Once upon a time there was a
factory that produced nuts, bolts and washers. There was
a highly efficient production line dedicated to each,
and each production line ended in an area called
Assembly. In Assembly were a group of workers who put
the nuts, bolts and washers together before they were
despatched to the customer. Each worker sat at a bench.
In front of them were three boxes, containing nuts,
bolts and washers. They took the components, put them
together and then dropped them into a fourth box
situated on the floor behind them.
One day the factory recruited a
consultant. Some people thought of him as a Work Study
engineer. Others saw him as a Time and Motion expert.
But, judging by his daily fee, he really was a
consultant. This chap reviewed all of the operations.
There was nothing he could do to improve the production
lines – they were already very efficient. But when he
arrived in the assembly department he had an idea that
would make things better.
The consultant arranged to have
holes drilled into each bench. These were special holes.
At the bottom they were in the shape of the bolts. Above
that they widened out to accommodate the washer. This
meant that the assembly workers could put the nut, bolt
and washer together using just one hand. Or, as the
consultant explained, the assemblers could now do two
jobs at the same time, which meant that they only needed
half as many people. This was used by the consultant to
explain his big fat fee. He took his cheque, thanked the
management and left.
Some time later the factory
management were talking to a CRM expert. He said that
the most important asset they had were their customers.
The CRM expert wanted to talk to the customers. In fact,
what he really wanted was for the factory to go out and
listen to their customers, but he had to sell the idea
first. So, off he went to the biggest customer. In order
to see the supply chain at first hand he decided that he
should travel with the van driver who made the
deliveries.
When they got to the customers he
was introduced to the warehouseman, the buyer, the
production engineer, the design team and the works
manager. They had a long chat about the quality of the
products, the timeliness of deliveries, the accuracy of
the invoices and the layout of the quality certificates.
He was then given a guided tour of the works. They had
one big assembly unit and one small pre-assembly shop.
In the pre-assembly shop sat a group of workers at a big
bench. On the bench sat a large box that the van driver
had just delivered, and three smaller boxes. Each worker
was taking units out of the box, unscrewing them, and
then placing the nuts, bolts and washers into each of
the three smaller boxes.
But this is just a fairy story.
Why? Because CRM and the whole Customer Relationship
Management idea has been hijacked by the database
manufacturers. What was once the simple but highly
effective philosophy of getting feedback from your
customers is now just another computerised
three-letter-acronym database being sold by the likes of
Oracle and Sieble. The database lineage probably began
with MRP (material requirement planning), which begat
MRPII (manufacturing resource planning), which begat ERP
(enterprise resource planning) with SAP on the side (and
nobody even knows what SAP stands for. It’s a fairy
story because a “CRM expert” would never suggest
listening to the customers.
Many years ago, back in the 1970s,
I worked for a firm that supplied Marks & Spencer with clothing. It
was the most successful company in its field, supplying
Marks & Spencer when it was at its height. Each week the boss would
go into the stores and watch the ladies shopping. When
one picked up a blouse, looked at it and put it back on
the rail he would pounce and ask her “why”. And when
someone decided to buy he’d pounce again. He knew what
they were buying and why, and what they weren’t buying,
and why. My boss did this not just in the UK. Once a
fortnight he and the head designer (there were 110
people working in the design studio) flew to New York on
Concorde to see what the American were buying. He knew
the customers and boy, did it show in our figures.
Nowadays, even though I work
exclusively in the business-to-business marketplace, I
get to meet senior people who think that you can
commission an outside agency to go out and listen to
consumers. “But its so easy” I tell them. “Get out of
your office, go to the tills and talk to the shoppers –
those who are buying and those who aren’t”.
In b2b it’s a bit more
complicated. Instead of having a point-of-sale (a blouse
rack for instance) where decisions and transactions are
made, there is a much more complex interaction between
the supplier and the customer. Designers, production
engineers, buyers, planners, logistics, marketing
support, installation and service engineers, managers,
sales reps and accounts are all bringing their influence
to bear on the relationship. We’ve all seen a case
where, after months of hard work by everyone, initiated
by strategic marketing and business development and
carried on right through the operation involving the
production and quality people, the relationship with the
new customer goes sour because of something that was
said or done by the finance department – all because
when the customer finally arrives in Accounts they
magically transmute into a debtor and are treated
accordingly.
We here at InfoQuest do b2b
customer satisfaction surveys. We have a unique way of
doing them, which gives our customers an average
response rate of between 70% and 75%. That is, provided
we are given good information to begin with. But it
really frightens me how little our clients sometimes
know about their customers. I’m talking about the basics
here. And I’m talking about multi-nationals and blue
chip businesses that the outside world might think of as
being world class.
The first step in the survey is
for our client to draw up a list of their most important
customers. Its up to them whether this is based on
biggest turnover, most profitable or greatest growth
potential, but they have to be customers – not suspects,
not prospects but live accounts. Then the client’s most
senior person writes a personal and personable letter to
each one, asking for their help. Then we call them, to
make sure they are willing to take part, but not there
and then over the ‘phone. Sometimes the comments we get
include: - “sorry, we no longer buy from them”; “Mr X
died three years ago”; “Miss Y left the company two
years ago”; “We’ve never heard of XYZ Company”; “We used
to have one of their machines – we asked them to quote
for a new one but they never came back to us”. And it’s
very, very frightening.
Years ago, when firms ran MRP
systems, there was usually someone responsible for
maintaining the Bills of Materials, to keep them up to
date, to stop the buyers buying stuff that was no longer
used on the factory floor. Businesses today need a
similar system for their customers. I’ve only come
across one firm that does this. The European Quality
Foundation (EFQM) has a nine-part model for business.
The most important part of the model (at 19%) is
customer feedback. TNT, the logistics company, was the
EFQM business of the year and they are the only folks I
know that call their customers every three months,
religiously, simply to make sure they’ve got the correct
contact details.
My question is why don’t
everybody’s sales reps do this?