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What’s in IT for me?
This chapter introduces high-profile strategic initiatives an organization can undertake to help it gain competi-
tive advantages and business efficiencies—supply chain management, customer relationship management, and
enterprise resource planning. At the simplest level, organizations implement enterprise systems to gain efficiency
in business processes, effectiveness in supply chains, and an overall understanding of customer needs and behav-
iors. Successful organizations recognize the competitive advantage of maintaining healthy relationships with
employees, customers, suppliers, and partners. Doing so has a direct and positive effect on revenue and greatly
adds to a company’s profitability.
You, as a business student, must understand the critical relationship your business will have with its employees,
customers, suppliers, and partners. You must also understand how to analyze your organizational data to ensure
you are not just meeting but exceeding expectations. Enterprises are technologically empowered as never before
to reach their goals of integrating, analyzing, and making intelligent business decisions.
■ C u s to m e r R e l a t i o n s h i p
M a n a ge m e n t
■ T h e B e n e f i t s o f C R M
■ T h e C h a l l e n ge s o f C R M
■ T h e Fu tu re o f C R M
■ E n te rp ri s e R e s o u rc e P l a n n i n g
■ T h e B e n e f i t s o f E R P
■ T h e C h a l l e n ge s o f E R P
■ T h e Fu tu re o f E n te rp ri s e
Sy s te m s : I n te g ra t i n g S C M ,
C R M , a n d E R P
■ B u i l d i n g a C o n n e c te d
C o rp o ra t i o n t h ro u g h
I n te g ra t i o n s
■ S u p p l y C h a i n M a n a ge m e n t
■ T h e B e n e f i t s o f S C M
■ T h e C h a l l e n ge s o f S C M
■ T h e Fu tu re o f S C M
SECTION 8.2
Customer Relationship
Management and Enterprise
Resource Planning
SECTION 8.1
Enterprise Systems and
Supply Chain Management
C
H
A
P
T
E
R
O
U
T
L
IN
E
Enterprise Applications:
Business Communications
C H A P T E R
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Zappos Is Passionate for Customers
Tony Hsieh’s first entrepreneurial effort began at the age of 12 when he started his
own custom button business. Realizing the importance of advertising, Hsieh began
marketing his business to other kids through directories, and soon his profits soared
to a few hundred dollars a month. Throughout his adolescence, Hsieh started sev-
eral businesses, and by the time he was in college he was making money selling
pizzas out of his Harvard dorm room. Another entrepreneurial student, Alfred Lin,
bought pizzas from Hsieh and resold them by the slice, making a nice profit. Hsieh
and Lin quickly became friends.
After Harvard, Hsieh founded LinkExchange in 1996, a company that helped small
businesses exchange banner ads. A mere two years later Hsieh, sold LinkExchange
to Microsoft for $265 million. Using the profits from the sale, Hsieh and Lin formed a
venture capital company that invested in start-up businesses. One investment that
caught their attention was Zappos, an online etailer of shoes. Both entrepreneurs
viewed the $40 billion shoe market as an opportunity they could not miss, and in 2000
Hsieh took over as Zappos’ CEO with Lin as his chief financial officer.
Today, Zappos is leading its market and offering an enormous selection of more than
90,000 styles of handbags, clothing, and accessories for more than 500 brands. One
reason for Zappos’ incredible success was Hsieh’s decision to use the advertising
and marketing budget for customer service, a tactic that would not have worked
before the Internet. Zappos’ passionate customer service strategy encourages cus-
tomers to order as many sizes and styles of products as they want, ships them for
free, and offers free return shipping. Zappos encourages customer communication,
and its call center receives more than 5,000 calls a day with the longest call to date
lasting more than four hours.
Zappos’ extensive inventory is stored in a warehouse in Kentucky right next to
a UPS shipping center. Only available stock is listed on the website, and orders as
late as 11 p.m. are still guaranteed next-day delivery. To facilitate supplier and part-
ner relationships, Zappos built an extranet that provides its vendors with all kinds
of product information, such as items sold, times sold, price, customer, and so on.
Armed with these kinds of details, suppliers can quickly change manufacturing
schedules to meet demand.
Zappos Culture
Along with valuing its partners and suppliers, Zappos also places a great deal of
value on its employee relationships. Zappos employees have fun, and walking
opening case study
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288 Chapter 8 Enterprise Applications: Business Communications
through the offices you will see all kinds of things not normally seen in business
environments—bottle-cap pyramids, cotton-candy machines, and bouncing balls.
Building loyal employee relationships is a critical success factor at Zappos, and to
facilitate this relationship the corporate headquarters are located in the same build-
ing as the call center (where most employees work) in Las Vegas. All employees
receive 100 percent company-paid health insurance along with a daily free lunch.
Of course, the Zappos culture does not work for everyone, and the company pays
to find the right employees through “The Offer,” which extends to new employees the
option of quitting and receiving payment for time worked plus an additional $1,000
bonus. Why the $1,000 bonus for quitting? Zappos management believes that is a
small price to pay to find those employees who do not have the sense of commitment
Zappos requires. Less than 10 percent of new hires take The Offer.
Zappos’ unique culture stresses the following:
1. Delivering WOW through service.
2. Embracing and driving change.
3. Creating fun and a little weirdness.
4. Being adventurous, creative, and open-minded.
5. Pursuing growth and learning.
6. Building open and honest relationships with communication.
7. Building a positive team and family spirit.
8. Doing more with less.
9. Being passionate and determined.
10. Being humble.
Zappos’ Sale to Amazon
Amazon.com purchased Zappos for $880 million in 2009. Zappos employees shared
$40 million in cash and stock, and the Zappos management team remained in place.
Having access to Amazon’s world-class warehouses and supply chain is sure to
catapult Zappos’ revenues, though many wonder whether the Zappos culture will
remain. It’ll be interesting to watch! 1
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section 8.1 SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
L E A R N I N G O U T C O M E S
8.1. Explain integrations and the role they play in connecting a corporation.
8.2 Describe supply chain management and its role in supporting business operations.
8.3. Identify the benefits and challenges of SCM along with its future.
BUILDING A CONNECTED CORPORATION
THROUGH INTEGRATIONS
Until the 1990s, each department in the United Kingdom’s Ministry of Defense and Army
headquarters had its own information system, and each system had its own database.
Sharing information was difficult, requiring employees to manually input the same infor-
mation into different systems multiple times. Often, management could not even com-
pile the information it needed to answer questions, solve problems, and make decisions.
To combat this challenge the ministry integrated its systems, or built connections
among its many databases. These connections or integrations allow separate systems to
communicate directly with each other, eliminating the need for manual entry into mul-
tiple systems. Building integrations allows the sharing of information across databases
along with dramatically increasing its quality. The army can now generate reports detail-
ing its state of readiness and other essential intelligence, tasks that were nearly impos-
sible before the integrations.
Two common methods are used for integrating databases. The first is to create for-
ward and backward integrations that link processes (and their underlying databases)
in the value chain. A forward integration takes information entered into a given sys-
tem and sends it automatically to all downstream systems and processes. A backward
integration takes information entered into a given system and sends it automatically
to all upstream systems and processes. Figure 8.1 demonstrates how this method works
across the systems or processes of sales, order entry, order fulfillment, and billing. In the
order entry system, for example, an employee can update the customer’s information. Via
the integrations, that information is sent upstream to the sales system and downstream
to the order fulfillment and billing systems. Ideally, an organization wants to build both
forward and backward integrations, which provide the flexibility to create, update, and
delete information in any of the systems. However, integrations are expensive and difficult
to build and maintain, causing most organizations to invest in forward integrations only.
The second integration method builds a central repository for a particular type of
information. Figure 8.2 provides an example of customer information integrated using
LO 8.1: Explain integrations and
the role they play in connecting a
corporation.
Forward integration of
customer information
Backward integration of
customer information
PB0092
Craig Schultz
PB0092
Craig Schultz
PB0092
Craig Schultz
PB0092
Craig Schultz
Sales System
Order Entry
System
Order Fulfillment
System Billing System
FIGURE 8.1
A Forward and Backward
Customer Information
Integration Example
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this method across four different systems in an organization. Users can create, update,
and delete customer information only in the central customer database. As users perform
these tasks, integrations automatically send the new and/or updated customer informa-
tion to the other systems. The other systems limit users to read-only access of the customer
information stored in them. Both integration methods do not entirely eliminate informa-
tion redundancy, but they do ensure information consistency among multiple systems.
Integration Tools
Enterprise systems provide enterprisewide support and data access for a firm’s opera-
tions and business processes. These systems can manage customer information across
the enterprise, letting you view everything your customer has experienced from sales to
support. Enterprise systems are often available as a generic, but highly customizable,
group of programs for business functions such as accounting, manufacturing, and mar-
keting. Generally, the development tools for customization are complex programming
tools that require specialist capabilities.
Enterprise application integration (EAI) connects the plans, methods, and tools
aimed at integrating separate enterprise systems. A legacy system is a current or existing
system that will become the base for upgrading or integrating with a new system. EAI
reviews how legacy systems fit into the new shape of the firm’s business processes and
devises ways to efficiently reuse what already exists while adding new systems and data.
Integrations are achieved using middleware — several different types of software that
sit between and provide connectivity for two or more software applications. Middleware
translates information between disparate systems. Enterprise application integration
(EAI) middleware takes a new approach to middleware by packaging commonly used
applications together, reducing the time needed to integrate applications from multiple
vendors. The remainder of this chapter covers the three enterprise systems most organi-
zations use to integrate their disparate departments and separate operational systems:
supply chain management (SCM), customer relationship management, and enterprise
resource planning (see Figure 8.3 ).
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
The average company spends nearly half of every dollar it earns on suppliers and raw
materials to manufacture products. It is not uncommon to hear of critical success fac-
tors focusing on getting the right products, to the right place, at the right time, at the
LO 8.2: Describe supply chain man-
agement and its role in supporting
business operations.
Sales System
Order Entry
System
Order Fulfillment
System
Customer Information
System
Billing System
PB0092
Craig Schultz
PB0092
Craig Schultz
PB0092
Craig Schultz
PB0092
Craig Schultz
PB0092
Craig Schultz
FIGURE 8.2
Integrating Customer
Information among
Databases
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291Enterprise MIS Module 3
right cost. For this reason, tools that can help a company source raw materials, manufac-
ture products, and deliver finished goods to retailers and customers are in high demand.
A supply chain consists of all parties involved, directly or indirectly, in obtaining raw
materials or a product. Figure 8.4 highlights the five basic supply chain activities a com-
pany undertakes to manufacture and distribute products. To automate and enable
FIGURE 8.3
The Three Primary Enterprise
Systems
Supply Chain
Management
Customer
Relationship
Management Enterprise
Resource
Planning
PLAN
SOURCE
MAKE
DELIVER
RETURN
Prepare to manage
all resources required
to meet demand
Build relationships
with suppliers to
procure raw materials
Manufacture
products and create
production schedules
Plan for
transportation of
goods to customers
Support
customers and
product returns
FIGURE 8.4
The Five Basic Supply Chain
Activities
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Chapter 8 Enterprise Applications: Business Communications292
Suppliers’
Supplier Supplier
Upstream
Manufacturer Distributor Retailer Customer Customers’Customer
Suppliers’
Supplier
Customers’
Customer
Suppliers’
Supplier
Customers’
Customer
Downstream
FIGURE 8.5
A Typical Supply Chain
sophisticated decision making in these critical areas, companies are turning to systems
that provide demand forecasting, inventory control, and information flows between
suppliers and customers.
Supply chain management (SCM) is the management of information flows between
and among activities in a supply chain to maximize total supply chain effectiveness and
corporate profitability. In the past, manufacturing efforts focused primarily on quality
improvement efforts within the company; today these efforts reach across the entire
supply chain, including customers, customers’ customers, suppliers, and suppliers’ sup-
pliers. Today’s supply chain is an intricate network of business partners linked through
communication channels and relationships. Supply chain management systems man-
age and enhance these relationships with the primary goal of creating a fast, efficient,
and low-cost network of business relationships that take products from concept to
market. SCM systems create the integrations or tight process and information linkages
between all participants in the supply chain. Supply chain management performs three
main business processes (see Figure 8.5 ):
1. Materials flow from suppliers and their upstream suppliers at all levels.
2. Materials are transformed into semifinished and finished products—the organiza-
tion’s own production processes.
