that we have to do (but don’t necessarily enjoy) in order for us to work more efficiently at the parts of our jobs we like best.

Growing sales and new business contacts without CRM is kind of like building a car from scratch. It is going to take longer, have more gotchas, and be harder to replicate than cars built on an assembly line. Whereas a good CRM tool becomes the assembly line.

We have a business advisor at eSilverBullet who has a PhD in engineering. He worked for IBM and started Iomega. He views sales the same as he does product development: as a process of small, replicable steps that, if followed the same way, will produce predictable and favorable results.

By putting each of those steps into a CRM system, the CRM’s workflow can then walk you through them, or walk a new employee you bring in off the street, so that either way, you’re going to get the same results: more customers, more money, and more time.

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eSilverBullet’s Setup is Quick

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

By Adam Ward

When I worked at my last company, I set up SugarCRM to manage our sales. Since it was open source and we had space available on one of our Linux servers, I figured it would be a cheap, easy solution for us.

It took me about a month to get it installed and set up. Even then, some of the features we wanted (and Sugar offered), didn’t work. Rather than spend any more time troubleshooting it, we just started using the features that did work, even the ones that frustrated us.

The reason I mention that is because CRM software is built to be flexible to accommodate all types of businesses. It is meant to be configured. That means any organization implementing CRM software will have to spend some amount of time and/or money to get it working for them.

We’ve done that work for you with eSilverBullet. One benefit of us designing this just for affiliate marketing is we’ve preconfigured it with portals to be used by advertisers, publishers, OPMs and networks. That means you can sign up for an account and start using it in minutes. For free.

We’ve still made it flexible enough for you to create your own custom tabs, with whatever fields you need in them. But those tabs aren’t necessary for you to start using the software.

To optimize your use of it, you’ll want to spend a little time setting up your email accounts and importing information from your existing contacts. Because CRM software with no data in it is not very exciting. But even with that we’re talking about minutes or hours of your time, not weeks or months.

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Using CRM to Retain Institutional Knowledge

Friday, May 7th, 2010

By Adam Ward

Two weeks ago we attended Ad Tech in San Francisco. Since then we’ve been following up with contacts we made there. We’ve already encountered four people we met at the show who are no longer working with those companies. I would guess that whatever contacts those people gathered at the show never made it back to the company.

For those of you who are business owners and managers, you probably know all too well about institutional knowledge walking out the door when your employees leave. Besides the lost relationships and business opportunities, it means taking longer to get the new employees up to speed. eSilverBullet can help with that.

eSilverBullet makes it easy not only for affiliate managers and other sales people to log their communications with contacts and prospects, but also for managers to keep tabs on their employees’ activities. If your employee uses a physical rolodex or notebook to keep track of contacts, that information will go out the door with him to whatever job he gets next. If he uses email for everything, there is no guarantee he won’t delete the emails before he leaves. And even if he doesn’t, it won’t be easy for his replacement to get a good sense of contacts by scouring someone else’s email history.

History Screenshot

In eSilverBullet, every time an employee sends an email, the system records it and attaches it to that particular contact. If the employees are using the notes, tasks and calendar events, all of those items show up under the contact’s history as well (see screenshot above). Unless the users are managers in the system, they can’t delete those histories. Any contracts or other digital files associated with a contact will be there as well.

Assigned To Screenshot

So if you have an employee leave, you can reassign all that person’s contacts and prospects to your replacement at the click of a button (see above). When your new employee logs into eSilverBullet the first time, she’ll see a set of tasks that needs to be done immediately. As she clicks through each contact or prospect, she can view a history of all emails, notes, tasks and meetings that the previous employee had with that contact.

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Tracking the Effectiveness of Prospecting

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

By Adam Ward

Without tracking and accountability, the affiliate market wouldn’t exist. So it makes sense that affiliate marketers should be tracking the effectiveness of their prospecting efforts as well.

