| Article Check |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Management > Turbo-Charge Your Rollout with ERM |
|
Article Check - Turbo-Charge Your Rollout with ERM
What Type Of Home Based Business Should You Start? l be significantly decreased by more errors, low productivity, low morale, higher turnover, lost opportunity, and time not spent on managing relationships with your customers.If you have decided that you want to start a home based business, you have a lot of choices on what type of business you want to start. You want to choose something that you are interested in, since you will be spending much of your time working on it. You also want it to be something that you’re good at. Here are some of the types of businesses you can start at home.If you are creative, you might want to make something and sell it. Just to name a few things to give you some ideas, you can make candles, jewelry, clothing, or almost anything else, and sell it. One way to sell the items you create is on the web, that way you don’t have to leave the house at all for your business. You can also sell your creations to a store, or at a flea market or craft fair. This is a great idea for someone who is very creative, and enjoys spending their time making different things.< But simply telling people to get on board won’t make it so. If you think that people will easily rise to the occasion and embrace CRM just because you tell them it’s now their job to do so, you’re in for a rude awakening. Organizational change is not that neat, clean, or linear. There are, however, some ERM practices that can actually speed up implementation and increase your chances for success: Continuous and consistent information sharing will accelerate understanding and acceptance of change. Why? People generally only retain about 25% of a message after a 48-hour period. To increase the odds that your employees understand the CRM vision, develop an internal "public relations" strategy to manage employee expectations. Include the people that will be most affected by the new technology and business processe Jobs To Do Online - A Dream Come True Employees are the often-neglected stakeholders in the success or failure of a CRM (Customer Relationship Management) initiative. But employees don't always resist new ways of doing business. If you factor in relationship management practices that engage people in the change process, you can circumvent significant resistance and actually speed up implementation.You’ve probably heard about regular normal people who are making insane amounts of money from the internet. You’ve heard that these people don’t have any special education or business/marketing training, they didn’t start with a huge investment and they don’t spend more than 15 hours working on their business. As a matter of fact, you can say that these people can make six-figure incomes without doing too much effort. You might be thinking: “Is that real? If so, I’m in! But what is the secret?”You see, you can find several jobs to do online that can make you money consistently, and more important, legally. Just one example is if you have something you could sell, it’s very easy to publish an auction in one of the various auction sites on the web. In case you didn’t know, there are literally thousands of people who make so much money with auctions that they make a living ou Find the Sweet Spot Embarking on any change initiative, such as a CRM implementation, requires a parallel strategy of ERM - Employee Relationship Management. In helping companies manage change, our experience repeatedly tells us that employees know what the problems to implementation are, usually have strong opinions about them, and honestly want to make their work environment successful. Nobody wants to work in continual chaos. So leaders and managers need to leverage existing employee knowledge and motivation—that sweet spot—to accelerate implementation. Finding the sweet spot will help you develop the strategy to: Move managers and employees to quickly buy into CRM implementation and; Productively reflect on what actions or new behaviors need to be adopted (teamwork, better communications, better problem-solving, decision-making, etc.). Confronting Resistance The ERM piece of the CRM implementation puzzle can confound and frustrate the most seasoned managers and leaders. That’s because you have to deal with the softer side of CRM. The key is to think and act in less linear ways. Here are a few situations where dealing with the softer side of CRM implementation is a must: Employees are balking at another change. In the drive to implement, there is usually an overwhelming focus on task (getting the job done) vs. process (how the job is being done). This leaves employees feeling partially informed, not part of the "in the know" group, and uncertain of what really is happening. The result: some people dig in their heels and refuse to change, others will humor you by pretending to get on board, and some will just ignore you altogether. Lots of wasted time on rumors and misinformation. Many organizations are hampered by patterns of communication that run in "silos" instead of smoothly across all departments throughout the organization. Handicapped by these silo communications, functions and departments are in a pattern of cross-talk. The result: people tend to rely on the grapevine and who they know to find out what's going on. Ask 10 employees (or managers!) what CRM is and you get 10 different answers. There is minimal formal knowledge or understanding of CRM, maybe at all levels in the organization. And what people don't know, they make up. The result: managing expectations becomes a nightmare. Bad blood exists between critical departments. When history colors the relationships between key people and/or departments, interactions tend to be seen through the lens of the past, not the present or future. The result: unless serious mending of