3. Products are distributed to customers and their downstream customers at all levels.
Consider a customer purchasing a mountain bike from a dealer. Dozens of steps are
required to complete this transaction from beginning to end. The customer places an
order with the dealer. The dealer purchases the bike from the manufacturer. The manu-
facturer purchases the raw materials required to make the bike such as aluminum, rub-
ber tires, brakes, accessories, and packaging from different suppliers. The raw materials
are stored in the manufacturer’s warehouse until a production order requires the bike
to be built, at which time the finished product is sent to the dealer or, in some cases,
directly to the customer. The supply chain for a bike manufacturer includes all processes
and people required to fulfill the customer’s order (see Figure 8.6 ).
Walmart and Procter & Gamble (P&G) have implemented a successful SCM system
that links Walmart’s distribution centers directly to P&G’s manufacturing centers (see
Figure 8.7 ). The customer generates order information by purchasing a product from
Walmart. Walmart supplies the order information to its warehouse or distributor. The
warehouse or distributor transfers the order information to P&G, which provides pricing
and availability information to the store and replenishes the product to the distributor.
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Payment is transferred electronically. Effective and efficient supply chain management
systems can enable an organization to have these impacts on Porter’s Five Forces Model 2 :
■ Decrease the power of its buyers.
■ Increase its supplier power.
■ Increase buyers’ switching costs to reduce the threat of substitute products or
services.
■ Create entry barriers to reduce the threat of new entrants.
■ Increase efficiencies while seeking a competitive advantage through cost leadership
(see Figure 8.8 ).
FIGURE 8.6
Supply Chain for a Bike
Manufacturer
Distribution of
Finished Bikes
to Retailers
Bike
Production
Aluminum Manufacturer
Tire Manufacturer
Brake Manufacturer
Packaging Manufacturer
Bike Accessory
Manufacturers
CustomerRaw Materials
Storage
Retailer
Procter &
Gamble
Walmart
Warehouse
or Distributor
Indicates information flows for products,
pricing, scheduling, and availability
Paper
Manufacturer
Packaging
Supplier
Scented Oil
Manufacturer
Cocoa Oil
Manufacturer
Walmart
Store Customer
FIGURE 8.7
Supply Chain for a Product
Purchased from Walmart
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THE BENEFITS OF SCM
Better forecasts for tomorrow result in better preparedness today. Technology advances
have significantly improved the ability to perform the five basic supply chain activities
such as access to advanced modeling and simulation tools that can combine informa-
tion from multiple sources to build forecasts that look days, weeks, and months ahead. It
is now common, for instance, for suppliers to participate in product development and for
retailers to contribute to marketing campaigns. Considerable evidence shows that sup-
ply chain integration results in superior supply chain capabilities, which drives a firm’s
profitability. Although firms have dreamed of integrating their supply chains for a long
time, it is only recently that advances in MIS have brought these dreams to life. Improved
visibility across the supply chain and increased profitability for the firm are the primary
business benefits received when implementing supply chain management systems.
Improved Visibility
Supply chain visibility is the ability to view all areas up and down the supply chain in
real time. To react to demand, an organization needs to know all customer events trig-
gered upstream and downstream and so must their suppliers and their suppliers’ sup-
pliers. Without this information, supply chain participants are blind to the supply and
demand needs occurring in the marketplace, a factor required to implement successful
business strategies. To improve visibility across the supply chain, firms can use supply
chain planning systems and supply chain execution systems. Supply chain planning
systems use advanced mathematical algorithms to improve the flow and efficiency of the
supply chain while reducing inventory. To yield accurate results, however, supply chain
planning systems require information inputs that are correct and up-to-date regarding
customers, orders, sales, manufacturing, and distribution capabilities.
Ideally, the supply chain consists of multiple firms that function as efficiently and
effectively as a single firm, with full information visibility. Supply chain execution
systems ensure supply chain cohesion by automating the different activities of the supply
chain. For example, a supply chain execution system might electronically route orders
from a manufacturer to a supplier using electronic data interchange (EDI), a standard
format for the electronic exchange of information between supply chain participants.
Figure 8.9 details how supply chain planning and supply chain execution systems inter-
act with the supply chain.
A good example of inventory issues that occur when a company does not have a clear
vision of its entire supply chain is the bullwhip effect. The bullwhip effect occurs when
distorted product-demand information ripples from one partner to the next throughout
the supply chain. The misinformation regarding a slight rise in demand for a product
could cause different members in the supply chain to stockpile inventory. These changes
ripple throughout the supply chain, magnifying the issue and creating excess inventory
and costs for all. For example, if a car dealership is having a hard time moving a particu-
lar brand of car, it might offer significant discounts to try to move the inventory. Without
this critical information, the car manufacturer might see a rise in demand for this par-
ticular brand of car and increase production orders, not realizing that the dealerships are
actually challenged with selling the inventory. Today, integrated supply chains provide
LO 8.3: Identify the benefits and
challenges of SCM along with its
future.
FIGURE 8.8
Effective and Efficient Supply
Chain Management’s Effect
on Porter’s Five Forces
Decrease
Increase
Organization’s
Supply Chain
• Supplier power
• Buyer power
• Threat of substitute
products or services
• Threat of new
entrants
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managers with the visibility to see their suppliers’ and customers’ supply chains, ensur-
ing that supply always meets demand.
Increased Profitability
Supply chain management systems can increase profitability across an organization.
For example, a manufacturing plant manager might focus on keeping the inventory of
Product A as low as possible, which will directly reduce the manufacturing costs and
make the plant manager look great. However, the plant manager and the business might
not realize that these savings are causing increased costs in other areas, such as hav-
ing to pay more to procure raw materials for immediate production needs or increas-
ing costs due to expedited shipping services. Only an end-to-end view or an integrated
supply chain would uncover these issues, allowing a firm to adjust business strategies to
increase profitability across the enterprise.
Customers are also more demanding than ever before. Because information is so
readily available, they know exactly what they want, when they want it, and how they
want it delivered. If your company can’t meet their demand, the competition is simply a
mouse-click away. Couple supply chain complexity with today’s demanding customers
and a firm’s costs can easily escalate out of control. Demand planning systems gener-
ate demand forecasts using statistical tools and forecasting techniques, so companies
can respond faster and more effectively to consumer demands through supply chain
enhancements. Firms are implementing demand planning systems to understand cus-
tomer demand and production capabilities so they can estimate supply chain costs that
ultimately impact the firm’s performance and business strategies. Innovative wireless
technologies, such as radio-frequency identification (RFID), are also enabling compa-
nies to operate with improved speed and accuracy, ensuring that they can satisfy con-
tinuously changing customer demands.
A supply chain is only as strong as its weakest link. Companies use supply chain man-
agement metrics to measure the performance of supply chains to quickly identify weak
links. A few of the common supply chain management metrics include:
■ Back order: An unfilled customer order for a product that is out of stock.
■ Inventory cycle time: The time it takes to manufacture a product and deliver it
to the retailer.
■ Customer order cycle time: The agreed upon time between the purchase of a
product and the delivery of the product.
■ Inventory turnover: The frequency of inventory replacement.
Supply Chain Planning
Information Flows
Payment Flows
Supply Chain Execution
Supplier Manufacturer Distributor Retailer Customer
FIGURE 8.9
Supply Chain Planning’s and
Supply Chain Execution’s
Roles in the Supply Chain
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THE CHALLENGES OF SCM
The primary challenges associated with supply chain management include costs and
complexity. Supply chain management systems can cost millions of dollars for the
software and millions of dollars more for help with the implementation. Just walk into
any manufacturing plant, distribution center, or factory floor and you will witness
the complexity and costs associated with supply chain management. Supply chains
cross entire organizations touching multiple departments and spanning organiza-
tionwide business processes. Revamping just a single business process can be difficult
for a company. Revamping all business processes that touch the supply chain is an
incredibly difficult and complex task but is typically required for the SCM system to
become effective. And, to top it all off, the supply chain reaches beyond the borders of
the organization into partner, supplier, and customer domains, adding another layer
of complexity for SCM. A lack of adequate collaboration among marketing, sales, and
manufacturing within a company and suppliers, partners, and distributors outside of a
company can easily sabotage SCM efforts sending the multimillion-dollar investment
down the drain.
The move toward globalization is also increasing supply chain complexity. As sup-
ply chains span geographical locations, issues such as time zone differences, trans-
portation fees, cultural and language barriers, and exchange rates all add additional
layers to the already complex supply chain. Government relationships, taxes, and local
laws also tend to differ across global regions, creating more confusion and issues in
supplier relationships. The bottom line is that SCM systems are complex and costly
and implementing them correctly can be challenging even for the most sophisticated
organization.
THE FUTURE OF SCM
There is a great commercial that depicts the future of supply chain management. A man
wearing a uniform is walking through a home and quietly replaces an empty cereal box
with a full one just as the child opens the kitchen cabinet. He then produces a new bag of
BUSINESS DRIVEN ETHICS AND SECURITY
Zappos, Staples, and Amazon are just a few of the companies taking advantage
of the latest innovation in warehouse management by replacing traditional
order fulfillment technologies such as conveyor belts with little orange robots.
The Kiva Mobile Fulfillment System (Kiva MFS) takes advantage of a unique
order fulfillment system that improves productivity, speed, accuracy, and flex-
ibility. Watching an order fulfillment center equipped with Kiva MFS robots is
amazing; the operators stand still while the products come to them. Inventory
pods store the products that are carried and transferred by a small army of little
orange robots, eliminating the need for traditional systems such as conveyors
and sorters. 3
What impact could Kiva MFS have on visibility and profitability of the supply
chain? How would your warehouse employees react if you told them you were
looking at implementing Kiva robots? What ethical issues arise in the replace-
ment of human labor with robots? What security concerns could a company
face when implementing Kiva MFS robots?
Kiva’s Robots
APPLY YOUR KNOWLEDGE
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dog food as soon as the hungry dog’s bowl is empty and finally reaches into the shower
to hand a new bottle of shampoo to the man in the shower who had just run out. The
next wave in supply chain management will be home-based supply chain fulfillment. No
more running to the store to replace your products as your store will come to you as soon
as you need a new product.
Walgreens is differentiating itself from other national chains as the family’s just-
in-time supplier, developing custom websites for each household that allow families
to order electronically and then pick up their goods at a self-service counter or drive-
through window at their convenience. Walgreens even calls its customers to let them
know their prescription medications are soon going to run out and offers to fulfill the
new prescription.
As the supply chain management market matures, it is becoming even more sophis-
ticated and incorporating additional functionality such as marketing, customer service,
and even product development to its extended supply chain. Advanced communica-
tions tools, easy-to-use decision support systems, and building trust among participants
when sharing information are all making the home-based supply chain possible. A few
of the fastest-growing SCM components include:
■ Collaborative demand planning— reduces inventory investments, while improving
customer satisfaction.
■ Collaborative engineering— reduces product development costs.
■ Selling chain management— automates order processes from initial customer
inquiry to final product delivery.
■ Supply chain event management (SCEM)— increases real-time information
sharing among supply chain partners focusing on reducing response time to
unexpected events.
BUSINESS DRIVEN DEBATE
Lines at the post office are frustrating, and they are also becoming unprofit-
able as the U.S. Postal Service faces billion-dollar losses for the first time in
its history. What is causing this failure? It could be any number of things, but
ebusiness competition is one of the primary challengers stealing the Postal
Service’s market share. Stamps.com allows you to customize and print your
own stamps 24 hours a day. If you are getting married, you can place your
engagement picture on the stamp for the invitations. If you are starting your
own business, you can purchase stamps showing your business logo. And,
Stamps.com goes beyond simply delivering a product by tracking customer
spending and recommending optimal delivery methods along with postage
discounts. Now that is something you can’t get at the post office. Talk about a
competitive advantage! 4
Why do you think the U.S. Postal Service is losing its market share and
becoming unprofitable? What does the Postal Service’s supply chain look
like? Who are its partners, suppliers, distributors, and customers? What can
the Postal Service do to revamp its supply chain so it can become profitable?
Many people believe the Postal Service should not be supported by the gov-
ernment, and that if it can’t operate efficiently it should fail. Do you agree?
Why or why not?
