businessman-with-questionmark-faceI recently received an e-mail from El-Noor Rashid with several interesting “what-if” scenarios on what is and what isn’t a Lead and Opportunity in Dynamics CRM.  I gave him my interpretation of what qualifies, but feel free to rehash these scenarios and give your own feedback.

Q: Suppose you have a new contact from an existing customer base (already an customer Account) that has an interest in your product/service and gives you his biz card. Is this a Lead or an Opportunity?

On the one hand this brand new contact has an unqualified interest in your products/services, but you are dealing with an existing Account.  My opinion is that this would be a Lead until there is sufficient interest to make them a qualified Lead and then you can move them to an Opty to generate a Quote.

A:  The way I would define that situation is to first add the new Contact to the Account, then create an Opportunity from the Account (or Contact).  The fact that you already have an established relationship with the Account elevates that Lead instantly to a new Opportunity.  The Opportunity can start at the initial sales stage, with a modest probability percentage (even 0%).

In my view, the Lead entity in an out-of-the-box CRM deployment is really designed for those you haven’t contacted yet and have minimal information.  The beauty of CRM, though, is that it can be customized any way you interpret the sales process.

A special case would be a contact-centered organization, like a doctor’s office.  A new person you just met that is interested in your medical services would start off as a Lead, until they book their first appointment; after which, they can be considered as a Contact with a history of sales records.

Q: What if you are dealing with a existing Account AND and existing Contact (for that account). That person is interested in learning more about a specific product or service. Is this considered a Lead because the interest is still general, yet qualified or because both the Account AND Contact existing in the CRM, that this is automatically an Opty?

A:  Again, I would still say it is automatically an Opportunity, albeit at its most initial sales stage.  You already have some established relationship with both the existing Account and Contact.

Q: Similar to the above question. What if the both the Account and the Contact existed, but the Account is Prospective because the orginal Opty was Lost, everything else is the same as the previous questions. Lead or Opty?

A: Still a new Opportunity.  Though the Account hasn’t yet contracted your services and isn’t officially a customer, you’ve probably already emailed, called or met the Contact from the previously lost Opportunity.

Q: If we have a new Lead (new Account), the general rule of thumb is when the Lead is qualified, it turns into a ‘Prospective’ Account + Opportunity + Contact. When the Opty is ‘Won’ then you would set the status to ‘Customer’ for that Account; otherwise if it is ‘Lost’, keep things the way they are. Is this how you see the progression of a Lead?

What worries some people is that the Account table will be contaminated and dominated with so many ’Prospective’ Accounts? What would be the response to these people to allay their fears or is a legitimate concern?

A:  The sales process you described is what I believe the natural order of things in Microsoft CRM.  I agree that the Account table will have many Prospective Accounts, but the important factor is that you have established communication with the Account, though it wasn’t successful.  This sales process aligns with the “Customer Relationship” philosophy in CRM.

The best method to allay your users fears of a cluttered Account database is to modify the default Account view.  Simply create two different views, something like “Active Customers” and “Prospective Accounts”.  Modify the filters for both to only show those relative accounts, then set the “Active Customers” view as Default.  After these steps, your users will only see Active Customers right away instead of the whole Account database.  If they just want to see Prospective Accounts, they’d simply select that view.  From their point of view, CRM would be cleanly partitioned.

Tags: , , , ,



Reader's Comments

  1. Anne Stanton | April 17th, 2009 at 5:10 am

    An Opportunity is not a person or account so the first question in this post is a bit confusing. An opportunity is the tracking of a potential dollar amount with all the associated sales information.

    Would this new contact be a lead or an opportunity? It would be neither. It would be a new contact on the existing account and if there was a new sales potential then a new opportunity would ALSO be created.

  2. Raaz | April 20th, 2009 at 2:03 am

    One scenario like that I want to create one or multiple opportunities from account screen. If I am selecting one or multiple account then on save and close I want its related opportunites should created automatically. I dont want to create opportunity from opportunity screen. How it can be acomplished?

  3. Christian | April 20th, 2009 at 11:23 am

    Raaz,

    I’m assuming you want to create an opportunity immediately from an account screen. Simply click the Actions menu > Add Relationships > Opportunity. However, to automatically generate new opportunities, I suggest creating a new workflow based on Account records that will Create Record (opportunity) as soon as the account record is saved. You can map the relevant fields you need on the new opportunity records.

    Good luck, -Christian

  4. Raaz | April 21st, 2009 at 6:13 am

    One more thing is that, On Account form I added a product tab, from where user select a product (For this I created a N:1 relationship with primary entity as product and related entity as Account). When user create an Account, he/she will select the product from the product tab (will create new if wants to). On saving Account, workflow will execute and that workflow will creates a new opportunity with its potential customer as this account.

    Now it was in my assumption that when I will see automatically created opportunity, that account will be related to this opportunity which it is showing and I will see in product list that Product which user select from product tab in Account form, but product doesn’t appear. How It can be done?

    Please ask if any thing is unclear

  5. Christian | April 21st, 2009 at 9:14 am

    Raaz:
    Sorry, but just because you’ve added a new relationship between Accounts and Products doesn’t mean that the Opportunities automatically inherit the Products. Accounts to Opportunities is its own relationship. Unless someone can post a better solution, you’ll need to always add the product directly to the opportunity. My best guess is that the functionality you’re looking for would require some software development. Perhaps this can be a new option for CRM 5.0.

    I suggest browsing the discussion groups to see if someone had a similar scenario.

    http://www.microsoft.com/communities/newsgroups/list/en-us/default.aspx?dg=microsoft.public.crm

    http://groups.google.com/group/microsoft.public.crm/topics?lnk

Leave a Comment

View in: Mobile | Standard