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Case Study: the Volkswagen™ Minibus story or why traditional sales software implementations stall.
Quick case study: why CRM implementations "stall".

The Smiths have 8 kids, aged 3 to 19. Family logistics is a real challenge. Family members use their own vehicles, and they each go their own way. They are slowly drifting apart from each other. They no longer drive together to family reunions. The teenagers never show up. Their Grandfather understands what's going on, so when his neighbor tells him that he is selling his VW™ minibus, he seizes the opportunity. He buys the minibus and offers it to his daughter (her birthday is in a few days). The neighbor drives the minibus to the family home. He takes Dad and Mom for a ride to familiarize them with the quirks of this "exotic" vehicle. Dad is nervous because he hasn’t "driven a stick" for at least 30 years. He takes notes. The car manual is in the glove compartment.

A bit surprised and puzzled by the revolution this vehicle will bring to their family, the parents cautiously embrace the idea. Dad is happy because the little ones, who usually drive with their Mom, will finally spend time with him. He will also get a chance to spend more time with his teens. Mom is happy because her kids won’t need to ride in their Dad’s mustang or in their broken Civic nearly as much. She sees those vehicles as dangerous, and she agrees with her Dad: the minibus is a good way to bring the family together. She has a great respect for her father, and she shares his vision of the family.

Moms' birthday comes. All are invited to celebrate at Grandfather's house. The eldest child flies home from her college town. The teens discover the minibus for the first time - It had not left the garage yet. They think that it is definitely "un-cool", but they are good kids so they don't say a word. Each has other plans for the day. Each understands that this will force them to stay there longer than anticipated. The eldest daughter worries that this new vehicle may jeopardize her chances to get her own car. She doesn’t know how the vehicle was acquired, and she was not sold on its benefits.

Dad calls the kids who usually ride with him in the mustang during the week-end. They reluctantly sit in the minibus as they learn that they will no longer ride in the sports car. They loved the mustang. Siting in this minibus is a big sacrifice for them. But they are good kids. They complain; but for now, they comply. They realize that they will be sitting next to their teenage brothers, endless sources of information that they desperately need as they approach their own teenage years.

Dad sits in the driver seat and tries to start the car. Mom brings the "little ones" and puts them in their car seats. She wonders if the minibus is fit for child car seats. She questions the knowledge of the neighbor who sold the car and explained how to install the seats. She is nervous. She always is when she senses that she will be late to a family event and may disappoint her father.

Dad struggles for a few long minutes with the clutch, accelerator and stick under the cold gaze of his wife. He utters a few words of frustration. The minibus jumps and stalls. Mom decides that for safety reasons, her toddlers will not ride in the minibus. She will keep driving them in her own car instead. She wonders in exasperation why her husband waited until the last minute to figure out how to operate the vehicle. Feeling hurt and feeling misunderstood, Dad explains that the notes he took were not useful. Disappointed because she thought that her husband could "drive a stick", and because of this perceived dead-end, Mom puts her eldest daughter in charge and leaves. Her daughter studied in Europe; she must know how to drive a stick. Dad leaves the garage and waits for his capable daughter to sort things out.

Because she did not participate in the test drive with her parents and cannot rely on her Dad’s notes, the daughter feels helpless. She asks her teenage brothers for help. None of them is able to operate the minibus. They become convinced that the minibus cannot drive. One teenager suggests that he replace a part of the engine. The teenage boys leave the house in their cars and join their friends (too late for grandpa’s party anyway). The daughter leaves the minibus to call the seller and ask for help. The kids who used to ride with their Dad in the mustang are now waiting alone in the minibus. There is no driver in the front seat. They realize that the teenagers will not ride with them in the minibus. One by one, they quietly leave the vehicle. Later in the day, Dad walks into the garage, closes the door of the minibus and the garage gate. His marriage matters more than a minibus, he thinks. Asked for help by Mom, an uncle suggests that the minibus be replaced by a large SUV. Nobody has consulted the manual in the glove compartment.

The grandfather reflects on the situation for a while and at the next family reunion - this one at his daughter's house - when all are present around the dinner table, he addresses his "clan". He talks about the importance of the family, about how much he and his wife care for it, and about how much sound values and tight family bonds have contributed to the happiness and strength of each member of the family ("just look at some other families"). Deep inside, everybody agrees. He explains that he has been reflecting on the past event, made some cost calculations, discussed with his daughter and son-in-law, and made a decision. From now on, a limousine will pick-up the family and drive everybody to their gathering locations. The Grandfather has signed a contract with a limousine company. Some simple rules will be defined with the parents and the company for everyone to follow (e.g.: when the limo arrives, everybody must be onboard within 5 minutes). Everybody agrees. All like the idea. The Grandfather is satisfied. He believes that his family is well worth the cost of a limousine service, a cost that is in effect lower that the purchasing, insurance and maintenance cost of a minibus.


So who is who and what is what in this story?