Fixing the
Post Office
APPLY YOUR KNOWLEDGE
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section 8.2 CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT
AND ENTERPRISE RESOURCE PLANNING
L E A R N I N G O U T C O M E S
8.4 Describe customer relationship management and its role in supporting business operations.
8.5. Identify the benefits and challenges of CRM along with its future.
8.6 Describe enterprise resource management and its role in supporting business operations.
8.7. Identify the benefits and challenges of ERP along with the future of the connected corporation.
CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT
Today, most competitors are simply a mouse-click away, and this intense competition is
forcing firms to switch from sales-focused business strategies to customer-focused busi-
ness strategies. Customers are one of a firm’s most valuable assets, and building strong
loyal customer relationships is a key competitive advantage. Harley-Davidson offers an
excellent example of a company that knows the value of customer loyalty, and it finds
itself in the coveted position of demand outweighing its supply. No other motorcycle
in the world has the look, feel, and sound of a Harley-Davidson. Demand for Harley-
Davidson motorcycles outweighs supply and some models have up to a two-year waiting
list. Knowing the value of its customers, Harley-Davidson started the Harley’s Owners
Group (HOG), which is the largest motorcycle club in the world with more than 600,000
members. HOG offers a wide array of events, rides, and benefits to its members and
is a key competitive advantage as it helps to build a strong sense of community among
Harley-Davidson owners. Harley-Davidson has built a customer following that is
extremely loyal, a difficult task to accomplish in any industry. 5
Customer relationship management (CRM) is a means of managing all aspects of
a customer’s relationship with an organization to increase customer loyalty and reten-
tion and an organization’s profitability. CRM allows an organization to gain insights into
customers’ shopping and buying behaviors. Every time a customer communicates with
a company, the firm has the chance to build a trusting relationship with that particu-
lar customer. Harley-Davidson realizes that it takes more than just building and selling
motorcycles to fulfill the dreams of its loyal customers. For this reason, the company
strives to deliver unforgettable experiences along with its top-quality products. When
the company began selling products online it found itself facing a dilemma—its online
strategy for selling accessories directly to consumers would bypass Harley-Davidson’s
dealers, who depend on the high-margin accessories for store revenues. The solution
was to deploy Harley-Davidson.com, which prompts customers to select a participating
Harley-Davidson dealership before placing any online orders. The selected dealership is
then responsible for fulfilling the order. This strategy ensured that the dealers remained
the focus point of each customer’s buying experiences. To guarantee that every customer
has a highly satisfying online buying experience, the company asks the dealers to agree
to a number of standards including:
■ Checking online orders twice daily.
■ Shipping online orders within 24 hours.
■ Responding to customer inquiries within 24 hours. 6
Harley-Davidson still monitors online customer metrics such as time taken to process
orders, number of returned orders, and number of incorrect orders, guaranteeing that
the company delivers on its critical success factor of providing prompt, excellent cus-
tomer service consistently to all its loyal customers.
A primary component of managing a customer relationship is knowing when and
why the customer is communicating with the company. Imagine an irate customer that
has just spent an hour on the phone with your call center complaining about a defective
LO 8.4: Describe customer relation-
ship management and its role in sup-
porting business operations.
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product. While the customer is on the phone, your sales representative decides to drop
by the customer’s office in an attempt to sell additional products. Obviously, this is not
the ideal time to try to up-sell or cross-sell products to this particular customer. A cus-
tomer relationship management system would inform the sales representative that
the customer was on the phone with customer service and even provide details of the
call. Then your sales representative could stop by and offer assistance in resolving the
product issue, which might help restore the relationship with the customer and provide
opportunities for future sales.
The complicated piece of this puzzle is that customers have many communication
channels they can use to contact a company including call centers, websites, email,
faxes, and telephones. To make matters even more complex, a single customer can
communicate with a firm using all of the different communication channels multiple
times. Keeping track of customer communications is important if the firm wants to con-
tinue to build and manage that relationship. A CRM system can track every form of cus-
tomer communication providing this information to all employees (see Figure 8.10 ).
The firm can then implement strategies for the best ways to communicate effectively
with each and every customer. With a CRM system a firm can obtain an overview of
the customer’s products, preferences, account information, communications, and
purchasing history, allowing it to send customized product offers, expedite shipping,
ensure satisfaction, and other marketing and sales techniques that can greatly add to
sales and profits.
FIGURE 8.10
Customer Relationship
Management Overview
Customer
Service
System
Inventory
System
Order
Fulfillment
System
Accounting
System
Customer Relationship Management System
Customer information flows
are represented by arrows.
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THE BENEFITS OF CRM
Companies that understand individual customer needs are best positioned to achieve
success. Of course, building successful customer relationships is not a new business prac-
tice; however, implementing CRM systems allows a company to operate more efficiently
and effectively in the area of supporting customer needs. CRM moves far beyond technol-
ogy by identifying customer needs and designing specific marketing campaigns tailored
to each. This enables a firm to treat customers as individuals, gaining important insights
into their buying preferences and shopping behaviors. Firms that treat their customers
well reap the rewards and generally see higher profits and highly loyal customers. Iden-
tifying the most valuable customers allows a firm to ensure that these customers receive
the highest levels of customer service and are offered the first opportunity to purchase
new products. Firms can find their most valuable customers by using the RFM formula—
recency, frequency, and monetary value. In other words, an organization must track:
■ How r ecently a customer purchased items.
■ How frequently a customer purchases items.
■ The monetary value of each customer purchase.
After gathering this initial CRM information, the firm can analyze it to identify pat-
terns and create marketing campaigns and sales promotions for different customer seg-
ments. For example, if a customer buys only at the height of the season, the firm should
send a special offer during the off-season. If a certain customer segment purchases shoes
but never accessories, the firm can offer discounted accessories with the purchase of a
new pair of shoes. If the firm determines that its top 20 percent of customers are respon-
sible for 80 percent of the revenue, it can focus on ensuring these customers are always
satisfied and receive the highest levels of customer service.
Evolution of CRM
There are three phases in the evolution of CRM: (1) reporting, (2) analyzing, and
(3) predicting. CRM reporting technologies help organizations identify their customers
across other applications. CRM analysis technologies help organizations segment
their customers into categories such as best and worst customers. CRM predicting
technologies help organizations predict customer behavior, such as which customers
are at risk of leaving. Figure 8.11 highlights a few of the important questions an organiza-
tion can answer in these areas by using CRM technologies.
LO 8.5: Identify the benefits and
challenges of CRM along with its
future.
ANALYZING
Customer Segmentation:
Asking Why It Happened
• Why did sales not meet
forecasts?
• Why was production so
low?
• Why did we not sell as
many units as previous
years?
• Who are our customers?
• Why was revenue
so high?
• Why are inventory
levels low?
PREDICTING
Customer Prediction:
Asking What Will Happen
• What customers are at
risk of leaving?
• Which products will our
customers buy?
• Who are the best
customers for a
marketing campaign?
• How do we reach our
customers?
• What will sales be this
year?
• How much inventory do
we need to preorder?
REPORTING
Customer Identification:
Asking What Happened
• What is the total
revenue by customer?
• How many units did we
make?
• What were total sales
by product?
• How many customers
do we have?
• What are the current
inventory levels?
FIGURE 8.11
Evolution of CRM
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Operational and Analytical CRM
The two primary components of a CRM strategy are operational CRM and analytical
CRM. Operational CRM supports traditional transactional processing for day-to-day
front-office operations or systems that deal directly with the customers. Analytical CRM
supports back-office operations and strategic analysis and includes all systems that do
not deal directly with the customers. Figure 8.12 provides an overview of the two.
BUSINESS DRIVEN GLOBALIZATION
Barclays Bank, a leader in the global financial markets, maintains business
operations in more than 70 countries. Barclays chose to invest in CRM technol-
ogies to help it gain valuable insights into its personal and business customers,
many of which carry credit cards. The purpose of the CRM system was to predict
the financial behavior of individual customers and assess whether a customer
is likely to pay back a loan in full within the agreed-upon time period and inter-
est rate. Surprisingly, Barclays’ CRM system quickly identified that about 50
percent of its customers were nonprofitable, and that 90 percent of its profits
were generated by fewer than 30 percent of its customers.
This valuable information allowed Barclays to revamp its offerings and
charge customers an interest rate based on risk assessment. Barclays also iden-
tifies groups of profitable customers, both on a corporate and personal level,
which it can then target for new financial products. 7
How can a business like Barclays use RFM (recency, frequency, and mone-
tary value) to improve customer relations? Provide three examples of questions
a bank would ask in each of the following categories: CRM reporting technolo-
gies, CRM analysis technologies, and CRM predicting technologies.
Banking on
Customer
Relationships
APPLY YOUR KNOWLEDGE
FIGURE 8.12
Operational CRM and
Analytical CRM
Sales
Systems
Marketing
Systems
Customer
Service
Systems
Front Office–Operational CRM
Collaborative
CRM
System
Data
Warehouse
Data
Mining
Back Office–Analytical CRM
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Figure 8.13 shows the different technologies marketing, sales, and customer service
departments can use to perform operational CRM.
Marketing and Operational CRM
Companies are no longer trying to sell one product to as many customers as possible;
instead, they are trying to sell one customer as many products as possible. Marketing
departments switch to this new way of doing business by using CRM technologies that
allow them to gather and analyze customer information to tailor successful marketing
campaigns. In fact, a marketing campaign’s success is directly proportional to the orga-
nization’s ability to gather and analyze the right customer information. The three pri-
mary operational CRM technologies a marketing department can implement to increase
customer satisfaction are:
1. List generator.
2. Campaign management.
3. Cross-selling and up-selling.
List Generator List generators compile customer information from a variety of
sources and segment it for different marketing campaigns. These sources include web-
site visits, questionnaires, surveys, marketing mailers, and so on. After compiling the
Marketing
Operational CRM Technology
Sales
Operational CRM Technology
Customer Service
Operational CRM Technology
List Generator
Campaign Management
Cross-Selling and Up-Selling
Sales Management
Contact Management
Opportunity Management
Contact Center
Web-Based Self-Service
Call Scripting
FIGURE 8.13
Operational CRM
Technologies
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customer list, it can be filtered based on criteria such as household income, gender, edu-
cation level, political facilitation, age, or other factors. List generators provide the mar-
keting department with valuable information on the type of customer it must target to
find success for a marketing campaign.
Campaign Management Campaign management systems guide users through
marketing campaigns by performing such tasks as campaign definition, planning,
scheduling, segmentation, and success analysis. These advanced systems can even cal-
culate the profitability and track the results for each marketing campaign.
Cross-Selling and Up-Selling Two key sales strategies a marketing campaign
can deploy are cross-selling and up-selling. Cross-selling is selling additional products
or services to an existing customer. For example, if you were to purchase Tim Burton’s
movie Alice in Wonderland on Amazon, you would also be asked if you want to purchase
the movie’s soundtrack or the original book. Amazon is taking advantage of cross-selling
by offering customers goods across its book, movie, and music product lines. Up-selling
is increasing the value of the sale. McDonald’s performs up-selling by asking customers
whether they would like to super-size their meals for an extra cost. CRM systems offer
marketing departments all kinds of information about customers and products, which
can help identify up-selling and cross-selling opportunities to increase revenues.
Sales and Operational CRM
Sales departments were the first to begin developing CRM systems. They had two primary
motivations to track customer sales information electronically. First, sales representa-
tives were struggling with the overwhelming amount of customer account information
they were required to maintain and track. Second, managers found themselves hindered
because much of their vital customer and sales information remained in the heads of their
sales representatives, even if the sales representative left the company. Finding a way to
track customer information became a critical success factor for many sales departments.
Figure 8.14 depicts the typical sales process, which begins with an opportunity and
ends with billing the customer for the sale. Leads and potential customers are the
lifeblood of all sales organizations, whether they sell computers, clothing, consulting, or
cars. How leads are handled can make the difference between revenue growth and decline.
Lead sent
to salesperson
Potential
customer
contacted
Sales Process
Potential
customer
meeting
Problems and
solutions
identified
Order
fulfilled
Customer
billed
Sales order
placed
Customer
sales quote
generated
Opportunity
generated
FIGURE 8.14
A Typical Sales Process
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Sales force automation (SFA) automatically tracks all the steps in the sales process.
SFA products focus on increasing customer satisfaction, building customer relation-
ships, and improving product sales. The three primary operational CRM technologies a
sales department can adopt are:
1. Sales management CRM systems.
2. Contact management CRM systems.
3. Opportunity management CRM systems.
Sales Management CRM Systems Sales management CRM systems automate
each phase of the sales process, helping individual sales representatives coordinate and
organize all their accounts. Features include calendars, reminders for important tasks,
multimedia presentations, and document generation. These systems can even provide
an analysis of the sales cycle and calculate how each individual sales representative is
performing during the sales process.
