Lost value: 3 ways to unlock the hidden intelligence in CRM data

Andy McDonald, CEO, Cloudapps, reveals three strategies that will unlock the hidden insights in CRM data needed to transform sales activities and grow revenues.
Andy McDonald, CEO, Cloudapps, reveals three strategies that will unlock the hidden insights in CRM data needed to transform sales activities and grow revenues.

It has long been known that understanding – and adapting to – your customers’ behaviors and preferences are central to sales success. The right level of accurate and appropriate data is key to gaining valuable, precise customer insights, and organizations that do not have this are likely missing out on crucial sales intelligence. Having a CRM system is not enough. 

1. Get more from the data you have

Have you ever wondered what useful data could be sat, underutilized, within your CRM system? 

Often, the data we’re collecting has an additional layer of useful, hidden information within it that CRM systems just aren’t sophisticated enough to pick up on. Fortunately, complementary technologies are available that can help gather and make sense of this kind of intelligence for maximum effect.

For example, asking whether there is a relevance to when an activity happened, data was input, or a behavior was recorded could offer new insight into sales funnel activity. This is valuable information that a CRM would often discard.

Likewise, identifying how many times the close date was pushed out, whether a lead ‘converted’ within one day, or when in the process a competitor was identified, could all provide a fresh perspective on how and when customers are truly converting. 

2. Collect more data

When businesses are struggling with incomplete data or they simply don’t have enough, the two obvious solutions are to collect more internally or purchase it. 

Suppliers can add a level of data that supplements what businesses have already, helping to fill in the gaps and generate greater insight. Buying leads, in-depth company intelligence, or analytics will improve customer understanding and cut the time spent on lengthy sales research in-house. 

More challenging, however, is gathering the behavioral data that fuels the most valuable insights about your customers in relation to your business. Sales professionals are a competitive bunch, so using league tables, rewards, competitions and gamification techniques within your CRM can encourage them to input a wealth of useful data specific to the organization and therefore invaluable for sales acceleration.

3. Use deep-learning AI

Most machine learning AI-based software solutions that offer opportunities to gain greater insights into your CRM data require at least two years of good quality data and are typically underpinned by pre-programmed assumptions, which can restrict the level of insight gained. For many organizations, this level of data is not available, and a more sophisticated form of artificial intelligence is needed to open up a new lane of insight that can inform sales activities.

One of the greatest benefits of deep-learning AI is that it doesn’t need huge volumes of data to achieve meaningful results. There are no preconceived ideas about which factors might be influencing sales. Instead, a pre-analysis of the data highlights where gaps may exist or misleading information may lie (such as sales teams adding their close dates at the end of the quarter if unsure when their opportunities will close). 

READ MORE:

The technology uses its own judgement to pinpoint factors having the biggest influence on sales, bringing a level of intelligence that can reveal some surprising, yet fact-based, actionable insights. The more data that is supplied, the more it can learn – giving an even greater level of accuracy and identifying correlations that humans could simply never achieve. It’s the nirvana of true data comprehension, and the best way to unlock the hidden gems within CRM.

For more news from Top Business Tech, don’t forget to subscribe to our daily bulletin!

Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter

Andy McDonald

Andy McDonald is the CEO of Cloudapps

Custom Software Development

Natalia Yanchii • 04th October 2024

There is a wide performance gap between industry-leading companies and other market players. What helps these top businesses outperform their competitors? McKinsey & Company researchers are confident that these are digital technologies and custom software solutions. Nearly 70% of the top performers develop their proprietary products to differentiate themselves from competitors and drive growth. As...

The Impact of Test Automation on Software Quality

Natalia Yanchii • 04th October 2024

Software systems have become highly complex now, with multiple interconnected components, diverse user interfaces, and business logic. To ensure quality, QA engineers thoroughly test these systems through either automated or manual testing. At Testlum, we met many software development teams who were pressured to deliver new features and updates at a faster pace. The manual...

Custom Software Development

Natalia Yanchii • 03rd October 2024

There is a wide performance gap between industry-leading companies and other market players. What helps these top businesses outperform their competitors? McKinsey & Company researchers are confident that these are digital technologies and custom software solutions. Nearly 70% of the top performers develop their proprietary products to differentiate themselves from competitors and drive growth. As...

Six ways to maintain compliance and remain secure

Patrick Spencer VP at Kiteworks • 16th September 2024

With approximately 3.4 billion malicious emails circulating daily, it is crucial for organisations to implement strong safeguards to protect against phishing and business email compromise (BEC) attacks. It is a problem that is not going to go away. In fact, email phishing scams continue to rise, with news of Screwfix customers being targeted breaking at...

Enriching the Edge-Cloud Continuum with eLxr

Jeff Reser • 12th September 2024

At the global Debian conference this summer, the eLxr Project was launched, delivering the first release of a Debian derivative that inherits the intelligent edge capabilities of Debian, with plans to expand these for a streamlined edge-to-cloud deployment approach. eLxr is an open source, enterprise-grade Linux distribution that addresses the unique challenges of near-edge networks...
The Digital Transformation Expo is coming to London on October 2-3. Register now!