The VW™ minibus is a Customer Relationship Management system (CRM aka Front-Office System): an application designed to help a company better serve its customers through the integration and automation of various "customer-serving" and office processes. This particular CRM is designed for midsize organization: It is "affordable". The SUV that the uncle recommends as an alternative to the minibus is a large enterprise CRM. CRM can cover the following general areas of business:
  1. Customer Service & Technical Support (helps with the tracking and management of Incidents, Technical Inquiries, Order Inquiries, Installed/Supported Product Base, Defects, Contracts, Warranties, Product Versions, Feature Requests, FAQ’s, etc),


  2. Sales & Sales Management (helps with the tracking and management of Leads, Opportunities, Quotes, Products, Pricing, Discounts, Tax Rates, Sales Orders, Forecasts, Sales Channels/Partners, Commissions, Sales Territories, etc.),


  3. Marketing (helps with the tracking and management of Target Lists, Email, Mail & Telemarketing Campaigns, Events, Marketing Documents, Email & Word Templates, Competitive intelligence, etc. ),


  4. Office & Team Productivity (helps with the management of Contacts, Vendors, Notes, Reports, Workflows, Schedules, Activities, Office Assets, Leave & Vacation days, Timesheets, Expenses, Email, Documents & Attachments, etc. Generally also provides MS-Outlook Synchronization, MS-Word Integration, Computer Telephony Integration, Back-end/Accounting system integration, PDA/phone access and a Self Service Customer Portal with a Forum, etc.),


  5. Project Management (helps with the tracking and management of tasks, available skills & resources, time & money spent). Insofar as that which directly relates to customers pertains to sales, Project Management belongs in CRM.

The grand-father is the CEO of a fast-growing midsize company. His daughter is the executive in charge of the software implementation, and her husband is the sales manager of the firm. The younger sons are its sales people. The daughter who flies home from college is its IT manager. The teenagers are the other employees and supervisors of the firm. The uncle who is called for help is a sales VP or a new sales manager hired after the fact.


So why is the minibus stuck in the garage?

Data clean-up and migration from legacy systems is a real budget killer. Midsize organizations tend to vastly underestimate the complexity of the task. By the time they have installed a system and migrated their data, their resources are depleted and momentum is lost. The executives who initiated the project abandon it to employees who can afford to spend time on details but who lack the authority to bring the project to completion. The implementation stalls. Technology has gobbled up all the allocated resources and time. Nothing is left for the two other pillars of any successful software implementation: Processes and People.

Trust is a double edged sword. Because CRM implementations live by trust, they also die from the lack of it. Here is why. Midsize organizations tend to invest in back-end systems (operations and accounting) before they invest in CRM. The managers who oversee the implementation of back-office systems are detail oriented. They are production managers or accountants whose job it is to craft processes and conform their employees’ activity to these processes (in a top to bottom fashion). Their procedures are the legal bond by which the organization runs. Companies invest in CRM when they realize that they must better control and integrate their front-office activities to become more customer-centric. CRM implementations decisions are made by Sales or General Managers whose job it is to process information that comes from their employees and from the market in a "bottom to top" fashion. Whereas their back-office colleagues were more detail oriented, Sales and General Managers are more relationship and bottom line driven. As against production managers or accountants who base their decisions on first-hand facts, they must base theirs on partial information and on trust. This is how trust plays an important role in the life and death of CRM systems. When Sales and General Managers initiate their CRM project, they do not foresee all the implications that their decision will have; they simply trust that CRM will help. They have limited information, limited experience and limited time. They have no choice but to entrust their CRM initiative to a vendor, an employee or a consultant. This trust carries the project until the end of the "technology" phase of the implementation. When the CRM system is in place, the very people that these managers rely upon to get their information and to get their job done start to react to the system and to the constraints that it imposes or may impose on them. If at this stage users are not trained and processes are not solidly defined, universally approved or firmly imposed, people voice their criticism and start to opt-out (explicitly or implicitly). The trust that Sales and General Managers have in their own staff weighs in against the trust that they had placed in the implementers and in the system. If by now, as is often the case, the consultant or implementer has moved on to another mission, the initiators of the CRM initiative are left with no other choice but to distance themselves from the system alongside its most powerful opponents.

Procedures are necessary but alien to the way Sales Departments operate.

Once the technology phase is complete, once resistance has built up and once the "implementer" is gone, success rarely materializes. Like any other enterprise software – and more so because CRM processes a lot of unstructured data, CRM systems can be used or misused in many different ways. For CRM information to be shared effectively and for reporting and automation to work, data must be entered and used with consistency; so procedures must exist to guide users, and users must be trained to follow them. The problem is that because procedures, integration and automation are usually alien to the way Front-Office departments operate, the initiators of the CRM project often fail to realize how critical it is to define processes and to formalize them in writing. So they do not. They assume that technology suffices and that using a CRM is akin to filling out web-forms or entering orders in an accounting system. With processes undefined employee support soon collapses.

Writing procedures and getting managers and employees to sign-up on them and on the new system is not an easy thing to do.

Sales and General Managers have neither the time nor the inclination to delve into the details of a complex system and to write lengthy instructions. Employees do not like to read instructions either. Managers usually "rule" by verbal communication and short memos, sometimes in a more re-active than pro-active manner.

Unlike back-office workers, sales, marketing, customer service, product managers and support employees are not used to procedures and to the rigor that enterprise software imposes on users. If anything, they are used to smaller, specialized, non-intrusive applications that they control individually or at the team level.

Integration is not a big concern for sales and Front-office employees.

Front-office employees do not depend on other departments’ data as much as their back-office colleagues do. When an R&D engineer modifies an engineering files, he knows that this will have an impact on other departments and employees: inventory, production, purchasing, QC, etc. There is no such awareness and domino effect in front office departments. Front-office employees process a lot of unstructured information and exchange little data with others. Integration is not a primary concern for them. Their knowledge of the needs of other departments is often limited. Their relations with their peers are generally informal, lightly structured, dependent on good-will and sometimes even competitive. Competition among employees, teams or departments is sometimes sought as a way to stimulate activity and to collect and verify information. As a corollary, secrecy can be used as a mean to protect oneself and retain power for both employees and managers.