Contact Management CRM Systems A contact management CRM system
maintains customer contact information and identifies prospective customers for future
sales, using tools such as organizational charts, detailed customer notes, and supple-
mental sales information. For example, a contact management system can take an
incoming telephone number and automatically display the person’s name along with a
comprehensive history including all communications with the company. This allows the
sales representative to personalize the phone conversation and ask such things as, “How
is your new laptop working, Sue?” or “How was your family vacation to Colorado?” The
customer feels valued since the sales associate knows her name and even remembers
details of their last conversation.
Opportunity Management CRM Systems Opportunity management CRM
systems target sales opportunities by finding new customers or companies for future
sales. They determine potential customers and competitors and define selling efforts
including budgets and schedules. Advanced systems can even calculate the probability
of a sale, which can save sales representatives significant time and money when qualify-
ing new customers. The primary difference between contact management and oppor-
tunity management is that contact management deals with existing customers and
opportunity management with new or potential customers.
Customer Service and Operational CRM
Most companies recognize the importance of building strong customer relationships
during the marketing and sales efforts, but they must continue this effort by building
strong post-sale relationships also. A primary reason firms lose customers is due to nega-
tive customer service experiences. Providing outstanding customer service is challeng-
ing, and many CRM technologies can assist organizations with this important activity.
The three primary ones are:
1. Contact center.
2. Web-based self-service.
3. Call scripting.
Contact Center A contact center or call center is where customer service represen-
tatives answer customer inquiries and solve problems, usually by email, chat, or phone.
It is one of the best assets a customer-driven organization can have because maintain-
ing a high level of customer support is critical to obtaining and retaining customers.
Figure 8.15 highlights a few of the services contact center systems offer.
Contact centers also track customer communication histories along with problem
resolutions—information critical for providing a comprehensive customer view to the
service representative. Representatives who can quickly comprehend the customer’s
concerns provide tremendous value to the customer and to the company. Nothing
makes frustrated customers happier than not having to explain their problems all over
again to yet another customer service representative.
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Web-Based Self-Service Web-based self-service systems allow customers to use
the Web to find answers to their questions or solutions to their problems. FedEx uses
Web-based self-service systems to let customers electronically track packages without
having to talk to a customer service representative. Another feature of Web-based self-
service is click-to-talk functions, which allow customers to click on a button and talk
with a representative via the Internet. Powerful customer-driven features such as these
add value to any organization by providing customers with real-time information that
helps resolve their concerns.
Call Scripting Companies that market and sell highly technical products have a dif-
ficult time finding competent customer service representatives. Call scripting systems
gather product details and issue resolution information that can be automatically gener-
ated into a script for the representative to read to the customer. These systems even pro-
vide questions the representative can ask the customer to troubleshoot the problem and
find a resolution. This feature not only helps reps answer difficult questions quickly but
also presents a uniform response so customers don’t receive different answers.
Analytical CRM
Analytical CRM provides information about customers and products that was once
impossible to locate, such as which type of marketing and sales campaign to launch and
which customers to target and when. Unlike operational CRM, which automates call
centers and sales forces with the aim of enhancing customer service, analytical CRM
works by using business intelligence to identify patterns in product sales and customer
behaviors. Analytical CRM tools can slice-and-dice vast amounts of information to cre-
ate custom views of customers, products, and market segments highlighting opportuni-
ties for cross-selling and up-selling. Website personalization occurs when a website has
stored enough data about a person’s likes and dislikes to fashion offers more likely to
FIGURE 8.15
Common Services Provided
by Contact Centers
Automatic call distribution: Routes inbound calls to available agents.
Interactive voice response (IVR): Directs customers to use touch-tone phones or keywords to
navigate or provide information.
Predictive dialing: Automatically dials outbound calls and forwards answered calls to an available
agent.
BUSINESS DRIVEN INNOVATION
New emotion-detection software called Perform, created by Nice Systems,
helps firms improve customer service by identifying callers who are displeased
or upset. Perform determines a baseline of emotion and can detect emotional
issues during the first few seconds of a call; any variation from the baseline acti-
vates an alert. When an elderly person who was highly distressed over medical
costs hung up during a phone call to the insurance company, Perform iden-
tified the customer’s frustration and automatically emailed a supervisor. The
supervisor was able to review a recording of the conversation and immediately
called the customer back suggesting ways to lower the costs. 8
How do you think emotion-detection software will affect customer relation-
ships? What other departments or business processes could benefit from its
use? Create a new product that uses emotion-detection software. What business
problem would your product solve and who would be your primary customers?
Nice Emotions
APPLY YOUR KNOWLEDGE
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Chapter 8 Enterprise Applications: Business Communications306
appeal to that person. Many marketers use CRM to personalize customer communica-
tions and decide which customers are worth pursuing. Here are a few examples of the
information insights analytical CRM can help an organization gain.
■ Find new profitable customers: Analytical CRM could highlight that the most prof-
itable market segment consists of women between 35 and 45 years old who drive
SUVs and live within 30 miles of the city limits. The firm could then find a way to
locate these customers for mailings and other opportunities.
■ Exceed customer expectations: Analytical CRM helps a firm move past the typical
“Dear Mr. Smith” greeting by personalizing communications. For example, if the firm
knows the customer’s favorite brand and size of shoe it can notify the customer that a
pair of size 12 Nike cross trainers are available for him to try on the next time he visits
the store.
■ Discover the activities the firm performs the best: Analytical CRM can determine
what an organization does better than its competitors. If a restaurant caters more
lunches to midsized companies than its competition does, it can purchase a special-
ized mailing targeting these customers for future mailings.
■ Eliminate competition: Analytical CRM can determine sales trends allowing the
company to provide customers with special deals outsmarting its competition.
A sports store might identify its best customers for outdoor apparel and invite
them to a private sale right before the competition runs its sale.
■ Care about customers: Analytical CRM can determine what customers want and
need, so a firm can contact them with an invitation to a private sale, reminder that
a product needs a tune-up, or send them a personalized letter along with a discount
coupon to help spark a renewed relationship.
Measuring CRM Success
Using CRM metrics to track and monitor performance is a best practice for many
companies. Figure 8.16 displays a few common CRM metrics a manager can use to
track the success of the system. Just remember that you only want to track between
five and seven of the hundreds of CRM metrics available.
THE CHALLENGES OF CRM
A standard rule of business states that the customer is always right. Although most busi-
nesses use this as their motto, they do not actually mean it. Ebusiness firms must adhere
to this rule as the power of the customer grows exponentially in the information age.
Various websites and videos on YouTube reveal the power of the individual consumer
(see Figure 8.17 ). A decade ago if you had a complaint against a company you could
make a phone call or write a letter. Now you can contact hundreds or thousands of
FIGURE 8.16
CRM Metrics
Sales Metrics Customer Service Metrics Marketing Metrics
Number of prospective customers Cases closed same day Number of marketing campaigns
Number of new customers Number of cases handled by agent New customer retention rates
Number of retained customers Number of service calls Number of responses by marketing campaign
Number of open leads Average number of service requests by type Number of purchases by marketing campaign
Number of sales calls Average time to resolution Revenue generated by marketing campaign
Number of sales calls per lead Average number of service calls per day Cost per interaction by marketing campaign
Amount of new revenue Percentage compliance with service-level
agreement
Number of new customers acquired by
marketing campaign
Amount of recurring revenue Percentage of service renewals Customer retention rate
Number of proposals given Customer satisfaction level Number of new leads by product
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FIGURE 8.17
The Power of the Customer
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BUSINESS DRIVEN START-UP
You might not want to put the fact that you won the Straightjacket Award on
your résumé unless you worked for Rackspace, a Texas company that special-
izes in hosting websites. At Rackspace, the coveted Straightjacket Award is
won by the employee who best delivers “fanatical customer support,” one of
the firm’s critical success factors. The company motivates its customer service
representatives by dividing them into teams, each responsible for its own prof-
itability. The company then measures such things as customer turnover, up-
selling, cross-selling, and referrals. The team with the highest scores wins the
Straightjacket Award and each member receives a 20 percent bonus. 9
Assume your professor has hired you as the employee relationship manager
for your class. What type of award would you create to help increase class par-
ticipation? What type of award would you create to help increase the overall
average on exams? What type of award would you create to help increase stu-
dent collaboration? Be sure to name your awards and describe their details.
Also, what type of metrics would you create to measure your awards? How
could a CRM system help you implement your awards?
Straightjacket
Customer Service
APPLY YOUR KNOWLEDGE
people around the globe and voice your complaint or anger with a company or product.
You—the customer—can now take your power directly to millions of people and compa-
nies have to listen.
THE FUTURE OF CRM
Organizations are discovering a wave of other key business areas where it is beneficial to
build strong relationships beyond customers. These include supplier relationship man-
agement (SRM), partner relationship management (PRM), and employee relationship
management (ERM).
Supplier relationship management (SRM) focuses on keeping suppliers satisfied by
evaluating and categorizing suppliers for different projects. SRM applications help com-
panies analyze suppliers based on a number of key variables including prices, inven-
tory availability, and business focus or strategies. It can then determine the best supplier
to collaborate with and develop strong relationships with to streamline processes, out-
source services, and provide products the firm could not offer alone.
Partner relationship management (PRM) discovers optimal sales channels by
selecting the right partners and identifying mutual customers. A PRM system offers real-
time sales channel information about such things as inventory availability, pricing strat-
egies, and shipping information, allowing a company to expand its market by offering
specialized products and services.
Employee relationship management (ERM) provides Web-based self-service tools
that streamline and automate the human resource department. Employees are the back-
bone of an enterprise and the communication channel to customers, partners, and sup-
pliers. Their relationship with the company is far more complex and long-lasting than
the relationship with customers, thus many enterprises are turning to ERM systems to
help retain key employees.
ENTERPRISE RESOURCE PLANNING
Today’s managers require real-time views into their businesses so they can make deci-
sions when they need to. Enterprise resource planning (ERP) integrates all depart-
ments and functions throughout an organization into a single IT system (or integrated
LO 8.6 : Describe enterprise
resource management and its role in
supporting business operations.
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set of IT systems) so employees can make decisions by viewing enterprisewide informa-
tion about all business operations.
Many organizations fail to maintain consistency across business operations. If a sin-
gle department, such as sales, decides to implement a new system without considering
other departments, like marketing and accounting, inconsistencies can occur through-
out the company, and operations can become discontinuous, like silos. Enterprise
resource planning systems provide organizations with consistency. They allow for the
effective planning and controlling of all the resources required to plan, source, make,
and deliver goods and services. Figure 8.18 shows how an ERP system takes data from
across the enterprise, consolidates and correlates it, and generates enterprisewide orga-
nizational reports.
A B C D E F
Corporate Data
Employees
Orders
Customers
Sales
Inventory
Global Shipping Report
Global Manufacturing Report
Global Sales Report
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
A B C D E FERP
FIGURE 8.18
Enterprise Resource Planning
System Overview
SALES
Information
Sales
Quote
Sales
Order
WAREHOUSE
Pack and
Ship
RECEIVING
Returns
ACCOUNTING
1
2
3
Payment
Billing
FIGURE 8.19
ERP Process Flow
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The key word in enterprise resource planning is enterprise. At the core of an ERP sys-
tem is a central database that gathers transactional data from operational systems across
the company. Each time information is altered, it is automatically updated throughout
the entire system. For example, sales representatives can access the ERP system to view
all necessary information to process orders such as credit rating, order history, inventory
levels, and delivery schedules. Once the order is complete, the ERP system automatically
routes it to the next department in the order process, as illustrated in Figure 8.19 . ERP sys-
tems facilitate the order process, ensuring customers receive their purchases faster and
with fewer errors. ERP systems can support numerous business processes far beyond
order processing, such as employee benefits and financial reporting. An ERP system can
also support supplier and customer business processes infiltrating the entire value chain
and helping the organization achieve greater operational efficiency (see Figure 8.20 ).
FIGURE 8.20
The Organization Before and
After ERP
Document Management
Work Flow
ERP Logistics
Sales
Financials
HR
Portal and Website
Project Management
ERP
Financials
Project Management
Portal and Website
Work Flow
Document Management
Sales
HR
Logistics
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THE BENEFITS OF ERP
The first generation of ERP systems focused on improving the manufacturing process
through automation, primarily addressing back-office business processes such as inven-
tory ordering and product distribution. The second generation of ERP systems extended
its reach into the front office and primarily addressed customer issues including mar-
keting and sales. The third generation of ERP systems, known as ERP-II, allows a com-
pany to compete on a functional level by adopting an enterprisewide approach using the
Internet to connect all participants in the value chain. Figure 8.21 shows how ERP has
grown to accommodate the needs of the entire organization.
