CRM has come a long way from its beginnings as a contact management tool—a glorified Rolodex—to take its place as an indispensable part of a customer experience strategy. The ability to collect and analyze large amounts of data has propelled CRM to an exciting new level, a discipline now recognized as crucial to client acquisition and retention. After all, good relationships, professional or otherwise, are based on knowledge and understanding, which provides a useful context for dialogue, sharing, loyalty and other interpersonal dynamics.
Simply put, the more you know about your clients—their likes, dislikes, goals, hopes, fears, challenges, successes and failures—the better equipped you are to be a responsive and effective building partner. And that, as every contractor knows, can often lead to a guaranteed pipe- line of future projects. Here’s how data-driven CRM tools can help make that happen:
› CRM collects and organizes information
› CRM refines client and project profiles
› CRM categorizes and records interactions
› CRM identifies and tracks client activity
› CRM enhances access to information
› CRM increases information visibility
› CRM customizes data reporting
› CRM supports multi-team data sharing
› CRM mines legacy business intelligence