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When I was a junior CRM consultant at several big six consultancies, I would avidly collect and occasionally read CRM analysts' reports. They were usually well written documents based on a bit of research and a modicum of insight. There was not usually anything original about the reports, but clients liked to see them referenced. I suspect they hadn't read them either. I would marvel at how the analysts could charge so much for the common sense, limited market research and vendor PR occasionally contained within them. And some of the reports were just plain wrong, particularly where the analysts stepped outside their area of expertise and failed to understand the bigger business picture. That gave me a bad dose of cognitive dissonance.
As I gained experience as a CRM consultant I continued to collect the reports. But I started to read only the reports from analysts who really knew their stuff. They comprised maybe 10% of all the analysts whose reports I had read previously.These analysts generally had real experience gained actually working in their field of expertise and thus a context within which to write about. But I compared and contrasted their writing with other sources of materials including academic papers for theory, CRM consultant colleagues for their experience and industry articles for practical case studies. Even the best analysts were sometimes found wanting. The biggest issue was, and I think still is, the hyping of CRM technology and the down-playing of all the other complementary factors that enable the technology to deliver value.
Today, as a partner in a start-up innovation consultancy, I no longer have access to analysts’ reports. I find the odd one on the Internet and out of habit still collect them. But I rarely read them unless they are about something new that I know nothing about. Charlene Li & Josh Bernoff's excellent reports on e.g. Social Computing, that led up to them publishing their 'Groundswell' book are a perfect example of this. They really know their subject. And I benefitted greatly from it. But even here, there is so much good stuff available for free on the Internet, or through my network of consultancy contacts that analysts have almost become obsolete. I have become knowledge self-sufficient. And that isn't because I don't need much knowledge; I read dozens of books, hundreds of academic papers and thousands of blog posts every year. I can get what I need from the Groundswell itself.
I understand why many businesses use analysts. It is not just to gain access to basic knowledge. Or the fear of maybe missing out on something insightful. Or even one-on-one access to the best analysts themselves. There is also the influencing analysts and their recommendations side too. What CRM consultancy doesn't want to be in the magic top-right quadrant or ahead of the CRM wave. But many normal businesses have stopped using analysts. I was talking to some CRM strategy folks from Vodafone a while back who said that they no longer used the big-name CRM analysts. They simply didn't know enough about their fast-moving industry to be worth the money. They still used niche analysts though. The ones who really know their subject. But not the big-name analysts.
My advice to any business thinking about using CRM analysts is to ask yourself these simple questions:
- Do they have individuals who really know your industry better than you do? If they don't, you shouldn't be using them
- Can they provide you with guidance in how to actually implement their insights? If they can't, you shouldn't be using them
- Can you get the same information from other, cheaper, less restrictive sources? If you can, you shouldn't be using them
- Can you get access to their unwritten knowledge in the heads of their best analysts, as well as their written reports when you need it, on a per-use basis? If you can't at a reasonable price, then you shouldn't be using them either.
I stopped using big-name CRM analysts some time ago. I havent missed anything. And my bank account is so much healthier. That doesn't mean that you shouldn't use them. But you should ask yourself those four questions first.
-----------------------------BY Graham Hill - Customer-driven Innovator, Customers & More
Source:customer THINK
Graham Hill is the founder of customer management consultancy Customers & More. He has more than 20 years of experience in customer-driven change programs with companies of all shapes and sizes. He can be contacted at graham(dot)hill(at)web(dot)de. [Blog: Customer Insider]
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