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How To Create A CRM Data Capture ProcedureAvoid dirty data! Create a custom designed CRM Data Capture Checklist for your staff to follow.Fortunately one of the most common reasons cited for the high failure rate of CRM systems - poor data quality - is also one of the easiest to avoid. Your CRM software is only as good as the information it contains. As the old programmers motto goes ‘garbage in, garbage out’. So how can you avoid incomplete, incorrect, irrelevant or out-of-date and generally unfit-for-use data from permeating your CRM software? By creating a capture data method specific to your CRM system. Define a CRM Data Capture Procedure: You need to gather your key CRM users together and thrash out a procedure for capturing data, defining the rules of use. Spell out:
Data Backups: You might as well address the issue of Backups while you are about it.
Once your Checklist is finished, get everyone to sign it off as READ! As standard practice, ensure that your Data Capture Procedure document is handed to all new employees at your company. Refer back to this document for possible revision every three months or so. Try this: select a couple of records - both good and bad - every week, to put on the overhead at staff meetings. Make sure you don’t unduly embarrass anybody but watch this become the light-relief highlight of your meetings! People learn best when having fun! What if your database is in one unholy mess? Has the rot set in so deeply that your database needs a complete overhaul? Turn this seemingly insurmountable task into an opportunity to you. This is an excellent excuse to re-establish contact with your clients and let them know you care. You can always put lapses down to data crashes but tell them you have fixed the problem! Importantly, help your staff understand what you need from the data capture to facilitate more accurate marketing and reporting and hence the success of your business and their careers. By creating a sense of pride and ownership in the company database, you are nurturing the essential process of buy-in, necessary for the success of your CRM initiative. Don’t compromise this critical tool by allowing your CRM software to be infected by inferior data.
(c) SmallBizCRM, September, 2005. All rights reserved. |
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