The current generation of ERP, ERP-II is composed of two primary components—core
and extended. Core ERP components are the traditional components included in most
ERP systems and primarily focus on internal operations. Extended ERP components are
the extra components that meet organizational needs not covered by the core compo-
nents and primarily focus on external operations. Figure 8.22 provides an example of an
ERP system with its core and extended components.
Core ERP Components
The three most common core ERP components focusing on internal operations are:
1. Accounting and finance.
2. Production and materials management.
3. Human resources.
LO 8.7: Identify the benefits and
challenges of ERP along with the
future of the connected corporation.
BUSINESS DRIVEN MIS
Classic Cars Inc. operates high-end automotive dealerships that offer luxury
cars along with luxury service. The company is proud of its extensive inven-
tory, top-of-the-line mechanics, and especially its exceptional service, which
includes operating a cappuccino bar at each dealership.
The company currently has 40 sales representatives at four locations. Each
location maintains its own computer systems, and all sales representatives have
their own contact management systems. This splintered approach to opera-
tions causes numerous problems in customer communication, pricing strategy,
and inventory control, such as:
■ A customer can get different quotes at different dealerships for the
same car.
■ Sales representatives frequently steal each other’s customers and
commissions.
■ Sales representatives send their customers to other dealerships to see
specific cars that turn out not to be on the lot.
■ Marketing campaigns are typically generic and not designed to target
specific customers.
■ If a sales representative quits, all his or her customer information is lost.
You work for Customer One, a small consulting company that specializes in
enterprisewide strategies. The owner of Classic Cars Inc. has hired you to help
him formulate a strategy to put his company back on track. Develop a proposal
detailing how an ERP system can alleviate the company’s problems and create
new sales opportunities.
Classic Cars
APPLY YOUR KNOWLEDGE
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Accounting and Finance ERP Components Accounting and finance ERP
components manage accounting data and financial processes within the enterprise
with functions such as general ledger, accounts payable, accounts receivable, budget-
ing, and asset management. One of the most useful features of an ERP accounting/
finance component is credit management. Most organizations manage their relation-
ships with customers by setting credit limits, or limits on how much a customer can owe
at any one time. ERP financial systems correlate customers’ orders with their account
FIGURE 8.21
The Evolution of ERP
• Materials Planning
• Order Entry
• Distribution
• General Ledger
• Accounting
• Shop Floor Control
• Project Management
• Knowledge Management
• Work Flow Management
• Customer Relationship Management
• Human Resource Management
• Portal Capability
• Integrated Financials
ERP
• Scheduling
• Forecasting
• Capacity Planning
• Ecommerce
• Warehousing
• Logistics
Extended ERP ERP-II
1990 2000 Present
FIGURE 8.22
Core ERP Components and
Extended ERP Components
Accounting
and
Finance
Production
and Materials
Management
Human
Resources
Core ERP Components
Customer
Relationship
Management
Supply Chain
Management
Business
Intelligence Ebusiness
Extended ERP Components
Enterprise
Resource Planning
Software
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313Enterprise MIS Module 3
balances to determine credit availability. They also perform all types of advanced profit-
ability modeling techniques.
Production and Materials Management ERP Components Production
and materials management ERP components handle production planning and execu-
tion tasks such as demand forecasting, production scheduling, job cost accounting, and
quality control. Demand forecasting helps determine production schedules and materials
purchasing. A company that makes its own product prepares a detailed production sched-
ule, and a company that buys products for resale develops a materials requirement plan.
Human Resources ERP Components Human resources ERP components
track employee information including payroll, benefits, compensation, and performance
assessment and ensure compliance with all laws. They even allow the organization to
perform detailed employee analysis, such as identifying who is likely to leave the com-
pany unless additional compensation or benefits are provided, and whether the most
talented people are working in areas where they can have the greatest impact. Human
resource components can also identify which employees are using which resources,
such as online training and long-distance telephone services.
Extended ERP Components
Extended ERP components meet the organizational needs not covered by the core com-
ponents and primarily focus on external operations. Many are Internet-enabled and
require interaction with customers, suppliers, and business partners outside the organi-
zation. The four most common extended ERP components are:
1. Business intelligence.
2. Customer relationship management.
3. Supply chain management.
4. Ebusiness.
Business Intelligence ERP Components Many organizations have found that
ERP tools can provide even greater value with the addition of powerful business intel-
ligence systems. The business intelligence components of ERP systems typically collect
information used throughout the organization (including data used in many other ERP
components), organize it, and apply analytical tools to assist managers with decisions.
Data warehouses are one of the most popular extensions to ERP systems.
Customer Relationship Management ERP Components ERP vendors now
include additional functionality that provides services formerly found only in CRM sys-
tems. The CRM components in ERP systems include contact centers, sales force auto-
mation, and advanced marketing functions. The goal is to provide an integrated view of
customer data, enabling a firm to effectively manage customer relationships by respond-
ing to customer needs and demands while identifying the most (and least) valuable cus-
tomers so the firm can better allocate its marketing resources.
Supply Chain Management ERP Components ERP vendors are expanding
their systems to include SCM functions that manage the information flows between and
among supply chain stages, maximizing total supply chain effectiveness and profitabil-
ity. SCM components allow a firm to monitor and control all stages in the supply chain
from the acquisition of raw materials to the receipt of finished goods by customers.
Ebusiness ERP Components The newest extended ERP components are the
ebusiness components that allow companies to establish an Internet presence and
fulfill online orders. Two of the primary features of ebusiness components are elogis-
tics and eprocurement. Elogistics manages the transportation and storage of goods.
Eprocurement is the business-to-business (B2B) online purchase and sale of supplies
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Chapter 8 Enterprise Applications: Business Communications314
and services. A common mistake many businesses make is jumping into online busi-
ness without properly integrating the entire organization on the ERP system. One large
toy manufacturer announced less than a week before Christmas that it would be unable
to fulfill any of its online orders. The company had all the toys in the warehouse, but it
could not organize the basic order processing function to get the toys delivered to con-
sumers on time.
Measuring ERP Success
One of the best methods of measuring ERP success is the balanced scorecard, created
by Dr. Robert Kaplan and Dr. David Norton, both from the Harvard Business School.
The balanced scorecard is a management system, as well as a measurement system,
that a firm uses to translate business strategies into executable tasks. It provides feed-
back for both internal and external business processes, allowing continuous improve-
ment. Kaplan and Norton describe the balanced scorecard as follows: “The balanced
scorecard retains traditional financial measures. But financial measures tell the story of
past events, an adequate story for industrial age companies for which investments in
long-term capabilities and customer relationships were not critical for success. These
financial measures are inadequate, however, for guiding and evaluating the journey that
information age companies must make to create future value through investment in cus-
tomers, suppliers, employees, processes, technology, and innovation.” 10 The balanced
scorecard uses four perspectives to monitor an organization:
1. The learning and growth perspective.
2. The internal business process perspective.
3. The customer perspective.
4. The financial perspective (see Figure 8.23 ).
Financial
O
bj
ec
tiv
es
M
ea
su
re
s
Ta
rg
et
s
In
iti
at
iv
es
“To succeed
financially, how
should we
appear to our
shareholders?”
Learning and
Growth
O
bj
ec
tiv
es
M
ea
su
re
s
Ta
rg
et
s
In
iti
at
iv
es“To achieve our
vision, how will
we sustain our
ability to
change and
improve?”
Customer
O
bj
ec
tiv
es
M
ea
su
re
s
Ta
rg
et
s
In
iti
at
iv
es
“To achieve our
vision, how
should we
appear to our
customers?”
Internal Business
Processes
O
bj
ec
tiv
es
M
ea
su
re
s
Ta
rg
et
s
In
iti
at
iv
es“To satisfy our
shareholders
and customers,
what business
processes must
we excel at?”
Vision
and
Strategy
FIGURE 8.23
The Four Primary
Perspectives of the
Balanced Scorecard
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BUSINESS DRIVEN DISCUSSION
At Flavors, a premium coffee shop, customers receive more than just a great
cup of coffee—they also get exposure to music, art, literature, and town events.
Flavors offers the following:
■ Music center—information about all live music events occurring in the area
and an open microphone two nights a week for local musicians.
■ Art gallery—a space in the store filled with great pieces from local artists.
■ Book clubs—a way for customers to meet to discuss current and classic
literature.
■ Coffee sampler—free tastings in which experts showcase coffees from
around the world.
■ Community calendar—weekly meetings to help customers find ways to
become more involved in their community.
■ Brewing courses—lessons in the finer details of the brewing, grinding, and
blending equipment for sale in Flavor stores, from the traditional press to a
digital espresso machine. Also includes a trouble-shooting guide developed
by brewing specialists.
Flavors’ sales are great and profits are soaring; however, operations need an
overhaul. The following is a quick look at Flavors’ current nonfood offerings.
■ Flavors does not receive any information about how many customers attend
live events in the music center. Musicians typically maintain a fan email list
and CD sales records for the event; however, they don’t always provide this
information to the store.
■ The art gallery is run by several local artists who pay Flavors a small com-
mission on each sale. Flavors has no input on the art displayed in the store
or information about who purchases it.
■ Book club events are booked and run through the local bookstore, Pages
Up, which runs a tab during the meetings and pays Flavor with a check at
the end of each month. Flavors has no access to book club customer infor-
mation or sales information.
■ Coffee sampler events are run through Flavors’ primary operations.
■ Community event information is open to all members of the community.
Each event is run by a separate organization, which provides monthly event
feedback to Flavors in a variety of formats from Word to Access files.
■ Brewing and machine resource courses are run by the equipment manu-
facturers, and all customer and sales information is provided to Flavors in a
Word document at the end of each year.
Flavors’ owners want to revamp the way the company operates so they can
take advantage of enterprise systems, and they have hired you as an integra-
tion expert. They also want to gain a better understanding of how the different
events they host affect the different areas of their business. For example, should
they have more open-microphone nights and fewer book clubs? The other way
around? Currently, they have no way to tell which events result in higher sales.
Create an integration strategy so Flavors can take advantage of CRM, SCM, and
ERP across the company.
Bean Integration
APPLY YOUR KNOWLEDGE
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Sales, Marketing,
Customer Service
Sales Forecasts,
Sales Strategies,
Marketing CampaignsCRM
Customers, Resellers,
Partners, Suppliers,
Distributors
Market Demand,
Resource and
Capacity Constraints,
Real-Time Scheduling
SCM
Accounting, Finance,
Logistics, Production
Forecasting, Planning,
Purchasing,
Material Management,
Warehousing,
Inventory, Distribution
ERP
Primary Users Primary Business BenefitEnterprise Application
FIGURE 8.24
Primary Uses and Business
Benefits of Strategic
Initiatives
THE CHALLENGES OF ERP
One of the biggest challenges of an ERP system is cost. ERP systems contain multiple com-
plex components that are not only expensive to purchase, but also expensive to imple-
ment. Costs can include the software itself, plus consulting charges, hardware expenses,
and training fees. A large firm can easily spend millions of dollars and many years
completing an ERP implementation. The biggest issue facing an ERP implementation is
that it fundamentally changes the way the entire organization operates, causing employ-
ees to learn and adjust to new business processes. Many ERP failures occur because the
business managers and MIS professionals underestimate the complexity of the plan-
ning, development, and training required with an ERP implementation. As a manager,
you must carefully assess your company’s needs and choose the right ERP system and
ensure proper support for all new processes, while avoiding too much change too fast.
THE FUTURE OF ENTERPRISE SYSTEMS:
INTEGRATING SCM, CRM, AND ERP
Applications such as SCM, CRM, and ERP are the backbone of ebusiness, yet most
organizations today have to piece together these systems. A firm might choose its CRM
components from Siebel, SCM components from i2, and financial components and HR
management components from Oracle. Figure 8.24 identifies the general audience and
purpose for each of these applications, and Figure 8.25 shows where they are integrated
and the underlying premise of an integrated organization. Integrating all of these enter-
prise systems allows an organization to function as a single unit meeting customer, part-
ner, and supplier needs.
If one application performs poorly, the entire customer value delivery system is
affected. For example, no matter how great a company is at CRM, if its SCM system does
not work and the customer never receives the finished product, the company will lose
that customer. The world-class enterprises of tomorrow must be built on world-class
applications implemented today.
