| 31. |
The Lexicon of CRM - Part 3: From R to Z (4 Pages)
by Randy Garland
Nov 2, 2001 Abstract : CRM. C.R.M. itself is an acronym, standing for Customer Relationship Management. This is part three of a three-part article to provide explanation and meaning for most of the common CRM phraseology. Here, in alphabetical order, we continue the Lexicon of CRM
Type: Article
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| 32. |
CRM: What Is It and Why Do It? Part One: Historical Background (5 Pages)
by Glen Petersen
Nov 8, 2004 Abstract : Many consultants, vendors, and analysts today define CRM in terms of being a customer-centric business strategy that is enabled by a set of applications that support customer-facing functions and management decision making. That may capture the essence of what CRM is, but it does not begin to capture why an end user organization should invest significant resources to pursue such an initiative.
Type: Article
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| 33. |
eLoyalty Enhances Its Field Service And Logistics Services (3 Pages)
by L. Talarico
Nov 21, 2000 Abstract : eLoyalty, a CRM strategy and implementation consultancy, recently partnered with ServicePower to enhance its Field Service and Logistics practice. ServicePower is a small vendor that develops dispatch optimization software. eLoyalty will use ServicePowerメs software to incorporate dispatch optimization and other aspects of Field Force Automation into their CRM services.
Type: Article
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| 34. |
Interelate: More on Tap Than Apps (3 Pages)
by L. Talarico
Sep 15, 2000 Abstract : Interelate, a customer intelligence ASP, recently announced partnerships with infrastructure service provider LoudCloud and CRM analytics vendor E.piphany. These partnerships complement Interelateメs analytics expertise to provide new analytical CRM service offerings that promise to provide more value to organizations than simply hosted applications, or 'apps on tap.'
Type: Article
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| 35. |
SAP Details CRM Plans (3 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Nov 17, 1999 Abstract : On November 9, SAP outlined its Customer Relationship Management plans in preparation for its product delivery next month. In December the company is expected to launch a telesales application and Internet portal that it hopes will lay the foundation for the full CRM suite rollout early next year.
Type: Article
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| 36. |
Beyond the Basics: The Value of Integrated CRM by Sage Software
Abstract : Customer relationship management (CRM) is more than just software or a set of processes--it's a business culture solidly focused on winning and keeping the right customers. A good CRM solution builds value to your business. Learn about the value of an integrated CRM suite.
Type: White Paper
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| 37. |
CRM Transformation and Innovation to take Organisations into 21st Century by Gush*
Abstract : Customer demand has pushed customer relationship management (CRM) business solutions to higher levels of technological innovation and integration resulting in more user-friendly and cost-effective solutions that deliver measurable results to both the users and the organization. In this paper we outline how CRM has matured both technologically and as a strategic business initiative to deliver organizational CRM success supported by real ROI.
Type: White Paper
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| 38. |
CRM Secrets of ROI and TCO by Bell Rock Solutions
Abstract : There is a real cost associated with buying and using a customer relationship management (CRM) software system. Licensing, implementation, integration, and adminstration, are just some of the challenges companies face. Learn the secrets of twenty-one experts in CRM, IT, business and management consulting on getting real value from CRM software.
Type: White Paper
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| 39. |
The Lexicon of CRM - Part 1: From A to I (7 Pages)
by Randy Garland
Oct 12, 2001 Abstract : C.R.M. itself is an acronym, standing for Customer Relationship Management. This is part one of three-part article to provide explanation and meaning for most of the common CRM phraseology. Here, in alphabetical order, is the Lexicon of CRM.
Type: Article
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| 40. |
Scala and Microsoft Become (Not So) Strange CRM Bedfellows (3 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Aug 28, 2003 Abstract : The Scala and Microsoft alliance in the CRM arena has merits of mutual benefits, particularly in the short to medium term, but due to vacillating motives of the participants that compete in the other enterprise applications fields, will it last? For the time being, Microsoft will likely be content to help Scala attack or keep the satellite divisions of its bigger competitors, particularly those of their common rival - SAP.
Type: Article
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