Thursday, November 14, 2019
Marketing MA Management and International Business Essay -- Business a
Marketing MA Management and International Business    Introduction    CRM is a term for methodologists, technologies and e-commerce  capabilities -used by companies to manage customer relationships.  (Foss, 2001:1) It is also called customer management, customer care  and sometimes customer centricity or customer-centric management.  (Brown, 2000:1)    All the names and definitions of CRM have customer, as its core-it is  the management of customer relationships, which attempts to  revolutionize marketing and reshape entire business models.    To survive and grow the business must make a profit. To make a profit  it has to find people who are willing to pay more for its  products/services than they cost. Therefore profit comes from  customers.    All Profit comes from customers  So if no profit=no business  And no customers=no profit  Then no customers=no business  Therefore customers ARE the business    The idea of CRM is not new-it was the way the local shopkeeper treated  his customer-he knew him, knew what was happening in his life, what he  was buying, (one to one marketing?) etc. What is new though is that  nowadays the retailers try to establish dialog with tens of thousands  or even millions of customers in an attempt to understand them better,  their individual needs and maximise the lifetime value of this  relationship. In this respect it is not ââ¬Ërevolutionââ¬â¢ of marketing, but  rather ââ¬Ëevolutionââ¬â¢. The old model of doing business is back into  action but armed with technology and different schemes to reach the  customer and retain them for life.    The four types of CRM programmes, described by Stanley (2000) are  aimed at enabling the company to win back customers, who have defected  or are planning to, (Win Back or Save), to create loyalty among  customers (Retail Loyalty), to up-sell or cross sell services to these  customers (Cross Sell/Up-Sell) and to prospect for new customers (Prospecting)    Retail Loyalty    "Loyalty is a feeling or attitude of devoted attachment and affection;  or the act of binding oneself (intellectually or emotionally) to a  course of action. (http://dictionary.reference.com)    In everyday life loyalty implies emotional commitment to family and  friends, fidelity in marriage. It also suggests monogamy-one choice  above all others. (Humby et.al, 2003:9)    In this sense loyalty is something expected. But when it comes to...              ...ce a Customer, Always a Customerâ⬠ Dublin: Oak  Tree Press    Foss, B., Stone, M., (2001) ââ¬Å"Successful Customer Relationship  Marketingâ⬠ London: Kogan Page    Gilbert, D., (1999) ââ¬Å"Retail Marketing Managementâ⬠ Harlow: FT/Pitman    Humby, C. et al., (2003) ââ¬Å"Scoring Pointsâ⬠ London: Kogan Page    Oliver R. (1997) ââ¬Å"Researchâ⬠ New York: McGraw Hill    Omar, O (1999) ââ¬Å"Retail Marketingâ⬠ London:FT Management    Reichheld, R. (1996) ââ¬Å"The Quest for Loyaltyâ⬠ Boston: Harvard Business  School Press    Daley, J (2004)â⬠ Is a toaster a fair swap for your loyalty as a  shopper?â⬠ The Independent (http://proquest.umi.com)    Davis, H. (2002) ââ¬Å"Marketing is all about intellectual use of dataâ⬠  Loyalty Guide    Jones, K (2002) ââ¬Å"Are you exploiting the potential of your customer  base?â⬠ Loyalty Guide    http://www.at1.uk.com/Loyalty_Fundamentals.htm    www.bbc.co.uk/cgi-bin/search/results. asda+loyalty+scheme    www.foodanddrinkeurope.com/news/news- -loyalty-cards     http://www.mori.com/polls/2002/blacksun.shtml 2002)    http://money.guardian.co.uk/(Datamonitor report by E.Ripley)    www.mori.com    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/52056.stm    Cross J. (2004) Lecture notes Southampton, University College                      
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