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317Enterprise MIS Module 3
Learning Outcome 8.1: Explain integrations and the role they play in connecting
a corporation.
Integrations allow separate systems to communicate directly with each other, eliminating the
need for manual entry into multiple systems. Building integrations allows the sharing of infor-
mation across databases along with dramatically increasing its quality.
Learning Outcome 8.2: Describe supply chain management and its role in supporting
business operations.
A supply chain consists of all parties involved, directly or indirectly, in obtaining raw mate-
rials or a product. To automate and enable sophisticated decision making in these criti-
cal areas, companies are turning to systems that provide demand forecasting, inventory
control, and information flows between suppliers and customers. Supply chain manage-
ment (SCM) is the management of information flows between and among activities in a
supply chain to maximize total supply chain effectiveness and corporate profitability. In
the past, manufacturing efforts focused primarily on quality improvement efforts within
the company; today these efforts reach across the entire supply chain, including cus-
tomers, customers’ customers, suppliers, and suppliers’ suppliers. Today’s supply chain
is an intricate network of business partners linked through communication channels and
relationships.
Learning Outcome 8.3: Identify the benefits and challenges of SCM along with its future.
Improved visibility across the supply chain and increased profitability for the firm are the
primary business benefits received when implementing supply chain management systems.
Supply chain visibility is the ability to view all areas up and down the supply chain in real
time. The primary challenges associated with supply chain management include costs and
complexity. The next wave in supply chain management will be home-based supply chain
FIGURE 8.25
Integrations between SCM,
CRM, and ERP
Accounting, Finance, Human Resources,
Purchasing, Management, Auditing,
Employees
Customers
SCM
Business
Partners,
Suppliers,
Distributors,
Resellers
ERP
Logistics,
Production,
Distribution
CRM
Marketing,
Sales,
Customer
Service
SCM
L E A R N I N G O U T C O M E R E V I E W
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Chapter 8 Enterprise Applications: Business Communications318
fulfillment. No more running to the store to replace your products as your store will come to
you as soon as you need a new product.
Learning Outcome 8.4: Describe customer relationship management and its role in
supporting business operations.
Customer relationship management (CRM) is a means of managing all aspects of a customer’s
relationship with an organization to increase customer loyalty and retention and an organi-
zation’s profitability. CRM allows an organization to gain insights into customers’ shopping
and buying behaviors. Every time a customer communicates with a company, the firm has the
chance to build a trusting relationship with that particular customer.
Learning Outcome 8.5: Identify the benefits and challenges of CRM along with its future.
Companies that understand individual customer needs are best positioned to achieve suc-
cess. Building successful customer relationships is not a new business practice; however,
implementing CRM systems allows a company to operate more efficiently and effectively in
the area of supporting customer needs. CRM moves far beyond technology by identifying cus-
tomer needs and designing specific marketing campaigns tailored to each.
A decade ago if you had a complaint against a company you could make a phone call or
write a letter. Now you can contact people around the globe and voice your complaint or
anger with a company or product. Companies have to listen, making CRM the primary chal-
lenge facing organizations.
Organizations are discovering a wave of other key business areas where it is beneficial
to build strong relationships beyond customers. These include supplier relationship manage-
ment (SRM), partner relationship management (PRM), and employee relationship manage-
ment (ERM).
Learning Outcome 8.6: Describe enterprise resource management and its role in
supporting business operations.
Enterprise resource planning (ERP) integrates all departments and functions throughout an
organization into a single IT system (or integrated set of IT systems) so employees can make
decisions by viewing enterprisewide information about all business operations. Enterprise
resource planning systems provide organizations with consistency. They allow for the effec-
tive planning and controlling of all the resources required to plan, source, make, and deliver
goods and services.
Learning Outcome 8.7: Identify the benefits and challenges of ERP along with the future
of the connected corporation.
The first generation of ERP systems focused on improving the manufacturing process through
automation, primarily addressing back-office business processes such as inventory ordering
and product distribution. The second generation of ERP systems extended its reach into the
front office and primarily addressed customer issues including marketing and sales. The third
generation of ERP systems, known as ERP-II, allows a company to compete on a functional
level, adopting an enterprisewide approach using the Internet to connect all participants in
the value chain
One of the biggest challenges of an ERP system is cost. ERP systems contain multiple com-
plex components that are not only expensive to purchase, but also expensive to implement.
Costs can include the software itself, plus consulting charges, hardware expenses, and train-
ing fees.
Applications such as SCM, CRM, and ERP are the backbone of ebusiness, yet most orga-
nizations today have to piece together these systems. A firm might choose its CRM compo-
nents from Siebel, SCM components from i2, and financial components and HR management
components from Oracle. Integrating all of these enterprise systems allows an organization to
function as a single unit meeting customer, partner, and supplier needs.
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319Enterprise MIS Module 3
1. Knowledge: Define SCM and how it can benefit Zappos.
2. Comprehension: Explain CRM and why Zappos would benefit from the implementation of a
CRM system.
3. Application: Demonstrate why Zappos would need to implement SCM, CRM, and ERP for a
connected corporation.
4. Analysis: Analyze the merger between Zappos and Amazon and assess potential issues
for Zappos customers.
5. Synthesis: Propose a plan for how Zappos can use Amazon’s supply chain to increase
sales and customer satisfaction.
6. Evaluate: Argue for or against the following statement: “In the electronic age customer
relationships are more important than ever and Zappos provides the new benchmark that
all corporations should follow.”
O P E N I N G C A S E Q U E S T I O N S
K E Y T E R M S
Accounting and finance ERP
component, 312
Analytical CRM, 301
Backward integration, 289
Balanced scorecard, 314
Bullwhip effect, 294
Call scripting system, 305
Campaign management
system, 303
Click-to-talk, 305
Contact center or call
center, 304
Contact management CRM
system, 304
Core ERP component, 311
CRM analysis technologies, 300
CRM predicting
technologies, 300
CRM reporting
technologies, 300
Cross-selling, 303
Customer relationship
management (CRM), 298
Demand planning system, 295
Electronic data interchange
(EDI), 294
Elogistics, 313
Employee relationship
management (ERM), 308
Enterprise application
integration (EAI), 290
Enterprise application integra-
tion (EAI) middleware, 290
Enterprise resource planning
(ERP), 308
Enterprise system, 290
Eprocurement, 313
Extended ERP component, 311
Forward integration, 289
Human resources ERP
component, 313
Integration, 289
Legacy system, 290
List generator, 302
Middleware, 290
Operational CRM, 301
Opportunity management
CRM system, 304
Partner relationship
management (PRM), 308
Production and materi-
als management ERP
component, 313
Sales force automation
(SFA), 304
Sales management
CRM system, 304
Supplier relationship
management (SRM), 308
Supply chain, 291
Supply chain execution
system, 294
Supply chain management
(SCM), 292
Supply chain planning
system, 294
Supply chain visibility, 294
Up-selling, 303
Web-based self-service
system, 305
Website personalization, 305
R E V I E W Q U E S T I O N S
1. How do integrations connect a corporation?
2. What is the difference between forward and backward integrations?
3. What are the five primary activities in a supply chain?
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4. What is the bullwhip effect and how can it impact a supply chain and a firm’s
profitability?
5. What are supply chain planning systems, supply chain execution systems, and demand
planning systems?
6. What are the challenges associated with SCM systems?
7. Why are customer relationships important to an organization? Do you agree that every
business needs to focus on customers to survive in the information age?
8. What is the difference between operational and analytical CRM?
9. How can a sales department use CRM to improve operations?
10. How can a marketing department use CRM to improve operations?
11. What is the difference between customer relationship management, supplier relation-
ship management, and employee relationship management?
12. What is an enterprise resource planning system?
13. What are the components in a core ERP system?
14. What are the components in an extended ERP system?
15. What does a company need to integrate to become connected?
C LO S I N G C A S E O N E
Can Customer Loyalty Be a Bad Thing?
What happens when you find out that your business’s most faithful customers aren’t neces-
sarily the most profitable ones? The economic crisis has jolted companies into the need to
redouble efforts to foster customer loyalty. Numerous articles now tout the increased impor-
tance of giving customers premium service in troubled times to ensure customer retention.
The underlying reasoning is simple—through their continued patronage, loyal customers help
a company to weather the storm.
Without question, there is some truth to this logic. No firm can survive for long without
loyal customers. The problem, however, is that success through loyalty isn’t nearly so simple.
Like most big ideas, there are conditions where it is unarguably correct, and less popular but
equally true conditions where it is wrong.
Loyalty is a big idea. At its most basic level, it is a feeling of attachment that causes some-
one to be willing to continue a relationship. And while exclusive loyalty has been replaced in
customers’ hearts and minds with multiple loyalties for many if not most product categories,
often greater than 50 percent of a company’s customers would classify themselves as holding
some level of loyalty to a particular company. Even if we narrow our classification of loyalty
to customers who feel loyal and give the majority of their purchases in a category to the firm,
typically we find this to represent one-third of a firm’s customers.
The fly in the ointment is that typically only 20 perceny of a firm’s customers are actually
profitable. And many—often most—of a company’s profitable customers are not loyal. This
presents managers with a loyalty problem, although not one that they expect. If typically most
loyal customers in a firm aren’t profitable, how does a customer loyalty strategy ever generate
a positive return on investment? Instead of asking whether you have enough loyal customers
in your customer base, you need to ask yourself three more complex questions: (1) which loyal
customers are good for the business, (2) how do we hang onto them, and (3) how do we get
more customers like them.
In this slow economy, customers in both B2B and B2C settings are naturally much more
sensitive to economic issues. Furthermore, companies in B2B relationships are often more
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321Enterprise MIS Module 3
reliant on their vendor partners to help them shoulder this burden. There is nothing inherently
wrong with this, and managers need to recognize that their job is to meet customers’ needs to
deserve their loyalty.
But the simple solution to improving customer loyalty in a down market is to offer price
deals. Firms that track their customer loyalty can be guaranteed that loyalty scores will
increase with each substantial decrease in price.
But that’s a bad loyalty strategy. This doesn’t mean businesses shouldn’t find ways to
be more efficient so they can pass cost savings on to customers. But price-driven loyalty
is always the lowest form of loyalty. It means the firm isn’t offering differentiated value to its
customers.
The place to begin any loyalty strategy is to determine which loyal customers are prof-
itable and which are not. A closer examination of these two types of customers always
reveals very different reasons for their loyalty. Unprofitable loyal customers tend to be loyal
for one of two reasons: (1) they are driven by unprofitable pricing or exchange policies, or
(2) they demand an excessive amount of service that they are not willing to pay fairly to
receive.
Profitable loyal customers, on the other hand, are almost always driven by differentiat-
ing aspects of the product or service offering. The key to a successful loyalty strategy is to
become clear as to what these differentiating aspects are, and to focus on tangibly improving
these elements. It is also imperative to actively tell customers and prospective customers that
these are the things the company stands for and that the firm is committed to being best at. By
doing this, the best customers will have the necessary information to clearly articulate why an
organization deserves their loyalty in good times and in bad. 11
Questions
1. Why are customer relationships important to an organization? Do you agree that every
business needs to focus on customers to survive in the information age?
2. How can a company find its most loyal customers?
3. Choose a business (maybe Starbucks, Disney, or Nissan). Answer each of the following
questions based on your business choice.
a. Which loyal customers are good for the business?
b. How do we hang onto them?
c. How do we get more customers like them?
4. Do you agree or disagree with the following statement: “The fly in the ointment is that
typically only 20 percent of a firm’s customers are actually profitable. And many—often
most—of a company;s profitable customers are not loyal.”
C LO S I N G C A S E T W O
Got Milk? It’s Good for You—Unless It’s
Contaminated!
Dong Lizhong bet that being a dairy farmer was his golden ticket out of a factory job in China.
Unfortunately, a contamination crisis in 2008 shattered his dairy business when babies myste-
riously started developing kidney stones from contaminated baby formula. A chemical called
melamine, an additive used to make plastic, was discovered in the milk supply of one of China’s
third-largest dairy producers. Four infants died from the contamination and at least 53,000 fell
ill. According to the official Xinhua news agency, officials knew about problems with the milk
for months before informing the public.
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China’s four largest dairy organizations, accounting for nearly half the country’s milk mar-
ket, pulled their goods off shelves. More than 20 countries, including France, India, and South
Korea, banned not only dairy products from China, but also candies, cookies, and chocolates.