To do that, you first need to know where your prospects came from. CRM systems typically have a pull-down menu inside the prospect’s record where you can list your lead source. Even though you can easily populate that pull-down menu with whatever information you want, it gets problematic in a hurry. What happens if you meet some prospects at one conference, but then you meet them at another conference? Which lead source should you select? And how will you be able to gauge what your cost per prospect acquisition is?

screenshot

In eSilverBullet, we’ve solved that problem by having a lead source be its own tab (see above), which you can then link to from the Prospects tab. Since every user has different lead sources, we leave it up to our users to create that as a custom tab. For us internally, though, we call our tab Campaigns. Then each time we go to a conference, send an email blast, post to ABW, etc. we can add a new campaign record.

So for example, if you create a campaign for Affiliate Summit East 2010 and come back with 300 prospects, you can link all those prospects to that campaign. If some of those prospects are already in your system because you linked them to your Ad Tech NY 2009 campaign, you don’t have to enter the prospects again. You just have to link the existing prospects to the new campaign, in addition to them being linked to the other campaign.

For each campaign, you can enter a dollar amount. So if you spend $5,000 on the ASE10 show and generate 300 prospects, you’ll know your cost per acquiring each lead was $16. And later, as you convert your prospects to advertisers or publishers (which you will do with a single click), the related campaigns will stay linked to the new advertiser or publisher records. So then you’ll be able to track your cost per acquiring new business contacts.

At year’s end, you can look back over all your campaigns, determine which ones gave you the biggest bang for your buck, and then plan accordingly for your next year’s prospecting activities.

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The Importance of Following Up

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

By Adam Ward

One feature that sets CRM systems apart from simple address books is the ability to have an active to-do list. And one of the biggest reasons prospects don’t become customers is that the person responsible for communicating with those prospects just doesn’t follow up, or doesn’t follow up in a timely manner.

Task screenshot

eSilverBullet makes it really easy for you to adopt best practices and follow up with your prospects. When you are viewing a prospect under your Prospects tab, there is a related window open and ready for you to enter a task (see screenshot above). So if you just tried to call your prospect, or just sent an email, you can enter a quick description like “left message, need to call back” and enter a follow-up date for that task. When you save that task, it shows up under the prospect’s record, and it also shows up under your Activities tab. That whole process takes seconds, with just 2-3 clicks to do it, compared to other CRM systems that require you to open up window after window to enter a task, then backtrack through those windows to link it to a prospect.

To Do Screenshot

So when you first log into eSilverBullet each day, you’ll start out on the Activities tab, and it will show you all the tasks you need to do that day, or are overdue (see above). As you work through your to-do list and do your follow-up emails or calls, all you have to do is click a red “X” to close out that particular task and create a new task.

So from a sales standpoint, this keeps your prospecting pipeline fresh. After all, prospects will only be moving forward if you move them forward. Sitting stagnant in your pipeline isn’t getting you any sales. So by having your daily reminders of your to-dos, you’re able to effectively follow up with them, and either move them into your customers (Advertiser or Publisher) pipeline (e.g. they’ve agreed to run their program on your site) or drop them as inactive prospects.

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Feeling the Pain: Top Ten Frustrations for Advertisers in Affiliate Marketing

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

By Adam Ward

Man clenching teeth

Even for veteran online merchants (the advertisers), marketing products in the affiliate space (also referred to as performance-based marketing) is no walk in the park. Here are the top ten headaches nearly all online advertisers deal with.

Running ad campaigns (or programs) on multiple ad networks (also called affiliate networks)

Online merchants expose their products to more consumers by running ad campaigns on other websites. Ostensibly, the more publisher websites the ads run on, the more traffic they push to the merchant’s site, which increases sales. Since ad networks provide an easy way for merchants to find publishers, it makes sense that a merchant would want to join as many ad networks as possible.

However, running on multiple networks creates new problems. First, there is the extra cost of getting set up and funding an account balance on each network. Second, the merchant needs to have a way of determining which network to attribute the sale to, if traffic came from multiple networks. Third, the chance of fraud increases dramatically, especially if the merchant isn’t actively managing the campaign.