relationships occurs, players have to change. Anything sound familiar? If you've been through an organizational change, you probably have some war stories. The good news is if you develop an ERM strategy in conjunction with your CRM implementation plans, you can sidestep many of these people problems. Take a Look at Yourself Turn the CRM philosophy inward and what you have is ERM. Any brand guru will tell you that to create a great brand, you need to also align your culture and people internally to deliver on your brand promise. Same thing with CRM-ERM. Your ERM policies need to reflect your CRM vision and policies. But that's easier said than done, especially during an implementation. When the heat is on to demonstrate the ROI on your CRM investment, it’s tempting to blow by the "high touch" part of successful high-tech implementation. The one thing you must do, though, is resist the pull of high-tech/low-touch. If you neglect good employee relations practices in the rush to get the job done, your ROI will be significantly decreased by more errors, low productivity, low morale, higher turnover, lost opportunity, and time not spent on managing relationships with your customers. But simply telling people to get on board won’t make it so. If you think that people will easily rise to the occasion and embrace CRM just because you tell them it’s now their job to do so, you’re in for a rude awakening. Organizational change is not that neat, clean, or linear. There are, however, some ERM practices that can actually speed up implementation and increase your chances for success: Continuous and consistent information sharing will accelerate understanding and acceptance of change. Why? People generally only retain about 25% of a message after a 48-hour period. To increase the odds that your employees understand the CRM vision, develop an internal "public relations" strategy to manage employee expectations. Include the people that will be most affected by the new technology and business processes Lessons I Learned From A Ground Hog agers and employees to quickly buy into CRM implementation and;The lowly groundhog, often called a woodchuck, is the only mammal to have a day named in his honor. The groundhog's day is February 2. Granted, it’s not a federal holiday and nobody gets off work. However, we all know about it and most of us check the news to see if the groundhog has seen his shadow. Consider how many of you recognize the name Punxsutawney Phil. Amazing, isn’t it. That's brand recognition at its finest -- it’s not even for a human.Regardless of whether Punxsutawney Phil goes back into his burrow for six more weeks of winter, he gets his day in the limelight. So how can such an innocuous creature as a groundhog become famous? It is in the publicity, of course.The right publicity can elevate even the simplest activity. In fact, the best publicity is actually very simple, clean, uncluttered and straightforward. Think about the messages that captures yo Productively reflect on what actions or new behaviors need to be adopted (teamwork, better communications, better problem-solving, decision-making, etc.). Confronting Resistance The ERM piece of the CRM implementation puzzle can confound and frustrate the most seasoned managers and leaders. That’s because you have to deal with the softer side of CRM. The key is to think and act in less linear ways. Here are a few situations where dealing with the softer side of CRM implementation is a must: Employees are balking at another change. In the drive to implement, there is usually an overwhelming focus on task (getting the job done) vs. process (how the job is being done). This leaves employees feeling partially informed, not part of the "in the know" group, and uncertain of what really is happening. The result: some people dig in their heels and refuse to change, others will humor you by pretending to get on board, and some will just ignore you altogether. Lots of wasted time on rumors and misinformation. Many organizations are hampered by patterns of communication that run in "silos" instead of smoothly across all departments throughout the organization. Handicapped by these silo communications, functions and departments are in a pattern of cross-talk. The result: people tend to rely on the grapevine and who they know to find out what's going on. Ask 10 employees (or managers!) what CRM is and you get 10 different answers. There is minimal formal knowledge or understanding of CRM, maybe at all levels in the organization. And what people don't know, they make up. The result: managing expectations becomes a nightmare. Bad blood exists between critical departments. When history colors the relationships between key people and/or departments, interactions tend to be seen through the lens of the past, not the present or future. The result: unless serious mending of relationships occurs, players have to change. Anything sound familiar? If you've been through an organizational change, you probably have some war stories. The good news is if you develop an ERM strategy in conjunction with your CRM implementation plans, you can sidestep many of these people problems. Take a Look at Yourself Turn the CRM philosophy inward and what you have is ERM. Any brand guru will tell you that to create a great brand, you need to also align your culture and people internally to deliver on your brand promise. Same thing with CRM-ERM. Your ERM policies need to reflect your CRM vision and policies. But that's easier said than done, especially during an implementation. When the heat is on to demonstrate the ROI on your CRM investment, it’s tempting to blow by the "high touch" part of successful high-tech implementation. The one thing you must do, though, is resist the pull of high-tech/low-touch. If you neglect good employee relations practices in the rush to get the job done, your ROI will be significantly decreased by more errors, low productivity, low