“This is a disastrous setback. I estimate that it will take one or two years to rebuild confi-
dence in dairy products,” says Luo Yunbo, dean of the College of Food Science & Nutritional
Engineering at China Agricultural University.
The local milk-collection station in Dong Lizhong’s village discontinued purchasing milk.
Farmers continued to milk their cows, but they drank the milk themselves or poured the milk
into their cabbage fields.
Cutting Corners
Chinese do not traditionally drink milk. However, as the country has grown more affluent
over the past few decades, the domestic dairy industry has skyrocketed. China’s two largest
dairy companies have greatly benefited from this new trend: China Mengniu Dairy and Inner
Mongolia Yili Industrial Group. Simultaneously, numerous entrepreneurs—from dairy farmers
to milk-collection station owners to milk distributors—have jumped into the supply chain of
dairy products to make their fortunes. Due to the fierce competition within China’s dairy indus-
try, a few companies decided to cut corners to reduce costs, regardless of the consequences.
As Mengniu and Yili expanded at breathtaking speed, they found themselves in the unique
position where supply could not keep up with demand. According to KPMG, China consumes
25 million tons of milk yearly, putting its dairy market ahead of France and Germany. In their
quest for more raw milk, Mengniu and Yili have expanded outside their base in the northern
province of Inner Mongolia and set up production facilities in other parts of China. Most of
the quality problems in milk were found in dairy farms in Hebei and Inner Mongolia provinces,
where the competition for raw milk supplies has been the fiercest.
Most dairy farmers in Hebei province traditionally sold their milk to milk-collection stations
established by local heavyweight Sanlu. In recent years, new privately owned milk-collection
stations to buy raw milk for Mengniu and Yili started popping up next to existing stations. These
new entrants captured raw milk supplies by offering dairy farmers slightly higher prices. “This
competition broke the rules. As milk buyers fought over milk supplies, their standards for qual-
ity fell,” says Roger Liu, vice chairman of American Dairy Inc., a Heilongjiang province-based
powdered milk company.
Additives to Boost Protein
Many of the milking stations do not have the equipment to test milk for additives. At the
Nanxincheng station, 16 households bring their dairy cows in the area to be milked in the red
brick farmhouse. The farmers hook up the cows to a milking machine, which pumps the milk
directly into a big vat. “They didn’t test the milk here. They sent it to Sanlu for testing,” says Du
Yanjun, a government inspector who was posted to monitor the Nanxincheng station after the
contamination crisis broke.
The milk is collected from the stations and shipped by middlemen to big dairy companies
such as Sanlu, which would do their own testing and grading. It now appears that unscru-
pulous middlemen added melamine to the raw milk to increase protein levels in their milk
samples, so their milk would be graded higher. However, ingesting melamine can also cause
kidney stones or kidney failure, especially in infants.
Matthew Estes, president and CEO of BabyCare, had looked into switching from Australian
and New Zealand sources of milk for the company’s infant-formula business in China.
BabyCare tested possible Chinese suppliers and realized it could not locate a suitable supplier
in China. “We couldn’t the find quality that met our standards. We chose to not sell in China
rather than take the risk,” he says.
Stiff Sentences
A Chinese court sentenced two of the middlemen to death and a dairy boss to life in prison
for their roles in the milk contamination scandal. The swift trial and harsh sentences show
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Beijing’s resolve in tackling the country’s stubborn food safety problems and an eagerness by
the communist leadership to move past the embarrassing scandal. 12
Questions
1. List 10 products that could possibly be affected by a problem in the U.S. milk supply chain.
What would be the damages to an ice cream business that used contaminated milk in its
manufacturing process? Who do you think should be held liable for such an issue?
2. Do you think a CRM system could have helped communicate issues in the milk production
supply chain? How could a company use a CRM system to perform damage control after
finding out about contaminated milk in the supply chain?
3. Do you agree with the Chinese court in sentencing of the middlemen to death and a dairy
boss to life in prison for their roles in the milk contamination scandal? Do you think the
United States should implement similar laws for unethical corporate behavior?
4. Many companies in the United States use Chinese suppliers in the sourcing of raw mate-
rials and manufacturing of products. Research the Internet and find three examples of
recent issues for U.S. companies because of Chinese products. What will happen in the
long run as companies use Chinese suppliers?
C R I T I C A L B U S I N E S S T H I N K I N G
1. Political Supply Chains
The U.S. government brokered a deal with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) allowing the
UAE government-owned firm Dubai Ports World (DPW) to operate six major U.S. ports
(New York, New Jersey, Baltimore, New Orleans, Miami, Philadelphia) after DPW pur-
chased the current United Kingdom-based port operator, P&O, the fourth largest port com-
pany in the world.
Some citizens are worried that the federal government may be outsourcing U.S. port
operations to a company prone to terrorist infiltration by allowing a firm from the United
Arab Emirates to run port operations within the United States. The United Arab Emirates
has had people involved in terrorism. Some of its financial institutions laundered the
money for the 9/11 terrorists. You have been called in on an investigation to determine the
potential effects on U.S. businesses’ supply chains if these ports were shut down due to
terrorist activities. Create an argument for or against outsourcing these ports to the UAE.
Be sure to detail the effect on U.S. businesses’ supply chains if these ports are subjected
to terrorist acts. 12
2. Analyzing Dell’s Supply Chain Management System
Dell’s supply chain strategy is legendary. If you want to build a successful SCM system,
your best bet is to model your SCM system after Dell’s. In a team, research Dell’s sup-
ply chain management strategy on the Web and create a report discussing any new SCM
updates and strategies the company is currently using that were not discussed in this text.
Be sure to include a graphical presentation of Dell’s current supply chain model.
3. Total Recall
The Firestone Tire Company issued a recall for all tires issued on a certain brand of Ford’s
sport-utility vehicles. The tire treads on some SUVs separated during use, which could
cause a fatal accident as the defect caused vehicles to roll over. In the beginning Firestone
denied it had a tire problem, stating that Ford had incorrectly matched its SUVs with the
wrong brand of tires. It also suggested that the shock absorbers might have been rub-
bing against the tires, causing the defect. Firestone soon recalled the tires as the company
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Chapter 8 Enterprise Applications: Business Communications324
received more and more pressure from government and consumer advocacy groups.
Interestingly, all of the defective tires were manufactured at the same tire factory and
the company soon shut down that facility. Information was soon found that Firestone had
recalled the identical type of tire in South America and had already settled a lawsuit for an
accident caused by the tread defect. Discuss each of the following factors in relation to
this case: quality, inventory, ethics, supply chain visibility, profitability, customer loyalty. 13
4. Finding Shelf Space at Walmart
Walmart’s business strategy of being a low-cost provider by managing its supply chain
down to the minutia has paid off greatly. Each week, approximately 100 million custom-
ers, or one-third of the U.S. population, visit Walmart’s U.S. stores. Walmart is currently
the world’s largest retailer and the second-largest corporation behind ExxonMobil. It was
founded by Sam Walton in 1962 and is the largest private employer in the United States and
Mexico. Walmart is also the largest grocery retailer in the United States, with an estimated
20 percent of the retail grocery and consumables business, and the largest toy seller in the
United States, with an estimated 45 percent of the retail toy business, having surpassed
Toys “R” Us in the late 1990s.
Walmart’s business model is based on selling a wide variety of general merchandise at
“always low prices.” The reason Walmart can offer such low prices is due to its innova-
tive use of information technology tools to create its highly sophisticated supply chain.
Walmart has famously invited its major suppliers to jointly develop powerful supply chain
partnerships. These are designed to increase product flow efficiency and, consequently,
Walmart’s profitability. 14
You are the owner of a high-end collectible toy company. You create everything from
authentic sports figure replicas to famous musicians and movie characters including Babe
Ruth, Hulk Hogan, Mick Jagger, Ozzy Osbourne, Alien, and the Terminator. It would be a
huge win for your company if you could get your collectibles into Walmart. Compile a stra-
tegic plan highlighting the steps required to approach Walmart as your supply chain part-
ner. Be sure to address the pros and cons of partnering with the chain, including the cost
to revamp your current supply chain to meet Walmart’s tough supply chain requirements.
5. Customer Relationship Management Strategies
On average, it costs an organization six times more to sell to a new customer than to sell
to an existing customer. As the co-owner of a medium-sized sports equipment distributor,
you have recently been notified that sales for the past three months have decreased by
an average of 20 percent. The reasons for the decline in sales are numerous, including a
poor economy and some negative publicity your company received regarding a defective
product line. In a group, explain how implementing a CRM system can help you understand
and combat the decline in sales. Be sure to justify why a CRM system is important to your
business and its future growth.
Also, search the Internet for at least one recent and authoritative article that compares
or ranks customer relationship management systems. Select two packages from the list
and compare their functions and features as described in the article(s) you found as well
as on each company’s website. Find references in the literature where companies that
are using each package have reported their experiences, both good and bad. Draw on
any other comparisons you can find. Prepare a presentation for delivery in class on the
strengths and weaknesses of each package, which one you favor, and why.
6. Searching for Employee Loyalty
You are the CEO of Razz, a start-up Web-based search company, which is planning to
compete directly with Google. The company had an exceptional first year and is currently
receiving over 500,000 hits a day from customers all over the world. You have hired 250
people in the past four months, doubling the size of your organization. With so many new
employees starting so quickly you are concerned about how your company’s culture will
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325Enterprise MIS Module 3
evolve and whether your employees are receiving enough attention. You are already famil-
iar with customer relationship management and how CRM systems can help an organi-
zation create strong customer relationships. However, you are unfamiliar with employee
relationship management and you are wondering what ERM systems might be able to offer
your employees and your company. Research the Web, create a report detailing features
and functions of ERM systems, and determine what value will be added to your organiza-
tion if you decide to implement an ERM solution.
7. Driving Up Profits with Loyalty (or Driving Down?)
The Butterfly Café is located in downtown San Francisco and offers specialty coffee, teas,
and organic fruits and vegetables. The café holds a number of events to attract customers
such as live music, poetry readings, book clubs, charity events, and local artist’s night. A
listing of all participants attending each event is tracked in the café’s database. The café
uses the information for marketing campaigns and offers customers who attend multiple
events additional discounts. A marketing database company, InTheKnow.com, has offered
to pay the Butterfly Café a substantial amount of money for access to its customer data-
base, which it will then sell to other local businesses. The owner of the Butterfly Café,
Penny Dirks, has come to you for advice. She is not sure if her customers would appreciate
her selling their personal information and how it might affect her business. However, the
amount of money InTheKnow.com is offering is enough to finance her much-needed new
patio for the back of the café. InTheKnow.com has promised that the sale will be com-
pletely confidential. What should Dirks do?
8. Supporting Customers
Creative.com is an ebusiness that sells craft materials and supplies over the Internet. You
have just started as the vice president of customer service, and you have a team of 45
customer service representatives. Currently, the only form of customer service is the toll-
free number and the company is receiving a tremendous number of calls regarding prod-
ucts, orders, and shipping information. The average wait time for a customer to speak to
a customer service representative is 35 minutes. Orders are being cancelled and Creative
.com is losing business due to its lack of customer service. Create a strategy to revamp the
customer service center and get the company back on track.
9. Implementing an ERP System
Blue Dog Inc. is a leading manufacturer in the high-end sunglasses industry, reaching
record revenue levels of more than $250 million last year. Blue Dog is currently deciding
on the possibility of implementing an ERP system to help decrease production costs and
increase inventory control. Many of the executives are nervous about making such a large
investment in an ERP system due to its low success rates. As a senior manager at Blue
Dog Inc., you have been asked to compile a list of the potential benefits and risks associ-
ated with implementing an ERP system along with your recommendations for the steps the
company can take to ensure a successful implementation. Be sure to also explain why ERP
systems include CRM and SCM components, and the advantages the company can gain by
implementing all of the components for a connected corporation.
E N T R E P R E N E U R I A L C H A L L E N G E
BUILD YOUR OWN BUSINESS
1. Netflix reinvented the video rental business using supply chain technology. Netflix is the
largest online DVD rental service, offering flat-rate rental by mail and over the Internet to
customers. Customers can create their own personal list of movie favorites and the DVDs
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are delivered by the US Post office from one of Netflix’s warehouses. Customers can keep
the DVDs for as long as they want and simply return it by mail to receive their next selec-
tion. Netflix’s business is video rental, but it used technology to revamp its supply chain to
completely disrupt the entire video rental industry. Define a way that you can revamp or
reinvent your business using supply chain technologies.
