|
Consistent Customer Views
|
Consistent Customer Views
by David M. Raab
DM Review
March, 2004
Last month's column discussed one set of technologies used to provide a
"360 degree view of the customer". Like other buzzwords that
have reached a critical mass of acceptance, the "360 degree
view" is now accepted as a self-evidently sufficient
justification for a systems project. This puts it right up there
with "lower costs" and "increased revenue" as objectives which a
system must prove it supports, but which need not themselves be
shown worthwhile.
But is the "360 degree view" really so valuable? If you know
this article is written by consultant, you can guess the answer:
it depends. But at the risk of losing my union card, I'll give a
definite answer instead.
No.
The reason will be familiar to any data warehouse developer.
Different data sources have different values. As in a warehouse,
sources should be added only when there is a specific business
need for their contents. That fundamental rule doesn't change
just because the subject is customer data.
Nor is there a change in the fundamental process for
assessing the value of adding a source. You identify the
business process involved, estimate the benefits that would
result from having the new data available, and compare those
benefits to the costs. It's easier said than done, but at least
conceptually there's nothing new.
Well, almost nothing. Data warehouses have traditionally
supported reporting and analysis applications used by corporate
management. The value of a new source is the value of
improvements in management decisions made possible by the new
data. The same approach applies to projects that give more
timely access to existing sources, such as data for real-time
sales or inventory analysis.
Customer data applications are sometimes also analytical, but
are increasingly tied to live customer interactions. This may or
may not require real-time updates—for example, a customer
priority code that is used to select service levels may be
updated just monthly. But interaction management always requires
direct connections to operational touchpoint systems such as
call centers and Web sites. This is something new, since
traditional warehouse applications have rarely required such
connections.
The difference is important because making connections to
touchpoint systems is not trivial. A data source valuation must
therefore consider not only the utility of adding the new
source—say, the improvement in accuracy of a predictive
model—but the cost and practicality of distributing the
improved information to a touchpoint where it can do some good.
In fact, the assessment goes beyond technology to include the
ability to change business practices, such as the behavior of
call center agents. Both data distribution and business practice
change can be substantial barriers to taking advantage of
customer data. This applies largely to the first project that
integrates the customer database with a new touchpoint. Once
that first project has built the basic connections and new
business processes, later projects can incorporate new data
sources with relatively little incremental cost.
Conducting this sort of valuation requires a true business
process perspective. This perspective will be new to many data
warehouse practitioners, who have not needed it to perform the
simpler valuations appropriate for reporting and analytical
system improvements. It is definitely more work than the older
approaches. But there are plenty of people to learn from, since
business process analysis is central to the increasingly common
approaches of formal process and quality management.
Incidentally, there's also a strong case to be made for
applying the process-oriented approach to analyzing the customer
experience. In this case, the analysis is organized around the
"process" of being a customer: that is, the sequence of events
experienced by a customer as she moves through the business
relationship, rather than the sequence of events the follow an
item being manufactured or an order being processed. It might
even be worthwhile to extend the analogy to consider customer
experience management as the "process of manufacturing valuable
customers." Sounds like a good conference presentation at the
least. But someone else will have to pursue that thought—it's a
bit too abstract for my own tastes.
Back to customer data. The need to integrate it with
touchpoint systems suggests an alternate meaning for the "360
degree view of the customer": making customer data available to
all company systems. It would be a "360 degree view" in the
sense that every system gets the same information about each
customer. Imagine all the customer systems around the edge of a
circle, staring at a customer in the center and seeing the same
thing. What they see is not necessarily complete, but at least
it's consistent. The business advantage of having the same
information available to all systems is it enables them to treat
each customer consistently. Consistency is something that
customers care about, so it has a value of its own. Of course,
consistently bad treatment is not particularly appealing, so
it's important that the consistent customer data be accompanied
by appropriate, customer-specific business practices.
This brings us back to the original question: is the "360
degree view" (now defined as universal access to consistent
customer data) so valuable that it constitutes a self-evident
justification for all touchpoint integration projects? Is
enabling consistent customer treatment important enough to
justify any reasonable expense?
It depends.
Copyright 2004 CLIENTxCLIENT, Inc. Contact: 908.350.3012
info@CLIENTxCLIENT.com
|