Managing Relationships Across the Distribution Channel: What's Next
Fastwater Rapids v. 1.6, 5Oct98
by Adina Levin
In a recent Network Economy
Practice, we reported on Bay Networks' use of its website to improve
the performance of the company's distribution channel, to use the channel
as a competitive advantage, and to improve its customer service. The Bay
Networks case study provides a useful jumping off place for a broader look
at what it takes to make effective use of the web in support of third party
channel sales. Getting a broader perspective on these issues is particularly
critical for companies today, as the established sales force automation vendors
begin making claims that the client/server systems they have developed to support
internal operations are now "web ready." What does this mean? Will
it meet your needs?
Let's begin by reviewing what Bay Networks built to support their channel.
Key components of Bay's web communications include:
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customized publishing, based on BroadVision technology, that captures data
about the specific interests of customers and partners.
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an online product support system directly available to customers.
This gives the customers the latest, most accurate information, and gives
Bay Networks first-hand insight into where customers are having difficulty.
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extranet systems for partners that provide personalized product news, access
to presentations and collateral materials, access to training, and detailed
technical and support information.
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a “Product Configurator,” based on technology from IBM/Trilogy, that a
customer can use to build a list of all the components required for a specific
installation. When configuration is complete, Bay Networks puts the
customer in touch with a distributor or reseller -- the customer walks
in with a pre-configured system; the distributor gets highly qualified
leads; Bay Networks gets information about what customers are interested
in
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custom-built tools, such as an “ROI calculator” to help partners do a better
job of focusing on winning the sale.
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and, most recently, on-line ordering for channel partners via PC Order.
Using the website, Bay Networks is capturing more information about their
customer's needs, interests, and service history. Ultimately, Bay would
like to use this profile and service data as one more part of their program
to pass qualified leads to channel partners. But they are not doing that
yet. Today, Bay can support its channel with documents and
ordering and with leads for prospects who have already configured
a product -- but cannot yet give partners effective ways to use of
the broader range of customer data.
The reason that this is interesting is that it reflects an industry
wide problem with moving customer data outside a company, to partners.
Customer Data Management
Naturally, the place for companies like Bay to look for assistance would
be the technology that is used today to manage customer interaction data
elsewhere in the company. Companies including Siebel, Vantive, and Aurum
at the high end, and Pivotal and Onyx in the mid-market, are the masters
of unified databases that hold records of customer interactions with salespeople,
customer service representatives, and, (starting recently), marketing campaigns
as well.
Today, these "front office" systems are used to generate leads for internal
salespeople and customer service staff. Recently, front office vendors
have been adding thin-client capability to these systems, allowing companies
to hand off leads to external channel partners. This is a
logical progression for these vendors. The web is the fastest growing
channel for sales and customer service. Moreover, the technical requirements
for "web customer data management" are similar, at the most basic level,
to the requirements for "internal customer data management."
However, the first generation web capabilities from the front office
vendors fall short of what is needed for businesses to manage relationships
with channel partners over the web. Though the core technology requirement
is the same - a relational database of customer interaction data - the
orientation required to succeed on the web is very different. Some of these
differences in focus include:
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External vs. Internal Processes:
Front office software has focused primarily on automating and streamlining
the processes of internal sales and service employees. These systems make
sure that a salesperson or customer service person walks through a similar
set of steps to qualify a lead or solve a technical support problem. This
internal process automation automation saves companies money, and on the
sales side, drives revenue through more effective sales processes. Web
solutions, however, are of primary benefit to partners and customers who
are outside the direct control of the company. Web solutions, therefore,
need to be attractive to partners and customers. Otherwise they won’t get
used.
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Enabling vs. Controlling: The most
common first step that front office software vendors take to the web is
to expose their standardized data-entry and customer interaction tracking
processes through a browser interface. The intent is to get channel partners
- or customers themselves - to use the system to log their own support
requests or to data-enter leads. This type of control is difficult
or impossible outside the company walls. Building an application
that is usable by an outsider, with no training, in an undetermined sequence
- is very different from building a structured client-server application
that the users will trained for and commanded to use.