Obligation to perform versus obligation to comply

Front-office employees are valued by their peers and managers for the results that they achieve individually, not for their adherence to set methods and their flawless contribution to the work of a team, not for the means that they employ or for what they do for others, not for their compliance to rules and recommendations.

Sales and General Managers will always tend to favor a salesperson who brings a lot of sales but bends the rules over one who is compliant but sells less. They will tend to be indulgent with the first, but not with the second.

Micro-management worries

If anything, Sales and General Managers are wary of interfering with the means employed by their staff because they fear being associated with their employees’ failures. The power of Sales and General Managers is dependent upon their ability to judge performance. If they cannot do it (because they share responsibility in their employees’ failure), they lose their ability to do their job; they lose their own relevance. Likewise, sales employees fear that management meddling in their activity could result in failure for which they might be unjustly blamed or sanctioned (be it because of management error or simply because they are wasting their time in front of a computer).

Contrat versus diktat

Managers and their teams are linked by contract-like understandings (objective-based) and positive motivation. They are not bound by instructions and monitored by a quality system as back office workers often are. Front-office employees are the link between an organization’s management and its market. Sales and General Managers tend to treat them as they treat their customers, with respect, openness, clarity and a measure of friendliness, through mutual commitments.

All this makes user adoption virtually impossible.

In effect, procedures, integration and automation are so irrelevant to sales and front-office departments and to their value system that it makes the adoption of enterprise software by these departments very difficult. Whatever the system and whatever its merits, Front-Office employees do not need it. They do not need a multi-user system to send email, log appointments, and track opportunities or tickets. They can do this with paper or single-user applications. Supervisors can benefit from a multi-user application, but they do not need a multi-department system to manage their teams. Front Office employees and their supervisors have no incentive to use enterprise software as it is at odds with the value and rewards framework in which they operate and which their management supports.

Unlike their Back-office colleagues, Sales and Front-office employees do not benefit directly from enterprise software.

Back-Office workers and accountants process structured data that is for the most part generated by other employees or departments and/or destined to be used by others. They benefit directly from the convenience and reliability delivered by enterprise software. Their work would be painstakingly slow without it. Their supervisors need software for compliance issues, and they use it to shape and enforce the processes that employees execute. Both Back-office workers and managers share the benefits of enterprise systems. This is not the case with CRM. Most of the new benefits that CRM brings are benefits for the top management of the company.

Those benefits are:

The company and its top managers are the main beneficiaries, yet employees are asked to do the work.

The above are essentially general management benefits since they serve the company as a whole and managers in particular. They make the organization more efficient and more "customer-centric". They are not per se benefits for the employees. The CRM requires that they work differently, but it does not bring much efficiency and reliability to the way they work already. Nonetheless employees are the ones who must work with the system and load it with data. In doing so, they make themselves more accountable and they lose both valuable time and freedom. In comparison, and from their perspective, it seems that all that managers have to do to benefit from the system is to read the reports that it generates.

Left unchanged, roles and processes are at odds with the new technology.

The Sales or General Managers who initiate front-office software projects rarely realize that they are the ones who benefit the most from the new technology. They seldom foresee that what the technology enables is new processes and that employees will not adjust to the new system if those processes go against current practices and job descriptions. Overlooking this, Sales and General Managers do not adjust their company’s processes to their new system and objectives. Underestimating the importance of the task, how alien the software is to employees, and that their own methods must change, they do not formalize the new processes into written procedures and revised job descriptions. Goals are not defined. Fairness, effectiveness and costs are not verified. Change is not introduced. Employees are not properly trained, and rewarding schemes are not adjusted.

What it takes to succeed is a leader-driven and heartfelt revolution.

Integrating the activity of sales, marketing, customer service, and support personnel, together and with the rest of the organization, at all levels and in all company locations, is truly a revolution. Like any revolution, it can only work if new and higher values are embraced by the people whose lives must change to make the new order possible. For this to happen, a prerequisite is that leaders espouse these values, propagate them and set rules that protect "law abiding" employees against those who act against the common good.

Here is an example. Two sales managers from the same organization, each located in a different country, sell products to two different factories owned by the same multinational corporation. On a late Friday afternoon, one of the sales managers receives a quote request from the factory located in his territory. He immediately replies with a quote and receives an enormous order. On Monday the President learns about the sale and praises the successful sales manager before his staff. This all seems very normal; yet, the company just lost a million dollars. The successful sales manager, whose aggressive style the president likes, did not bother to check the company’s CRM to see where the sale was coming from – and why should he? He reports directly to the president, and the president does not care about the CRM system. He does not have a sales background and does not want to be encumbered with details. If the sales manager had been "scrupulous", he would have learned from the system that the product that he just sold had been "designed-in" by the manager of the other country. He would have known that months of work and tens of thousands of dollars had been spent on that sale and that the price originally quoted for the product was twice as much as what the customer finally paid (a price commensurate with the costs involved). The customer, a multinational company with a centralized purchasing database was simply shopping around. The company sales director later figured this out but he has no authority over the territory managers who historically report to the president. He also knows that his boss, the president, uses this situation to keep him and the territory managers in check. He knows that this is the culture of the company and he does not like some of the constraints imposed on him by the CRM system, so he does not say anything. The territory manager who lost the sale and has become unpopular because of his lack of results understands the situation and starts looking for another job.

If new processes had been formalized, signed-off, and universally accepted, this example would demonstrate how dangerous an employee who shows brilliant results but defies company standards or procedures can be (and much more so that an employee who bends the rules but is not successful). But this is not the case here. The technology that would prevent the company from bidding against itself exists, but no process is in place to enforce this. In this example, everybody conforms to the company standards which are implicitly enforced by the president of the company himself.