Having to use different tracking software for each network on which they run ads

Every network has its own software for tracking ad campaigns. The networks expect merchants and publishers to use the tracking numbers from its own software to determine who should receive commissions on sales. So even if a merchant has its own tracking software, it still has to log into a tracking system for every network it belongs to and pull campaign statistics from it.

Having to develop proprietary tracking software (or buy third-party software) to manage in-house campaigns

Although a merchant can use the tracking software of whatever network it joins, that only works if the merchant doesn’t run ad campaigns in-house or on multiple networks. For example, if the merchant has the same campaign running on two networks, it is possible for a single publisher to grab that ad from both networks. If the publisher refers a consumer who ends up buying on the merchant’s site, each network will attribute that single publisher with a sale. So if the merchant doesn’t have its own tracking software to police that situation, it will end up paying a double commission for a single referral.

Also, because merchants contract directly with publishers (off network) to run a campaign, those merchants will need to have their own software to track the campaign results.

Dealing with publisher and network disputes over tracking numbers

Because everyone uses the tracking statistics to know what commissions to pay, this inevitably leads to squabbling over “which” statistics to use. Publishers would prefer to use their own tracking numbers. Networks would prefer to use their own tracking numbers. And advertisers would prefer to use their own tracking numbers. Since all these numbers are rarely the same, you get a lot of back-and-forth between advertisers and publishers over how much the advertiser really owes.

Recruiting new publishers and maintaining relationships with current publishers

Having an ad campaign does an advertiser no good if the ad isn’t running anywhere. So advertisers need to constantly prospect for publishers. And just like any other sales environment, taking care of your existing business relationships is far cheaper and more productive than prospecting new relationships. So advertisers need to stay in touch with publishers that are running the ad campaigns. However, knowing that this needs to be done is not as easy as actually doing it. With all the other demands on an advertiser’s time, prospecting and relationship management often take a back seat, especially if the advertiser doesn’t have tools, such as customer relationship management (CRM) software, in place to help focus those efforts.

Dealing with parasiteware and unethical networks and publishers

Parasiteware is too complicated to delve into here (but you can go to this forum to learn all about it). Basically, there are some networks and publishers out there that use various technologies to divert search traffic that would have come directly to an advertiser’s site (so the networks and publishers get commissions they didn’t earn), that would prevent other publishers from receiving their legitimate commissions (which can create tension with the advertiser and those publishers), that would overwrite the tracking code, or would inflate tracking numbers so advertisers end up paying more than they should.

Not knowing how effective a campaign will be before it starts, and then not knowing the optimum time to discontinue a campaign that is no longer effective

Although advertisers can get a good sense of what campaigns work, they don’t have crystal balls. Since the look and content of an ad’s creative play a big role in attracting customers, a poor campaign can really hurt an advertiser. Advertisers can use analytics and persuasion consultants to help them optimize their campaigns, but that adds an extra cost to a campaign.

Having publishers refuse to join a particular ad network, or refuse to run an in-house campaign directly

Ideally, an advertiser should be able to work with any publisher it wants. Unfortunately, some publishers refuse to work with advertisers that don’t run campaigns on a specific network. If an advertiser wants to work with that publisher, but decides the benefits don’t outweigh the extra headaches of joining another network, it will have to not work with that publisher.

Having to continuously, actively manage an ad campaign

Running an ad campaign is not as simple as writing copy for the ad, designing the creative, giving it to a publisher to run, then forgetting about it. A campaign needs to be actively managed. Campaign managers need to monitor statistics to make sure the commissions they pay out are for valid leads. They need to monitor the effectiveness of the ad. They need to make changes to the campaign or creative if they aren’t getting the results they’d like.

Having to manage an ad campaign in-house as well as on affiliate networks

As a continuation of the previous point, an advertiser needs to multiply the effort of managing each campaign by the number of networks on which they run the campaigns.

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