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Integrating Data with Publishing: Vendors
selling front office customer data management solutions often speak as
if the data and process management component that they provide is the main
piece needed in order to manage relationships with partners and customers
on the web. The result is a "customer service" application consisting
of a screen in which the customer enters her name, address, and requirement,
and waits for a sales or service person to call her back. This model
does not work on the web, for customers or for channel partners. Before
giving their name and number, customers want to browse company and product
information; customers expect to receive some value before they give up
information on the web. For channel partners to use a web system
to contribute data, they need to get value back - qualified leads, information
about customer's purchase and service history, up-to-date product and service
information, news about customers and competitors. The implication
is that a complete internet customer or partner interaction system needs
both documents and data.
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Interoperability: Since they reach
outside the walls of the company, relationship management systems for Internet
and extranet use have to be able to work in a more heterogeneous environment
than one encounters in internal systems. This need is particularly pressing
in applications that support a distribution channel, since resellers typically
sell a range of complementary and competitive products - it is not realistic
for them to use a different web-based application for each one of their
suppliers.
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Focus on Networks, Not Chains: Vendors
selling front office customer data management solutions often speak of
the “value chain” as if it were linear and one-directional. Once
you move outside of the controlled environment of “re-engineered” internal
processes, the relationships between the different parties in an engagement
are more likely to take the form of a network than a chain. The relationships
are complex, there is give and take, and success depends more on interactions
between parts, rather than on execution of a system.
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Customer Data vs. Customer Interaction:
Building a web-based system for partners and customers is more complex
than it first appears. It requires incorporating customer data, publishing,
useful applications (such as Bay's ROI calculator), and collaborative features
into integrated interaction systems, that can be used without training,
and provide value to the people who use them. This is much more than putting
"a pretty face" on the same old customer service data entry screen.
Over time, front office software vendors will need to adapt to the requirements
of doing business over the web. In the short term, users should carefully
evaluate front office vendors' claims about their web solutions, and realistically
determine the amount of effort it would take to integrate these features
into supportive system for channel partners and customers.
Focus on the Relationship Network
When we advise companies on how to think through the business problems
that they will address with their website, we have them begin with a careful
analysis of the network of relationships extending beyond the bounds of
their company -- just as Bay Networks did. The first, most
productive opportunities are usually associated with parts of that economic
network that are broken or “noisy,” in the information sense. As
in the Bay Networks case, these are places where one finds “institutionalized
inefficiency” -- systems of “patches” built up to compensate for faulty
or slow communications. Complex systems create such patches without
anyone’s deciding to make it happen.
Given a map of the network of business relations and a list of the points
in the network that are slow or noisy, the company can begin evaluating
these nodes in terms of criticality and opportunity. The greatest
opportunities are at the places where you can not only improve efficiency,
but where doing so enhances your position as a central node in the network.
Today, Bay Networks is “fixing” poor communication in the “chain” from
them through distributors to customers by rewiring the network. This puts
Bay Networks in a more central role. Value increases as you increase
control over “nexus” points where communication paths join.
The next step is to more tightly incorporate customer data into the
application. The web is about to have a profound impact on the interface
between manufacturers and channel partners. Using the internet, companies
will be able to turn the trickle of data that passes along the distribution
channel into a torrent. Over time it will become increasingly important
for companies using indirect distribution to support the distribution channel
with leads and other data about customer requirements - and in return,
channel partners will contribute more information than ever before about
what end users are doing with the products they buy.
The increased data flow will create new success factors - establishing
and managing the data flow, and managing the changes in the relationship
that result from this increased level of communication. The transition
must be managed carefully, to support the channel, rather than alienate
important partners.
We counsel clients to focus on one problem at a time -- this is a network
-- making too many changes at once produces effects that are hard to predict.
And we help them think through all the implications of these changes, just
as Bay Networks recognized that making product and support information
more efficient could put the distribution network at risk, and so also
designed the website so that it would help distributors succeed in new
ways.