But the CEO cannot do this work.

The Sales or General Manager who initiate the front-office project SHOULD ideally redefine processes and formalize them in writing, but he CANNOT. He cannot because he is generally unaware of the crucial importance of his role and authority in the matter (nobody told him), because he does not know precisely what the system can do, and because it would take too much of his time to delve into it. Sometimes, he also lacks the knowledge of the unspoken dynamic that exists between departments and individuals and which can "make or break" the implementation. So what can he do? What happens next?

All the CEO can do is delegate and be prudent.

Well, the role of a good manager is to delegate, so he hands-over the task of "making things work" to a trustworthy subordinate. In face of uncertainty, his duty is to be prudent, so he starts on a small scale, usually with one department, generally with Sales. He may suspect that the new system could overlap and conflict with existing tools but he does not know precisely how, so this also is delegated. Let’s see how this works out.

This cannot work. A revolution can't be delegated to a lieutenant.

When the task of "making CRM work" is delegated to one or several executives or department managers, success is unlikely to materialize. Like his boss, the executive in charge usually lacks the software expertise and a sufficient understanding of what his colleagues do (and how and why they do it). He also lacks the time that would be required to handle the task. Unlike his boss alas, he lacks the authority and the stake in the game to succeed. He soon realizes that the goals of integration fostered by the new system can only be achieved if they are enabled at the human level first (something that he cannot do). He perceives that the procedures that he could write might upset people, could be foiled by influential employees and would not be enforceable. He worries that he could fail and disappoint his boss despite his best efforts and loyalty. So he does the best he can; he re-distributes parts or all of the task of "making things work" and writing procedures to users who know the system better and to managers who have the authority to alter their own departments’ processes (after all, this is also the best way to ensure that they get onboard). At best, this results in a patchwork of processes and a few documents that more or less reproduce the way things worked before the system was installed. In general this results in frustration for the people who were put in charge, finger pointing among managers, and puzzlement among regular employees. For lack of a proper policy, procedure and instruction framework, the system is under-used and its use becomes in part optional.

The implementation stalls and everybody is puzzled and disappointed

What is disappointing for the parties involved is that most of them would have welcomed the new technology if it had been accompanied by ad-hoc "enabling" processes and cultural adjustments. Once introduced to the system, employees can easily envision how better results could be achieved by their organization with a bit of automation and integration among users, departments, office locations and hierarchy levels. Good employees do care about their company.

There would have been "something in it for everybody"

The list could go on.

Employees and their supervisors can see how our "top management" benefits would be spelled out into efficiencies at their level. Some hope that the system will compel decision makers to solve issues that they had raised to no avail in the past.

So why doesn’t it work? Why can’t those in charge make it work?

The first and obvious reason why subordinates cannot make it work is that most of the efficiencies that could be gained are efficiencies that depend on others for their actualization. For integration to work, two or more parties must integrate something and therefore change or "exchange" something. The realization of these efficiencies is dependant upon people expressing their needs in light of what the technology can do. It is then dependant on the willingness of people in other departments or at other hierarchy levels to modify the way they work and to share information; to loose a little today to gain more tomorrow. The same reasoning applies to automation. For a software functionality to be used, you need managers to convene, and to research and evaluate the gain that could be achieved through the functionality (gain in increased throughput or in time saved).

It is hard to ask people to loose a little today so that others will gain more tomorrow.

Asking people to work or modify the way they work for benefits that would be gained in another department is a hard thing to do, especially when those benefits do not appear to be "mission-critical" (as is often the case with CRM). It is hard for a Sales-Manager to ask his peer in customer service to adopt a new system just so that sales people can faster access the information logged by customer service agents. The Customer Service supervisor will likely answer "if you need information, just ask" or "log into OUR system and find the information yourself". Sales managers know that being able to access information in a snap from a single contact record in a single database is a true benefit. Customer Service agents do not. For their part, they do not care much about the information logged by sales people.

Why would anybody sacrifice anything for a project that has already lost its leadership and momentum.

A second, and frequent reason why people cannot "make it work" is that many of the parties involved do not have to. They did not participate in the initial phase of the deployment and by the time they could be joining, the project has already lost its direction and momentum.

With a small scale implementation and a limited set of functionalities, very little gets accomplished in terms of integration.

This can happen when the project starts with a single department only. Again, It is hard to anticipate all the consequences of an implementation and it may be intimidating and risky to "re-engineer" multiple departments at once, so it makes sense to start small. But Ideally, the system should be first installed in an independent division or location of the firm. Instead Unfortunately, for most midsize organizations this is not an option. They do not have divisions, and/or their managers need to remain in control. They need things to happen locally, in their main office and with their staff. So instead of starting with the entire system in an independent location, they start in one department only and with a limited set of functionalities. They may initially limit the number of licenses that they purchase to the number of employees working in this department. Since the other departments are not yet involved, they adopt a "wait and see" attitude. As far as they are concerned, "they are not concerned". Since the implementation generally starts with Sales -- a department that many regard as unruly or privileged and in need of tighter monitoring -- many end up viewing the system as a sales tool only. In this context, with only one department onboard and with Customer-Service, Tech-Support, Marketing, Product Managers, and the rest of the company left out, very little gets accomplished in terms of Integration. All that may be achieved is the automation of a few key processes (quotations, order entry…) and a tighter control over the Sales team -- if sales people collaborate, that is.

The new system overlaps and conflicts with pre-existing tools. The old tools remain in use. Customer-centricity can't be achieved.

