Analyst: Microsoft CRM not after big boys

By Victoria Ho, ZDNet Asia
Monday, April 21, 2008 08:01 PM

Features-wise, Microsoft Dynamics CRM may not be as robust as its bigger competitors, but to judge it on that front may be missing the point altogether, says a Springboard analyst.

Microsoft's CRM (customer relationship management) product's strength is in its familiar interface and integration with the rest of the software giant's office applications suite, said Michael Barnes, vice president of software and Asia-Pacific research at Springboard Research, in an interview.

Barnes said Microsoft's approach to CRM is from the "contact and collaboration perspective via Outlook and Exchange...Instead of treating CRM as a distinct set of functions packaged as a separate application".

This angles Microsoft's offering effectively at the SMB (small and midsize business) segment, because such companies may only require several CRM functions, with workers operating mainly within Outlook for most tasks, said Barnes.

"For many of these companies, most communications and scheduling is performed in Outlook. Since CRM is how you deal with contacts, that should be done through the same interface," said Barnes, adding that for many SMBs, a full CRM suite may not be on their buy list in the first place.

For specialized functions and larger companies, Microsoft's CRM may therefore prove insufficient, noted Barnes.

He offered of a scenario where Microsoft's CRM may not be sufficient. Barnes said, generally, Outlook is not the tool of choice for helpdesks, so Microsoft CRM may not be the choice for larger companies which may want to route call inquiries directly to a sales force automation system.

Manish Chopra, Asia-Pacific marketing director for Microsoft's Dynamics products, said in an interview Microsoft is targeting CRM at a broader audience compared to its competitors' products.

According to Chopra, about 15 percent of the employees in large organizations are licensed to use CRM software, with a further half of that segment actually using it.

"But what most people do is fire up Outlook for their e-mail first thing in the morning...the level of integration with Outlook is what appeals to people," said Chopra.

Microsoft's competitors generally sell to the marketing or finance chiefs of a company but not the IT people, he said, adding that widespread CRM use cannot be implemented top-down but needs to appeal to a broader audience.

Close to half of Microsoft's CRM business in the region comes from SMBs, many of whom use portions of CRM functionality in their operations, said Chopra.

He said: "Many customers use CRM but may not call it CRM in the first place; it could be 'vendor management' or 'loyalty management', but it uses CRM tools."

On the threat posed by competitor Salesforce.com's extensive third party applications network, termed AppExchange, Chopra said Microsoft's own network of ISVs (independent software vendors) are similarly building applications to suit customers' varied needs.

With many of them located in the region, Chopra said they are in tune with niche needs of customers.

Microsoft released Dynamics CRM 4.0 in December last year.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.

Guest user

Guest user

Level: 
Joined: —
Already a member? Log in »



 

Loading...

Tech Jobs Now!

Mainsoft: Opening options for Java, .NET developers

Java

Mainsoft provides tools for running .NET code on the Java platform.


Read more »


Tags

  1. adobe
  2. apple
  3. apps
  4. big
  5. by
  6. china
  7. enterprise
  8. google
  9. hat
  10. iso
  11. linux
  12. microsoft
  13. mobile
  14. office
  15. ooxml
  16. open
  17. pc
  18. ready
  19. red
  20. salesforce
  21. software
  22. source
  23. standard
  24. sun
  25. users
  26. vista
  27. vote
  28. windows
  29. xml
  30. xp
 
Increase performance with eco-technology innovations
Simplify your infrastructure and unify management, while lowering power and cooling costs of your datacenter.
» Maximum flexibility with powerful blade technolgy
» Bring new services and applications online faster
» Lower energy use and cost
Oracle SOA Business Software Centre
Many companies are recognizing the need to adopt standards in their efforts to build service-oriented applications.
Secure the "Next-Gen SOA Infrastructure" & "Bringing SOA Value Patterns to Life" whitepapers here

» Visit the Power Center

Up close and personal with a merger

Blog thumbnail

What can you get for 13.9 billion buckaroos? For Hewlett-Packard, US$13.9 billion would allow you to buy your way into becoming the second biggest IT services company in the industry...... by Eileen Yu

Read more »