IT Investments: Out of Step with Business Focus
One would think that IT spending and human capital investments would map to the strategic focus on customer relationships in companies worldwide. But Microsoft believes that the survey shows this is not the case, revealing instead that IT and human capital investments in 2006 did not match up squarely with business priorities.
While 55 percent of respondents said that the top business issue for their organization was customer relationships, only 32 percent selected customer relationships as the top priority for IT spending. Similarly, only 35 percent selected it as the top priority for human capital investments.
At first glance this seems surprising, but the findings correlate with those of a separate Forrester survey of 74 customer experience executives that indicates many companies are not disciplined in their approach to customer experience management. Few corporation-wide programs exist, and sparse leadership and limited measurements are common (February 6, 2007, Forrester report "Obstacles to Customer Experience Success").
From the Microsoft-commissioned study of business managers, the mean ranking of customer relationships in 2006, with regard to both IT spending and human capital investments, is highest in the U.S. and lowest in Asia. For Microsoft this finding was unexpected, given that the percentage of respondents who say their organizations invest in advanced technologies to support customer relationships is higher in Asia than in the U.S. and Europe.
The outlook is similar for 2007. Based on Forrester's phone interviews, almost a third of senior IT leaders (29 percent) ranked customer relationships the number one business focus according to their organization's IT spending for 2006. Another 35 percent ranked customer relationships second. A slightly larger percentage (31 percent) selected customer service as the number one business focus according to their organization's planned IT spending for 2007, and a slightly smaller percentage (33 percent) ranked it number two.
A Closer Look at the Data
Digging deeper into the IT investment data backs up the Microsoft assertion that a disconnect exists between what business managers believe is most important and how organizations are investing in IT and human capital. Of those respondents selecting customer relationships as the number one priority for the organization:
-
Only 51 percent say their organization has implemented CRM software.
-
Only 41 percent have implemented a basic customer tracking system.
-
Only 38 percent have implemented a knowledge base.
Even fewer have implemented more advanced technologies. For example, only 21 percent have implemented automated, skills-based routing (a request coming in and going to an area specialist in their field), and only 21 percent have implemented agent collaboration (more than one person being able to work on a customer issue using chat or another mechanism).
So What's Going On Here?
In the Microsoft view, the main reasons for lack of IT investment in support of customer relationships are:
-
Lack of discipline.
Many organizations don't have corporation-wide programs, leadership, metrics in place, or even a clear customer experience strategy. Instead, they have siloed customer experiences, industry tunnel vision, and inward-focused product development.
-
Path of least resistance.
Most project teams find it easier to build a business case for technology and human capital investments that result in operational efficiency than to justify improvements in customer relationships. It is easier to calculate the ROI of shortened cycle times or reallocated headcount, for example, than it is to quantify an increase in customer satisfaction or customer retention.
-
Shades of CRM.
Many business and IT executives do not feel that the business benefits achieved with CRM investments meet their expectations, or that they are able to quickly realize value from the applications.
From the survey and analysis, Microsoft concludes that:
-
Respondents' top strategic concern is customer relationships, followed by operational excellence.
-
Technology spending and human capital investments in 2006 were not aligned with the most business-critical issue: customer relationships.
-
Customer relationships ranks higher on the priority list in the U.S. than it does in Europe or Asia.
-
Risk-averse, tactical innovation initiatives that focus on explicit customer needs and cost efficiencies often do so at the expense of long-term programs to improve customer relationships.
-
Customer interactions are valued as crown jewels (and therefore outsourced less commonly than one might think).
-
Organizations that rank customer relationships as the number one priority have made limited technology investment in this area.
See additional survey data and a detailed Forrester analysis (PDF file, 294 KB).
Are companies missing the growth possibilities of strategic innovation?
That's what Forrester Consulting concluded after surveying business managers on what was strategically important to their organizations. The study indicates that managers view innovation primarily as a way to boost operational efficiency and enhance customer relationships.
Read Forrester Consulting findings on innovation spending (PDF, 84 KB)