There are not that many things which are new in CRM process automation. This also thwarts the implementation. For the most part, CRM systems consolidate processes that could be handled by other tools: accounting systems (order fulfillment), dedicated applications (quotations, email, calendar, campaigns, bug tracking, project management…), back-end or legacy systems, intranet etc. The value created by CRM is not so much in the automation of these processes as it is in their integration into a coherent whole in which data can be reused and in which it is better organized "around the customer". What is new about CRM is that it treats these processes as what they truly are: customer-serving processes. Integrated Back-End systems (ERP, MRP) tend to treat them as "internal" processes. In good CRM systems, there is never more than one or two degrees of separation or "clicks" between a customer record and any other record that relates to this customer.

When the CRM project starts, many of these front office processes are already tied to other applications (quotations, order fulfillment, email, calendar, campaigns, bug tracking, project management…). Because it is hard to anticipate all the implications that CRM entails, and because the project does not yet involve all its potential users, many of these tools still remain in use after the CRM installation. This is the third reason why it is hard to federate people around the CRM project and to "make it work".

Users fervently fight to protect their tools and nobody stands for the CRM.

Some CRM functionalities are redundant and thus appear optional or unnecessary to many users. Since the benefits of automation are more obvious than the benefits of integration, they do not understand why they should switch tool. Again, they are accountable for the results that they achieve, and generally not for the means that they employ, so they may feel entitled to the privilege to pick their tools. As human beings (as any economic player), they fear uncertainty and resist change. They have invested time "equity" in their applications. They like to use the best tools available in their trade. The tools that they master may boost their professional egos and feature prominently in their resumes. They may also have "upgrades" in mind which may already have been approved by their managers. CRM is a turnoff for them. There are no bells and whistles in most CRM functionalities because things need to remain manageable in large applications; so people invariably find the CRM functionalities to be too basic. Nothing worth sacrificing anyway. Their argument against CRM is strong: "why fix it if it isn’t broken". If the CRM functionalities at stake prove too rudimentary, too different or too buggy, the argument usually holds sway. They do not need to know the CRM to make their point, and they rarely do.

The processes embodied in the pre-existing tools can conflict with those embodied in the CRM.

Even when there are legitimate reasons why a seemingly "redundant" application should remain in use, problems can arise from the processes embodied in this application. Those processes may not only overlap with those of the CRM system, they could also conflict with them. If those problems are not anticipated, discussed and solved before the implementation, they can become insurmountable and further contribute to the marginalization of the CRM system.

Here is an example: Email messages sent-to and received-from contacts via a CRM system can automatically be attached to the records of these contacts. Optionally, they can also be manually attached to other relevant records: quotes, opportunities, incidents etc. As they are attached to records, email messages become accessible to all (…who are authorized to access these records). This is a huge benefit. Messages are no longer kept hidden and inaccessible in individual email clients and Personal Computers. This is also a risk however. As people still use email clients like Outlook alongside the CRM system, they may not be aware of the fact that their email messages might now be read by people other than their intended recipient. Here, the email processes embodied in the CRM system and that embodied in personal email clients like Outlook conflict with each other. If a CEO were to discover this difference by accident, he would invariably regard it as a flaw and he would overlook the benefits brought by email integration. Asked for advice, IT specialists would prudently recommend that the CRM not be used for email. Thus, they would unknowingly deprive the CRM system of a big portion of its usefulness (as if someone decided that faxes and letters could not be stored in the customers’ manila folders in a company’s file cabinets because those cabinets can be opened by people other than the recipients of the document).

If this CEO and his/her team had been forewarned, they might have agreed to use a different set of IMAP email addresses/accounts for the CRM system. When a company decides to use a CRM, it should first design an email procedure to ensure, among other things, that personal, confidential or internal email messages are sent and received via personal email addresses/inboxes/accounts that would exist in Outlook and/or Smart-phones but NOT in the CRM system. The CRM email client would only be used for non-confidential business related correspondence. If handling multiple email accounts/addresses depending on the content of email messages was too much to ask or was still regarded as risky, the company could instead disable the automatic attachment of email to contacts. This would require that email messages be manually attached to records based on their value and content, but this would preserve email confidentiality. In any case, the inconvenience that any of these solution would have created would be very minor in comparison to the benefits it would have preserved. The situation did not justify that the baby be thrown with the bath water. This leads us to our next point.

The CRM is finally abandonned to the IT department.

When the implementation stalls with procedures, employee support, utilization and management oversight lacking, the responsibility of the CRM system generally falls onto the IT department. This also impacts the success of the CRM project.

Installing and securing a CRM system is a relatively simple process. With a little bit of experience, this can be done in a half day. The complexity and toil is elsewhere: in the system selection, data migration, process definition, training etc. IT personnel sometimes participate in the installation of the system, but they do not always participate in the other phases of the implementation which are non-technical in nature. Many software initiatives start in the IT department but this one generally does not. As a consequence, IT personnel are usually unaware of the "what, why and how" of the system and of its many intertwined functionalities. Since little or no procedures were written, it is hard for them to figure out what is important and what is not. All this can make them feel ambivalent or indifferent towards the application. They empathize with the employees for whom the system is a turnoff. They will not question their assumptions and will not consider the pros and cons of CRM because nobody is there to explain where and how the system creates efficiencies. They will more eagerly spend time trying to integrate the CRM with the tools that these employees like rather than try to understand how the system works and how to tweak it to accommodate their needs. Emboldened by dwindling management interest and now "in charge", they may take action and jeopardize the little of the system that is actually in use for the sake of the people who do not want to use it (the above example shows how this could happen). If they do, functionalities that worked will inevitably cease to work. More efficiencies will unavoidably disappear. Sales people will slowly abandon the system and return to their old tools. They will only use the system as an opportunity log and as a quote writer (if this task has not been re-assigned to a single employee).

