Customer Data Is Next Competitive Weapon
Wednesday, July 9th, 2008At Istobe, we’ve clearly been preaching the virtues of customer analytics for some time now, so it makes us happy when we read new research that shows an increased interest in customer centric software solutions to make better use of existing customer data. Specifically, a new report by AMR (The Customer Management Market Sizing Report 2007-2012) shows that spending on customer management applications and software has increased by double-digits for the first time since the 1990’s.
The report talks about how “an almost universal trend around customer-centricity and customer experience management will fuel continued customer management investments regardless of economic conditions” and how in the next five years “the customer experience will be the most important potential competitive weapon.”
Additionally, the author specifically singles out marketing analytics as being “even more critical in a more challenging economy as insights into customer behavior provide better visibility into future demand and the effect of promotions and campaigns” and also notes that marketing organizations “are feeling more pressure from executives to demonstrate better insight into return on marketing investment. Today’s marketer needs to rely more on technology to aggregate demand data, analyze customer behavior and close the loop on campaigns.”
The report goes on to talk about the growth in SaaS and other industry trends, but the biggest takeaway I found was that the current economic recession is a great opportunity for companies to gain ground on competitors by implementing customer analytics solutions that better focus on increasing customer retention (see our other post about that here) and improving marketing response rates. While many organizations have already planned for or implemented cost cutting measures in light of concerns over the future, I definitely believe the measure of success between firms in a given industry over the course of the next few years will largely be determined by how effectively they use their existing data to manage their business.