morale, higher turnover, lost opportunity, and time not spent on managing relationships with your customers. But simply telling people to get on board won’t make it so. If you think that people will easily rise to the occasion and embrace CRM just because you tell them it’s now their job to do so, you’re in for a rude awakening. Organizational change is not that neat, clean, or linear. There are, however, some ERM practices that can actually speed up implementation and increase your chances for success: Continuous and consistent information sharing will accelerate understanding and acceptance of change. Why? People generally only retain about 25% of a message after a 48-hour period. To increase the odds that your employees understand the CRM vision, develop an internal "public relations" strategy to manage employee expectations. Include the people that will be most affected by the new technology and business processe How to Keep a Good Employee: Look, Listen, Learn d some will just ignore you altogether.Recently a client told me a wonderful story about how a change of attitude helped her to keep a valued employee.Angry and grumbling about one of the provisions in the company policy, the employee asked for a private meeting with my client, the owner of a small sales company, and began to tell her in direct terms what was wrong. The client couldn't hear anything the employee was saying because she was too busy planning her own rebuttal strategy. It was important to let the employee know that the policy was a good one. On the other hand, she didn't want to lose her top sales agent. Physically, she could feel her body clenching and mentally, she was preoccupied with what she should say.She Who Speaks First Loses. Fortunately, she remembered an old adage from her own sales days: when you are negotiating to close the sale and you've asked for the order, it is almost Lots of wasted time on rumors and misinformation. Many organizations are hampered by patterns of communication that run in "silos" instead of smoothly across all departments throughout the organization. Handicapped by these silo communications, functions and departments are in a pattern of cross-talk. The result: people tend to rely on the grapevine and who they know to find out what's going on. Ask 10 employees (or managers!) what CRM is and you get 10 different answers. There is minimal formal knowledge or understanding of CRM, maybe at all levels in the organization. And what people don't know, they make up. The result: managing expectations becomes a nightmare. Bad blood exists between critical departments. When history colors the relationships between key people and/or departments, interactions tend to be seen through the lens of the past, not the present or future. The result: unless serious mending of relationships occurs, players have to change. Anything sound familiar? If you've been through an organizational change, you probably have some war stories. The good news is if you develop an ERM strategy in conjunction with your CRM implementation plans, you can sidestep many of these people problems. Take a Look at Yourself Turn the CRM philosophy inward and what you have is ERM. Any brand guru will tell you that to create a great brand, you need to also align your culture and people internally to deliver on your brand promise. Same thing with CRM-ERM. Your ERM policies need to reflect your CRM vision and policies. But that's easier said than done, especially during an implementation. When the heat is on to demonstrate the ROI on your CRM investment, it’s tempting to blow by the "high touch" part of successful high-tech implementation. The one thing you must do, though, is resist the pull of high-tech/low-touch. If you neglect good employee relations practices in the rush to get the job done, your ROI will be significantly decreased by more errors, low productivity, low morale, higher turnover, lost opportunity, and time not spent on managing relationships with your customers. But simply telling people to get on board won’t make it so. If you think that people will easily rise to the occasion and embrace CRM just because you tell them it’s now their job to do so, you’re in for a rude awakening. Organizational change is not that neat, clean, or linear. There are, however, some ERM practices that can actually speed up implementation and increase your chances for success: Continuous and consistent information sharing will accelerate understanding and acceptance of change. Why? People generally only retain about 25% of a message after a 48-hour period. To increase the odds that your employees understand the CRM vision, develop an internal "public relations" strategy to manage employee expectations. Include the people that will be most affected by the new technology and business processe Recognizing When It's Time to Move On have to change.Changing jobs ranks as one of the most stressful life events that people go through, and most of us will change jobs four to seven times during our lives. So, even if you've been down this road before, you want to be sure the time is right before you make the leap. After all, if it's going to be a life-changing, stressful event, you want it to be worth the effort, right?Challenging Your Comfort ZoneIt might seem like changing jobs should be more of a relief than a stressful process, but many people are reluctant to part with what's familiar. After all, you know what to expect in your current job even if you're bored with it. A new job might seem like a welcome or exciting endeavor, but it brings with it a lot of "what-ifs." What if the new boss is a tyrant? What if people don't like you or your ideas? What if the company decides to lay off people and the new employe Anything sound familiar? If you've been through an organizational change, you probably have some war stories. The good news is if you develop an ERM strategy in conjunction with your CRM implementation