Now the question is, how could this happen?

Why couldn’t anybody see this happening and intervene? What did the software implementer do or not do?

Now, lets have a look at the CRM functionalities listed earlier in this document. In a business in which CRM works, the removal of these functionalities would feel like death by a thousand cuts? How is it that here, it is the CRM system that died by a thousand cuts?

20 anecdotal reasons why CRM so often fails midsize businesses.
"Traditional" Sales Software (i.e.: CRM or Customer Relationship Management) rarely works for midsize organizations. It generally brings little or no ROI, generates unwanted complexity and squanders large amounts of time for both managers and users. IT consultancies (Gartner™, Meta Group™, Butler Group™, Accenture™…) acknowledge that 55% to 70% of all CRM implementations fail. The CRM industry often puts the blame on resistance to change and on insufficient upper management buy-in.

Here is a 30-point anectdotal overview of what in-house implementers generally say about their CRM/SFA experience. The problems with CRM are not merely pitfalls or side effects. They stem from the business model of traditional software vendors and the unique nature of the sales function.


Often unfit for the sales processes of midsize companies.

Most sales people find the prospect of entering and updating information in a database burdensome and needlessly time-consuming. They usually enjoy a great deal of freedom, and it is not in their interest to load a database with the very information that makes them valuable and hard to replace. They resist "commoditization."

Sales and customer service teams in midsize companies tend to be small and spread across locations, countries, or product lines. They have their own sub-management and unique objectives. CRM processes often clash with existing procedures, practices and local agendas. CEO's want to avoid anything that might stifle local entrepreneurship and destroy local value. Corporate Sales Managers may not have the authority required to impose a shared application to local leaders. Local managers lack the awareness, perspective and motivation required to spot and pursue cross-unit opportunities.

Midsize companies' sales and customer-service personnel have pre-existing ways to manage their customer relationships and do their jobs. Established patterns can make them reluctant to relinquish their personal tools (email application, PDA's, etc...) and adopt a management-controlled, enterprise-wide alternative. ERP's, accounting systems and dedicated enterprise applications already give them a wide array of tools and real-time information (e.g.: quotes, orders, email, shared calendar, campaigns, bug tracking, project management, document Management, etc.). The CRM functionalities that are redundant appear optional or unnecessary to many. Since the benefits of automation are more obvious than the benefits of integration, they do not understand why they should switch tool. Their argument against CRM is strong: "why fix it if it isn’t broken". Some legacy tools are never retired. They overlap and conflict with the CRM system. Integration and customer-centricity cannot be achieved.

Sales software implementations are hard to manage and easy to derail. The benefits brought by CRM are benefits to the organization as a whole and not necessarily to the individual department or user. A system that integrates all the front office needs of an organization into a single tool will never be as powerful in each one of its functionalities as a series of dedicated applications. Striking a balance between the common good and the legitimate needs of the users can be complex and risky. Ignorance (in the face of software complexity), power struggle, personnality, and fear can get in the way. They can derail the process at an early stage or subtly strip the system of its benefits (through "opt-out" exceptions).

Processes embedded in CRM systems cannot be enforced; only written procedures can. When CRM users do not conform to the many non-written procedures imposed by a CRM system, they usually blame the software, and in doing so, blame the sponsors of the system. Implementers generally fail to understand that everything that the system asks of users should be written and approved by both higher and lower hierarchy in all the departments involved. This is essential to ensure that management requests and CRM processes are reasonable and do not conflict with each other. Every procedural decision has to be made with the CRM system in mind. This requires a high level of CRM knowledge and commitment from all the managers involved.

Likewise, Sales or General Managers seldom foresee that employees will not adjust to the new system if their roles and job descriptions are at odds with the CRM processes. Managers tend to underestimate the importance of the change involved, how alien the software is to employees, and that their own methods must change. Roles and job descriptions are not revised. Goals are not defined. Fairness and effectiveness are not verified. Change is not introduced. Employees are not properly trained, and rewarding schemes are not adjusted.

The need to consolidate and share information (account profile, contact data, opportunities, calls, correspondence, quotes, orders, shipments, payment history, profitability, customer support issues...) is proportionate to the size of the company. Midsize corporations have less need to simulate a one-to-one relationship with their customers in order to sell and create loyalty. Instead, they rely on empowered sales people to listen to their customers, understand or uncover what they need, obtain it from their factories and guarantee that their promises are kept.

Sales people cannot be coerced into using a CRM system. Prudent sales managers will not enforce policies that could backfire if critics find sympathetic ears higher in the hierarchy (i.e. their CEO). Vigorous enforcement may be an option in giant organizations; it is not in midsize companies where sales people play a crucial role (all the more so in "labor-protective" Europe and in "consensus-driven" Asia).

The success of CRM software is contingent on user adoption and education. In most sales environments, sales people can barely afford the time it takes to learn new products. They do not have time or mindshare for software training. They do not have time to study a complex enterprise software application - let alone "Windows" if they are PC-challenged. Unlike most other employees, they are goal-driven; they are not bound to a tool. They can do their job and succeed without the CRM system. So all it takes to derail an implementation and corrupt the reports produced by a CRM system is a PC-challenged sales person or one who shows brilliant results but defies the CRM policies.