2. Business is booming, and you have achieved your goal of driving operating costs down,
which helps to drive revenues up. One of your best new products is from China, and it
is accounting for a 20 percent increase in your profits. Yesterday, a dockworkers union
strike began and shut down all of the West Coast shipping docks from San Francisco to
Canada. Work will resume when the union agrees to new labor contracts, which could
take months. You need to quickly assess the impact of the shutdown on your business.
How will you keep business running if you cannot receive your shipments? What strate-
gies do you recommend to help the business continue working while the supply chain is
disrupted by the strike?
3. The Web contains numerous examples of customer power. Examples include www
.ihatedell.net and www.donotbuydodge.ca. Customers are using YouTube, MySpace,
blogs, and a number of other Web tools to slam or praise companies. Do you believe that
the most influential person in your business is the customer? How could customers hurt
or help your business? Will your employees agree that customers are the most important
part of the business?
A P P LY YO U R K N O W L E D G E B U S I N E S S P R O J E C T S
PROJECT I Shipping Problems
Entrepreneurship is in Alyssa Stuart’s blood. Stuart has been starting businesses since
she was 10 years old, and she finally has the perfect business of custom-made furniture.
Customers who visit her shop can choose from a number of different fabrics and 50 different
styles of couch and chair designs to create their custom-made furniture. Once the customer
decides on a fabric pattern and furniture design, the information is sent to China where the
furniture is built and shipped to the customer via the West Coast. Stuart is excited about her
business; all of her hard work has finally paid off as she has more than 17,000 customers and
875 orders currently in the pipe.
Project Focus
Stuart’s business is booming. Her high-quality products and outstanding customer service
have created an excellent reputation for her business. But the business is at risk of losing
everything and she has come to you for help solving her supply chain issues. The parcel deliv-
ery companies like Fed Ex and UPS are on strike and Alyssa is not sure how she is going to
get her raw materials or finished products delivered. What strategies do you recommend for
Alyssa’s business to continue working to overcome the strike?
PROJECT I I Great Stories
When customers have an unpleasant customer experience, the company no longer has to
worry about them telling a few friends and family; the company now has to worry about them
telling everyone. Internet service providers are giving frustrated consumers another means
of fighting back. Free or low-cost computer space for Internet websites is empowering
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consumers to tell not only their friends, but also the world about the way they have been
treated. A few examples of disgruntled customer stories from the Internet include:
■ A bike-riding tourist requires stitches after being bitten on the leg by a dog. The tourism
company is banned from renting bikes and in turn bars the tourist from taking any future
tours.
■ A customer leaving Best Buy refuses to voluntarily show the receipt to the guard at the
door. The Best Buy employees try to seize the customer’s cart and then decide to park a
car behind the customer’s vehicle.
■ Enterprise Rent-A-Car operates a high-stress business, and frequently its customers find
that the company did not honor reservations, did not have cars ready for reservations,
rented cars with empty tanks of gas, and charged higher rates to corporate account
holders.
Project Focus
The pervasive nature of the Internet is increasing customer power and changing business
from product-focused to a customer-focused. Explain the difference between product-
focused business and customer-focused business and why CRM is more important than ever
before?
PROJECT I I I JetBlue on YouTube
JetBlue took an unusual and interesting CRM approach by using YouTube to apologize to its
customers. JetBlue’s founder and former CEO, David Neeleman, apologized to customers via
YouTube after a very bad week for the airline: 1,100 flights were canceled due to snowstorms,
causing thousands of passengers to be stranded at airports around the country. Neeleman’s
unrehearsed, unrefined, and sincere YouTube apology made customers understand the issues
and accept the company’s apology.
Project Focus
You are the founder and CEO of GoodDog, a large pet food manufacturing company. Recently,
at least 16 pet deaths have been tied to tainted pet food, fortunately not manufactured by your
company. A recall of potentially deadly pet food has dog and cat owners studying their animals
for even the slightest hint of illness and swamping veterinarians nationwide with calls about
symptoms. Create a strategy for using YouTube as a vehicle to communicate with your custom-
ers as they fear for their pets’ lives. Be sure to highlight the pros and cons of using YouTube as
a customer communication vehicle. Are there any other new technologies you could use as a
customer communication vehicle that would be more effective than YouTube? With all the new
advances in technology and the many ways to reach customers, do you think using YouTube is
a smart approach? What else could you do to help gain back customers’ trust?
PROJECT IV Gaining Business Intelligence from Strategic Initiatives
You are a new employee in the customer service department at Premier One, a large office
supply distributor. The company, , has been in business for three years and focuses on provid-
ing top of the line office supplies at a low cost. The company currently has 90 employees and
operates in seven states.
Project Focus
Sales over the past three years have tripled, and the manual systems currently in place are
no longer sufficient to run the business. Your first task is to meet with your new team and
create a presentation for the president and chief executive officer describing supply chain
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Chapter 8 Enterprise Applications: Business Communications328
management, customer relationship management, and enterprise resource planning. The pre-
sentation should highlight the main benefits Premier One can receive from these enterprise
systems along with any additional added business value that can be gained from the systems.
PROJECT V Second Life CRM
New virtual worlds such as Second Life are becoming the first point of contact between many
firms and customers. To say the least, virtual relationships are far different from traditional
relationships. Firms such as Adidas, Dell, Reuters, and Toyota are all embracing Second Life;
however, beyond opening a virtual office in a virtual world, they are struggling with how to
build virtual customer relationships.
PA Consulting quickly learned that building a virtual office to answer customer queries is
not nearly good enough to find and attract loyal customers. The company realized that real
people behind the avatars need to be housed in a real office similar to having a call center to
answer questions for online shopping. When a potential customer wants to speak to a human,
one must appear or else the customer will leave the website.
Project Focus
You are the executive director of CRM at StormPeak, an advanced technological company
that develops robots. You are in charge of overseeing the first virtual site being built in Second
Life. Create a CRM strategy for doing business in a virtual world. Here are a few questions to
get you started:
■ How will customer relationships be different in a virtual world?
■ What is your strategy for managing customer relationships in this new virtual environment?
■ How will supporting Second Life customers differ from supporting traditional customers?
■ How will supporting Second Life customers differ from supporting website customers?
■ What customer security issues might you encounter in Second Life?
■ What customer ethical issues might you encounter in Second Life?
PROJECT VI Searching Telephone Calls
Imagine being able to search a database of customer phone calls to find specific requests
or to be able to sort through digital customer complaints to detect the exact moment when
the interaction between the customer service representative and the customer went wrong.
A new tool called Find It allows the sorting of digital voice records as easily as using Google
to sift through documents. Find It is opening limitless business opportunities as organizations
begin to understand how they can use this technology to help employees search voice mails
or recorded calls for keywords and phrases.
Project Focus
You have recently started your own marketing firm and you want to use the power of Find It
to help your customers query all of their unique data records, including digital voice record-
ings. Now all you need is to prepare your marketing materials to send to potential customers.
Create a marketing pitch that you will deliver to customers detailing the business opportuni-
ties they could uncover if they purchase Find It. Your marketing pitch can be a one-page docu-
ment, a catchy tune, a video, or a PowerPoint presentation.
PROJECT VI I Sharptooth Incorporated
Stephen Kern is the founder and CEO of Sharptooth, a small business that buys and sells
comic strips to magazines and newspapers around the country. Some of Sharptooth’s artists
have made it big and are syndicated in hundreds of magazines and newspapers, while others
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329Enterprise MIS Module 3
are new to the industry. Kern started in the business as an artist and began contracting other
artists when he realized he had a knack for promoting and marketing comic materials. His
artistic background is great for spotting talented young artists, but not so great for running the
business.
Project Focus
Kern recently began selling comics to new forms of media such as blogs, websites, and other
online tools. He has hired you to build him a new system to track all online comic sales. You
quickly notice that Kern has a separate system for each of his different lines of business
including newspaper sources, magazine sources, billboard sources, and now online sources.
You notice that each system works independently to perform its job of creating, updating,
and maintaining sales information, but you are wondering how he operates his business as a
whole. Create a list of issues Kern will encounter if he continues to run his business with four
separate systems performing the same operations. What could happen to the business if he
cannot correlate the details of each? Be sure to highlight at least 10 issues where separate
systems could cause problems.
PROJECT VI I I Eating In
Having been employed by the same company for more than 20 years, Mary Lou Smith was
shocked when she was suddenly terminated along with about 900 of her co-workers. It took
Smith a few weeks to recover from the shock, then she finally began focusing her efforts on
searching for a new job. Smith was sure her loyal employment history and strong skill set
would land her a new job in no time; however, after several months of searching she wasn’t
having any luck. With her emergency funds quickly being depleted, Smith knew she had to
find a new job soon or else she’d need to start selling her assets or cashing in her retirement.
The one positive aspect of having so much free time was that she could focus on her true
passion, cooking. She began making a little money by catering lunches and dinners for local
businesses and neighbors. Smith overheard a neighbor remark that she was hosting a large
party and didn’t have enough time to prepare the meal. Almost jokingly, Smith asked her how
much she’d be willing to pay for a catered event. Soon Smith was catering for numerous
neighbors and small businesses and she knew she had to make a decision if she would go into
business for herself or continue searching for other employment.
Project Focus
After a year in the catering business, Smith was earning a good living and building a stellar
reputation. She began catering for all types of events, including weddings, and business was
so good that she hired several employees to help grow her business. As Smith begins to plan
her expansion, she has asked for you help in answering the following questions:
1. How important is customer loyalty for Smith’s business? What can she do to ensure her
customers remain loyal? How could one disgruntled customer hurt business? What can
she do to combat this challenge?
2. Research the business Yelp.com. What service does Yelp.com perform? Would a small
business see Yelp.com as an opportunity or a threat? What are the pros and cons a
customer should be aware of when using yelp.com?
3. Smith’s responsibilities include forecasting, inventory control, scheduling, and ensuring
high-quality products. What types of forecasts would she require to run her business?
What types of inventory would she want to track? What might happen if her inventory
tracking tool was off by 50 percent? What types of schedules does Smith need to gener-
ate? What things might occur to disrupt schedules and cause her to reschedule? How
can a supply chain management system help run the business?
4. Smith wants to create a business based on loyal customers and loyal employees. She
offers her employees bonuses for new ideas, recipes, or business referrals. What risks
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Chapter 8 Enterprise Applications: Business Communications330
is Smith encountering by offering these bonuses? One employee idea that she has
implemented is turning out to be a competitive advantage for her business; however,
the employee has quit and is now working for a competitor. Should Smith still pay the
employee the bonus? What should she do to ensure she is building strong employee
relationships?
5. Smith overheard one of her customers talking about enterprise systems such as CRM,
SCM, and ERP. However, she is sure they are available only to big companies that have
lots of capital. Research the Internet and find examples of enterprise systems for small
business. Do you think she should invest in these types of systems to run her business?
Why or why not?
Project
Number
Project
Name
Project
Type Plug-In
Focus
Area
Project
Level
Skill
Set
Page
Number
9 Security Analysis Excel T3 Filtering Data Intermediate Conditional
Formatting,
Autofilter, Subtotal
AYK.7
10 Gathering Data Excel T3 Data Analysis Intermediate Conditional
Formatting
AYK.8
11 Scanner System Excel T2 Strategic
Analysis
Intermediate Formulas AYK.8
12 Competitive Pricing Excel T2 Profit
Maximization
Intermediate Formulas AYK.9
13 Adequate
Acquisitions
Excel T2 Break Even
Analysis
Intermediate Formulas AYK.9
15 Assessing the Value
of Information
Excel T3 Data Analysis Intermediate PivotTable AYK.10
16 Growth, Trends, and
Forecasts
Excel T2, T3 Data
Forecasting
Advanced Average, Trend,
Growth
AYK.11
18 Formatting Grades Excel T3 Data Analysis Advanced If, LookUp AYK.12
22 Turnover Rates Excel T3 Data Mining Advanced PivotTable AYK.15
23 Vital Information Excel T3 Data Mining Advanced PivotTable AYK.15
24 Breaking Even Excel T4 Business
Analysis
Advanced Goal Seek AYK.16
25 Profit Scenario Excel T4 Sales Analysis Advanced Scenario Manager AYK.16
AY K A P P L I C AT I O N P R O J E C T S
If you are looking for Excel projects to incorporate into your class, try any of the following after
reading this chapter.
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