plans, you can sidestep many of these people problems. Take a Look at Yourself Turn the CRM philosophy inward and what you have is ERM. Any brand guru will tell you that to create a great brand, you need to also align your culture and people internally to deliver on your brand promise. Same thing with CRM-ERM. Your ERM policies need to reflect your CRM vision and policies. But that's easier said than done, especially during an implementation. When the heat is on to demonstrate the ROI on your CRM investment, it’s tempting to blow by the "high touch" part of successful high-tech implementation. The one thing you must do, though, is resist the pull of high-tech/low-touch. If you neglect good employee relations practices in the rush to get the job done, your ROI will be significantly decreased by more errors, low productivity, low morale, higher turnover, lost opportunity, and time not spent on managing relationships with your customers. But simply telling people to get on board won’t make it so. If you think that people will easily rise to the occasion and embrace CRM just because you tell them it’s now their job to do so, you’re in for a rude awakening. Organizational change is not that neat, clean, or linear. There are, however, some ERM practices that can actually speed up implementation and increase your chances for success: Continuous and consistent information sharing will accelerate understanding and acceptance of change. Why? People generally only retain about 25% of a message after a 48-hour period. To increase the odds that your employees understand the CRM vision, develop an internal "public relations" strategy to manage employee expectations. Include the people that will be most affected by the new technology and business processe Why Human Resources Are The Real Key To Success In This Information Age l be significantly decreased by more errors, low productivity, low morale, higher turnover, lost opportunity, and time not spent on managing relationships with your customers.The rapid changes that have mainly been brought about by the information age are numerous and irreversible. They have affected our way of life on virtually every front and have left many old companies in ruins while causing other new ones to swiftly emerge and grow to great unprecedented profitability, literally overnight.But despite everything, there are still a few things that have not changed. For example computers cannot think for themselves and make the appropriate decisions, at least not yet. So a human needs to analyze the data and then based on the information, to make a decision on what to do before finally feeding the computer with instructions for implementation.In actual fact human resources have become even more important in this information age. While it is true that corporations have massively cut back on people (and still continue to do so), the trut But simply telling people to get on board won’t make it so. If you think that people will easily rise to the occasion and embrace CRM just because you tell them it’s now their job to do so, you’re in for a rude awakening. Organizational change is not that neat, clean, or linear. There are, however, some ERM practices that can actually speed up implementation and increase your chances for success: Continuous and consistent information sharing will accelerate understanding and acceptance of change. Why? People generally only retain about 25% of a message after a 48-hour period. To increase the odds that your employees understand the CRM vision, develop an internal "public relations" strategy to manage employee expectations. Include the people that will be most affected by the new technology and business processes in your change efforts from Day One. Not only will you find out what they need to make life easier as their world changes, you’ll also start the buy-in process just in asking for their input. Focus on knowledge, not on your employees' attitudes. If employees are resisting, look to increase their knowledge about why this whole initiative is happening. Explain how the new technology will impact their job. Clarify what new skills they’re expected to have and how they’ll acquire them. Articulate explicitly what metrics will be used to gauge new CRM behavior and what business results are to come of all this. In other words, make it real obvious what’s in it for them (the "WIIFM" factor). It is 5 times more difficult to change attitudes than it is to change knowledge. To engage employees, focus first on changing their knowledge through learning and communications that allow for a two-way exchange of information, feelings, and ideas. Manage expectations by gently warning people that it could get worse before it gets better. There is almost always a period of "storming" and messiness before new practices, knowledge, systems, and relationships gel into a new functional way of doing business. You can never over-communicate. If you're sick of talking about CRM, you've probably only connected with a fraction of your people. Talk it up some more. They'll let you know when they've heard enough. Make sure you're walking the talk of your CRM strategy by getting "relationship management" right in your own back yard first. If you can’t build and manage relationships with your own people, how can you expect to be successful with customers? The more helpful relationships there are within your organization, the more likely CRM implementation will be successful. Why? Because information will be shared faster, problems will be resolved quicker, and employees are more likely to buy into the CRM vision. You can create these helpful relationships by investing in an ERM strategy. Copyright 2002 Dailey & O'Brien, Inc.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:10 Keys to Stay Motivated And On Top Of Your Game Insurance Broker Job 9 Tips - Buying Insurance Policies Are You Eking Out a Living, and Can't Get What You Want from a Job?
|