The benefits of CRM integration can only be fully realized if Sales, International Sales, Customer Service, Helpdesk and Marketing, all use the CRM system. Midsize organizations come in all shapes and forms. In some of them, all the department involved in front-office activities report to a single boss. In others, they do not. They may be totally independant from each other or they may report to other departments' managers. In some organizations, Customer Service and Helpdesk activities are placed under the control of an operations or production manager. In others, marketing itself (or product management) is seen as a back-office activity. When this is the case, and unless the CRM implementation is initiated by the C.E.O of the company himself, the benefits of integration are unlikely to materialize.


Traditional sales software generally produces poor data.

CRM solutions tend to offer a wide array of interlocking features that form a whole. Users have to learn and understand too many things that they don't need to get to the one they do and to properly enter information that others will use.

Sales activity is hard to quantify. Reports produced by CRM applications draw moderate credibility. This is especially true when systems are not used in a uniform and universal manner. CRM is too dependent on the diligence, goodwill and skill of the users.

CRM databases are filled with prospects and direct customers, as well as distributors, sub-distributors, retailers, representatives and their own customers and prospects. The information may have been entered by sales people, customer service agents, and marketing staff or by the contacts themselves through the Internet. The CRM data lacks homogeneity and integrity, and it is perishable. It is a poor source of information for the marketing department (let alone for "data-mining").

More information is a good thing only if it is "pre-qualified." If it is not, activity increases but productivity decreases. A large proportion of the people who contact a company will never buy from it. Some customers place orders without ever being contacted by a salesperson. Yet, both these types of contacts find their way into CRM databases and generate additional follow-up or maintenance work. While this influx of information can clearly lead to new business, it more surely drains sales resources. What makes a difference in sales is not so much how many contacts one calls as it is the number of times one calls existing contacts.

CRM applications generally involve personnel from a single organization. Yet, the people involved in the sale of a given product are often outside of the organization: distributors, agents, and independent representatives. The reseller market remains mostly opaque to its sales and marketing management.


Traditional sales software is complicated, rigid and risky.

Most users are generally not willing or able to juggle the relationships between contacts, companies, leads, opportunities or customer-service tickets in the database. They do not know how to properly handle duplicates. CRM is generally implemented by the sales team with limited involvement from the IT staff (often uneasy with CRM). For both, maintaining CRM data is a daunting task.

Client/server CRM programs are difficult to install, tweak, fix, maintain and upgrade. They are among the most complex applications running on PC networks today. Many midsize organizations find the long implementations (30, 90 or even 180 days) unacceptable. The cumulative complexity of the application, network and client OS is overwhelming for them.

The complexity of CRM systems is often overlooked by non-users in top management positions who in turn neglect or underestimate the training needs of their teams and the need to adjust processes, roles and attitudes.

Importing and exporting data in and out of a CRM system is extremely complex, time consuming and costly. The conversion of legacy system or commercial database information into usable CRM records typically requires that this information be cleaned, reformatted and imported in as many layers or steps as there are tables in the target database. The structure of the CRM database has to be well understood and long routines have to be written and tested.

Importing 1,000 or 10,000 contact records into a database costs as much as importing one or several million records. The cost involved in populating CRM systems does not significantly shrink with the size of the company. Since this cost is generally larger than that of the CRM software itself in large systems, one can imaginge how it can become prohibitive in midsize businesses.

Information technology is usually the turf of the Operations, Finance/Accounting and IT departments. CRM can subtly disturb a pre-existing balance of power and trigger adverse reactions in the firm. When CRM claims to help a company become more customer-focused, it also promises more power to the sales department.

Decision makers sometimes fail to adequatly involve sales, customer service or marketing employees in the implementation and management of the CRM system. They give the upper hand to IT, accounting or operations employees whose culture is far removed from that of front office people. At best, this creates a useless CRM tool that wastes everybody's time. At worst this puts sales, marketing and customer service under the direct control of back-office managers and it destroys these departments. Either way, this goes against the objective to acieve more customer-centricity.

At best, CRM makes the front-office departments of the organization more customer-centric, not the organization as a whole. Everybody participates in the selection and implementation of an ERP system, and everybody uses it: manufacturing, purchasing, logistics, materials planning, general & cost accounting, design & manufacturing engineering, quality, human resources, IT, sales, marketing, customer service, etc.. This is not the case with CRM. CRM is a sales, customer service and marketing endeavor. Most other departments of the organization feel unconcerned by CRM and by the data it generates. As far as they are concerned, the system that matters is the ERP (or the accounting system). So while the front-office departments of the organization may become more customer-centric, the rest of the company remains largely "production-centric" or "accounting-centric"; in other words: "self-centric".

(1) If the departments that should be customer-centric by their very nature (sales, customer service and marketing) are not customer-centric enough, and (2) if they fail to help the rest of the organization be sufficiently responsive to its market, then software alone may not be the cure that the company needs.

While most people see accounting systems and ERP's as the nervous system of their organization, they tend to regard CRM as an exoskeleton that exists at the periphery of the business to structure and consolidate its relations with its environment. The scope of CRM and its ramifications within the overall IT and process infrastructure of the organization is unclear to many. Because, CRM only involves three departments, people tend to see it as an isolated or standalone application like a CAD package, a word processor or a spreadsheet. This confusion often leads to a gross under-appreciation of the cost and time it will take for the organization to build and absorb the application. As a result, decision makers often declare victory too soon after the system is installed and unknowingly pull the plug on their CRM initiative.

