5 Methods how Microsoft CRM can help your business weather this crazy economy
Consulting, General Users, Salespeople, Support October 13th, 2008
Anyone who has not been living in cave lately has been bombarded with grim news about the world economy. What to do about these tough times for a business on a tight budget?
Consider investing in a Microsoft CRM solution. An effectively deployed CRM system can give an anxious company the edge it needs to intelligently retain its best customers and come out winning when dancing days are here again.
5 quick points on why an organization should invest in Microsoft CRM:
1. Tight budget? Microsoft Dynamics CRM Online is your weapon of choice
Microsoft has been selling their CRM Online service hard, and for very good reasons. Starting at an affordable $39 per user monthly fee, your business can have virtually all the same tools available to enterprise-sized customers. Businesses with tight budgets will not have crippled version of CRM. This includes the fully functional CRM client in your Outlook. I’ll let it sink in; that’s some serious stuff. We’re talking about the cost of a full-fledged data center and CRM software condensed into a fee that is cheaper than my cable bill.
Small businesses won’t need an I.T. staff and expensive servers to get the full benefits of Microsoft CRM. Register with Microsoft CRM Online and you will have room for up to 20GB of data, enough for even the largest corporations. When your business grows too big for the CRM Online account, Microsoft offers free support to migrate the data to an On-Premise solution. Ramping up to a full CRM solution has never been easier.
2. Streamline your business processes and never miss a sales opportunity
With the right setup, Microsoft Dynamics CRM will never let that one hot sales prospect fall through the cracks; we’ve all see that happen before. Microsoft Dynamics CRM has the customization tools to tweak the system to your organization’s heartbeat.
Are you adopting a new sales methodology (eg. Miller-Heiman)? Most if not all of these practices are supported out-of-the-box, and easily configurable. If you need to issue follow-up phone calls for hot leads, the built-in workflow will schedule these activities automatically for your sales team. Think about the right “CRM flavor” you’ve been missing, and chances are only minor tweaking is required in Microsoft Dynamics CRM.
3. Know your best customers to hold onto them
Everyone is worried about money these days, especially your customers. One smart strategy is to focus your organization’s budget and energy on your most loyal customers. But how to retain them if you don’t know who they are?
Leveraging the Report Builder and Advanced Find tools in Microsoft CRM, a manager can easily slice and dice customer data to pinpoint and label your target customers. Quickly build and run queries to determine customers with the most sales activity, and determine your highest performing salespeople.
4. Deploy effective Marketing Campaigns
Now that you know your best customers, what is the best way to keep them? Leverage the Marketing module in Microsoft CRM effectively by first assigning those customers to a Marketing List.
With this new Marketing List, a manager can run specialized campaigns that would address those best customers directly through different channels. If approached creatively, these constant “touches” can only add value to your customer relationships. These campaigns can include special promotions, event invitations, free gifts, requests for their personal feedback and more. A marketing manager can run e-mail blasts and mail merges, then measure the success of the campaign.
5. Keep them happy with responsive customer service
All the marketing campaigns in the world won’t help a customer with a service issue. A Customer Service Rep using the Service module can immediately create customer service cases, track activities and view case history. To make sure each issue is addressed promptly and reliably, CRM workflows can be setup to automatically assign activities and track status changes. A Knowledge Base Article database is available to record common issues and address them immediately. Also, Microsoft CRM is a relational database, so your salespeople also have full knowledge of open cases and intelligently address their customer accounts.
Feel free to contact me in the “About Me” page for consulting advice on deploying Microsoft CRM for your business.
Tags: CRM, CRM Online, Customer Service, Economy, Microsoft Dynamics CRM, Miller Heiman, Sales, Sales Automation, Small Business
Microsoft’s latest statement outlines big plans for the future of Dynamics CRM [PDF download]
Administrator, Consulting, CRM 4.0, Customizations, Developer, Downloads, General Users, Microsoft Dynamics, Salespeople July 28th, 2008

Sales. Service. Marketing. Dynamics CRM's got you covered.
If your business or career involves Microsoft Dynamics CRM, this is probably the announcement you’ve been waiting for. Microsoft released a statement today addressing several important topics on the future of Dynamics CRM. You can really tell they believe in the software and has big plans for it in the future.
The Microsoft Dynamics CRM Team Blog released a document titled “Statement of Direction”, which is available for download at these links:
- Microsoft Dynamics CRM: Statement of Direction [PDF, 487KB]
- CustomerSource [link]
- PartnerSource [link]
Some of the topics covered in this statement include:
- Roadmap
- CRM Mobility
- Solution Accelerators
- SharePoint Web Parts
- BizTalk integration
- New features in CRM Online
- CRM “V-Next” (aka, Dynamics CRM 5.0!)
Some major announcements I’ve collected from reading this statement:
- Microsoft will release “CRM Mobile Express” in Q3 of 2008. This fully-supported software will allow CRM to run on any HTML 4.0 capable phone. To support Blackberry customers, Microsoft partnered with TenDigits to provide their MobileAccess 4.0 software at a cost-effective price.
- The list of confirmed CRM Accelerators are as follows:
- Analytics
- eService
- Event Management
- Enterprise Search
- Sales Methodologies
- Extended Sales Forecasting
- CRM Notifications
- Business Productivity
- An updated SharePoint web part for CRM 4.0 will be released in the second half of 2008. It will support multi-tenancy, IFD deployments and 64-bit environments.
- New tools and features will be phased into CRM Online between now and CRM “V.Next”. This will include advertising management, search engine, new analytics elements and dashboards.
CRM “V.Next”, or perhaps more known as CRM 5.0, deserves it’s own special section. It’s slated to be released late 2009 to early 2010. I’ve summarized some of the goals for this next version below.
- Deliver a “rich and satisfying user experience, leveraging new usability advances in the next releases of Microsoft Office and Windows.”
- Enhance the Outlook and Office “ribbon” experience.
- Streamlined user interface.
- More user personalization options.
- Closer integration with SharePoint, especially around document management.
- Improved Business Intelligence tools.
- Balanced workload management for more efficient use of resources.
- Overall improvements to:
- Contact and Account Management
- Team-Based Collaboration
- Call Center and Unified Communications Support
For the full Table of Contents, click on the link below.
Tags: CRM, CRM 4.0, CRM 5.0, CRM Online, Microsoft, Microsoft Dynamics CRM, Mobile, SharePoint

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