CRM Hot Topic: Public Sector v Private Sector
Article by Eric Bohl, Corporate Director of Customer
Services at Tower Hamlets Council and Sponsor of the CRM National Programme:
More than half of English councils have
recognised the value of Customer Relationship Management (CRM) as a way
of saving time and money when it comes to improving customer care. However,
recent research has found that some local authorities have been cautious about
the benefits of CRM, and half aren't yet engaged in it.
One possible reason for a cautious approach to
‘signing up’ to CRM could be the bad press that private sector CRM models
sometimes attract.
But in the public sector, CRM is at the forefront
of eGovernment initiatives, and from a strategic point of view is cruicial. The
CRM National Programme is a £4.275 million government initiative, tasked with
the goal of bringing ‘clarity and definition to the role of Customer
relationship management in local government’.
Many councils had a strong vision of what they
wanted from CRM. For these 190 councils, CRM aims to transform the ways in
which they deliver services to the citizen. Significantly improved customer
satisfaction levels from these councils can show future CRM implementers that
public sector Customer relationship management works. But to achieve this goal
local government needs to understand the task in hand and be able to use the
tools available.
Media speculation of CRM's value in the private
sector has been sometimes negative, and this is compounded with the wider
issues of private sector customer service. The condemnation of services like
the 118 numbers, and companies that, for financial reasons, have transferred
their call centre services overseas, may make a potential public sector CRM
implementer sit back and question whether initiating a CRM solution is in the
citizen’s best interest.
Clarity could lie in the fundamental
differences between the private sector and public sector CRM model.
Private v Public Sector CRM
The use of CRM in the public and private
sectors is similar in two ways. Both use the same underlying technology and
principles, and both use CRM to help improve customer care.
The big difference between both sectors can
often lie in the way in which each regards the customer.
In the private sector, the level of service
given to each customer is sometimes seen to be based upon his or her current or
perceived future value to the organisation. This often means that CRM is used
by some organisations to ensure that high value customers get a high level of
service, while as many transactions as possible, are automated, when it comes
to low value customers.
In the private sector CRM is used to manage a
large number of customers, using a small number of processes, to maximise a
small number of products and services.
In the public sector each customer is valued
equally. The sector’s goal is to provide each customer with a service tailored
to his or her needs. CRM can ensure that dealing with a council is simple, that
the customer’s needs are understood and that councils deliver the correct
services to address them.
In the public sector CRM is used to serve a
large number of citizens, using a small number of processes, to maximise a
large number of products and services.
Leading by example
Broadly speaking Customer relationship
management (CRM) enables councils to understand, anticipate and manage the
current and future service needs of individuals and citizens. However CRM
cannot be standardised between each council, as the services offered by each
are so diverse.
A good way of defining public sector CRM is to
examine how individual local authorities are implementing the initiative, and
we can look to three of the CRM national project councils of Newham, Hull and
Salford to lead by example."