CEO's often see IT investments in sales as a possible distraction and as an unnecessary injection of complexity and rigidity into a field that "does not require it" and is hard to "tame". They may even question whether IT provides any ROI at all. If so, they will not put their weight behind the CRM project or embrace the process adjustment it may entail.

CRM systems are rigid. Archaic designs or software flaws are hard to fix without putting existing data at risk. The underlying organization or business processes that CRM applications frame are likely to be challenged by evolving requirements and technology. Flexibility, swiftness and focus are essential to the survival of midsize organizations. They cannot afford to manage complexity in anything but their core competency. CRM's rigidity is all the more detrimental considering the high costs involved.

CRM systems are error prone. Giving individuals the right to modify and delete shared data is bound to generate frustrating human errors and incomprehension. Synchronization between servers does not work any better (e.g. if 2 individuals update the same note entry between two synchronizations, the work of one of these users is going to be automatically erased).

Many non-core functionalities in client/server CRM applications are not finalized at the time of release. They are user-unfriendly or have bugs.

CRM is not without risks. With ERP, it is the past of the company that is recorded and accessible through databases. With CRM, it is its future, pending sales and ongoing negotiations, on an unprecedented scale, in real time and with full details. Customers, products, prices, quantities, negotiation stages and notes are no longer aggregated at lower levels in the hierarchy and kept hidden locally. Never before have people had access to so much critical information so easily, via a PC client or an Internet browser. Never before have managers had the technical capability to access information that was beyond their jurisdiction or scope of responsibility (e.g. foreign sales pipeline). With CRM and data proliferation, leaks are more destructive and less traceable.

Paradoxically, CRM vendors rarely rely on positive, articulate or quantifiable arguments to sell their product. There are very few hard benefits and a lots of intangibles in their pitch. No ROI talk or calculation. In essence, they propagate the idea that companies need front-office automation and a "360° view" of their customers to remain competitive (as if it were only a matter of common sense, and as if CRM was the only way to increase front-office productivity). They capitalize on the insatiable "thirst" that corporations and their managers have for predictability and control. The pitch is in itself revealing of the limits of CRM.

Is there value in the automation & integration of sales operations?
In and by itself, the traditional offering of enterprise software vendors, integration & automation, brings little to the sales department in terms of visibility, efficiency and manageability. As a matter of fact, the benefits that CRM might bring in principle are wiped out by the complexity of the application and its effects in midsize organizations. There is value in integration & automation in the sales department of midsize organization, but commercial CRM software is not the best way to extract it.


In and by itself, CRM brings little in terms of visibility

Front and back office systems process very different types of information. The former processes "dirty" and often unstructured data while the latter processes "clean" structured data.

For the software industry, CRM is to sales what ERP/MRP is to manufacturing - a way to integrate several functions of a firm into a coherent whole (sales, marketing, customer service and support). Yet ERP/MRP systems deal with standard enterprise processes, finite information and "docile" operators, whereas CRM systems deal with diverse and evolving markets, a variety of sales channels, sales information (by nature imprecise, patchy and ephemeral) and sales people (a result-driven and independent breed). The conventional "Enterprise Application" model is unfit to encompass this front office complexity.

CRM really deals with the "chaos" of the market (a high number of leads, prospects, customers, an ever-changing reality from which orders are extracted through a distillation-like process) while ERP/MRP deals with the "order" of the enterprise (where orders with very precise information are processed into products or services). "Chaos" on the one hand, "order" on the other; two entirely different universes that require two totally different approaches.


In and by itself, CRM brings little in terms of efficiency

Back office and front office processes have little in common. The former attempts to "tame the production machinery" while the latter attempts to "tame the market."

The software industry operates with CRM as it does with everything else. It pores over a business activity or a discipline and identifies data to be integrated and processes to be automated. It provides customizability, links to surrounding systems (e.g.: back office application, outlook, PDA's, Internet) and calculation capabilities (here, mostly analytics). In doing so, it reduces the number of times the same information has to be keyed in, and it reduces error and labor costs (in theory only, because software implementations are rarely accompanied by layoffs in midsize organizations).

This may mean something for ERP because (1) it integrates many departments. (2) These departments share a lot of information (e.g.: engineering files shared by R&D, production, purchasing and quality). (3) They exchange a lot of data. (4) They "crunch a lot of numbers" (e.g.: MRP calculations, accounting). (5) They handle functions where savings can dramatically impact the bottom line (e.g.: purchasing: in an organization where material costs represent 70% of total sales (and salaries and overheads 25%), a 7% decrease in purchasing prices has the same impact on profits as the doubling of sales).

For CRM, this is less true. It concerns but a few functions, often grouped into a single department. The quantity of information that is shared or exchanged within or between these functions is limited (contact data and notes). Most of the information they share often already resides in a back office system (product and price lists, stock availability, customer orders). The occurrences of multiple data entries are less frequent, and the resulting potential savings limited: namely (1) the conversion of leads into quotes and (2) the conversion of quotes into orders (but this can already be handled by most back office applications).


Unnecessary complexity creates inefficiencies and reduces visibility

CRM and eCRM solutions are packed with complexity because the business model of software vendors requires it. They sell licenses or charge monthly fees. The more integrated the application, the more they can charge; the more functionality-rich their product, the more appeal there is to it; the more acronyms, buzzwords and hype, the further ahead they are of their market and competitors. The more proprietary lock-in (API, file formats...) the more cross-sell opportunities. The scope of commercial sales software is determined by concerns of marketability, selling price and profit maximization which lead to over-integration, arbitrary modularization, high complexity and poor quality. CRM and eCRM vendors are "prisoners of their own DNA." The vendor's business model is "what is wrong with CRM."