Customer Relationship Management
Download
Report
Transcript Customer Relationship Management
Customer Relationship
Management
CRM in Modern Health Care Delivery
Group Presentation – IS 6800
Renee’ Ross
Hung Winn M.D., J.D
1
Agenda
Definition of CRM
Importance of CRM to General Managers
Statistics
Industry leaders
Success stories
Case Study – MU Healthcare System
Best Practices
Lessons Learned
2
CRM – What is it?
CRM – “Strategy used to learn more about customers’ needs
and behaviors in order to develop stronger relationships
with them” http://guide.darwinmag.com/technology/enterprise/crm/index.html?; last accessed September 27, 2004.
CRM – “Any application or initiative designed to help an
organization optimize interactions with customers,
suppliers, or prospects via one or more touch points – such
as a call center, salesperson, distributor, store, branch office,
Web, or e-mail – for the purpose of acquiring, retaining, or
cross-selling customers.” Goodhue, D. L., Wixon B. H., and Watson, H. J., “Realizing Business Benefits
Through CRM: Hitting the Right Target In The Right Way” MIS Quarterly Executive, Vol. 1, 2, 2002, pp. 79-96.
CRM introduced in 1993
3
Importance of CRM to GM’s
CRM can….
Increase customer service levels
Improve efficiency of call centers
Cross-sell products more effectively
Help sales staff close deals quickly
Simplify marketing processes
Increase ROI
http://guide.darwinmag.com/technology/enterprise/crm/index.html?; last accessed September 27, 2004
.
4
Importance of CRM to GM’s
“Research has shown
that companies that
create satisfied, loyal
customers have more
repeat business,
lower customeracquisition costs, and
stronger brand
value—all of which
translates into better
financial
performance”
http://siebel.com; last accessed October 17, 2004.
5
CRM Spending
2001 - $8.8 billion
2003 - $9.4 billion
2005 projection - $30.6 billion
Gartner estimates that large businesses spend
between $30 million and $90 million on CRM
initiatives over a 3-year period
Mello, A., “Watch out for CRM’s hidden costs” October 17, 2001;
http://techupdate.zdnet.com/techupdate/stories/main/0,14179,2818263,00.html; last accessed on
October 29, 2004.
6
CRM Spending
Budgeting for CRM – hidden costs
Project management
Software integration
Data maintenance
Training
Gartner revealed many businesses
underestimate CRM costs by 40-75%
Mello, A., “Watch out for CRM’s hidden costs” October 17, 2001;
http://techupdate.zdnet.com/techupdate/stories/main/0,14179,2818263,00.html; last accessed on October 29, 2004.
7
CRM Infrastructure
Call Center
Web
Access
E-mail
Store
Direct
Sales
Fax
Refined Business Processes
Process
Improvement
Business Intelligence
Integrated database
Billing
Call center
Fig. 2
Accounts
Sales
….
Dyche, J., The CRM Guide to Customer Relationship Management, Addison-Wesley, Boston, 2002
8
CRM Targets / Components
Applications
Infrastructure
Transformation
All three are necessary, to some degree, for
successful implementation of CRM
initiatives
Goodhue, D. L., Wixon B. H., and Watson, H. J., “Realizing Business Benefits Through CRM: Hitting the Right
Target In The Right Way” MIS Quarterly Executive, Vol. 1, 2, 2002, pp. 79-96.
9
Retention vs. Acquisition
Retention of customers gives greater benefit over
acquisition of new customers
•Builds trust and loyalty
•Up-sell and cross sell opportunities
Move customers through the lifecycle
Acquisition, Growth and Retention
Movement will maximize their value and increase
profits
Ref 21, 22
Studies indicate that increasing the number of
customers a company retains each year by just 5%
can increase contribution to shareholder value by
40% to 95%
10
Retention vs. Acquisition
Average U.S. companies
lose 20% of customers
every year – not knowing
why
Costs 6 to 7 times more to
attain a new customer than
to retain current customers
http://www.crmtrends.com/crm.html; last accessed October 28, 2004.
Bleicher, Paul. “An Imposing Change.” Pharmaceutical Executive. Jun 2004. p.p. 26-30.
11
CRM Success Stories
80% of organizations report success with CRM
programs
Examples
Union Pacific Railroad (Siebel)
4500 users / Replaced legacy system / Strategic part of overall business
intelligence strategy
Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago (PeopleSoft)
5800 employees / Replaced legacy system / “Automation means
clinicians can focus more time on patient care. Having PeopleSoft as a
support system will help us achieve our mission of patients first.”
Ref 7, 16, 20
12
CRM Failure
Failure rate of 15-25%
85% of CRM users cannot quantify benefits
Krass, P., “CRM: Once More, Without Reeling” March 17, 2003;
http://www.cfo.com/article/1,5309,8948/BS/12/4,00.html; last accessed October 15, 2004.
13
CRM Industry Leaders
14
Company Information
Headquarters in San Mateo, California
Founded 1993
5000 employees
2.8 million users at 4,000+ organizations
2003 revenue - $1.35 billion
Strategy
“CRM for Everyone” – CRM software solutions for any kind of organization, any type of user, and any budget
Product Offerings
Siebel Business Analytics
Siebel On Demand
Siebel Sales
Siebel Professional
http://siebel.com; last accessed October 17, 2004.
15
Company Information
Headquarters in Pleasanton, California
Founded 1987
12,000 employees
Serving 12,200 organizations
2003 revenue - $2.3 billion
Strategy
Flexible and adaptable business solutions
Product Offerings
1.
PeopleSoft Enterprise
PeopleSoft Enterprise One
PeopleSoft World
http://www.peoplesoft.com; last accessed October 17, 2004.
16
Company Information
Headquarters in Bellevue, Washington
900 customers in 50 industries
Strategy
Through three audience-specific portals, Onyx Employee Portal,
Onyx Customer Portal and Onyx Partner Portal, Onyx Enterprise
CRM provides proven technology ideal for business environments
that need flexible, reliable and manageable CRM
Product Offerings
Onyx CRMExpress
Onyx Portable CRM
Onyx Analytics
http://www.onyx.com; last accessed October 17, 2004.
17
Company Information
Headquarters in Waldorf, Germany
Founded 1972
30,000 employees
2.8 million users; 1,500 partners
Mission
To provide collaborative business solutions for all types of industries
and for every major market
Product Offerings
1.
mySAP Business Suite
mySAP ERP
SAP xApps
http://www.sap.com; last accessed October 17, 2004.
18
CRM and Electronic Medical
Records (EMR)
“Initiative designed to help an organization
(physician / hospital) optimize interactions
with customers (patients) for the purpose of
acquiring or retaining customers (patients).”
Goodhue, D. L., Wixon B. H., and Watson, H. J., “Realizing Business Benefits Through CRM: Hitting the Right Target In
The Right Way” MIS Quarterly Executive, Vol. 1, 2, 2002, pp. 79-96
19
Need for EMR
Archaic information systems
According to the Journal of American Medical
Association, “as many as 98,000 patients die each
year in U.S. hospitals from preventable medical
errors
Lack of reliable health information.
Swartz, Nikki, “A Prescription for Electronic Health Records” Information Management Journal, Vol 38, 4, 2004,
p.20-22.
20
Market for EMR
The market for EMR for physicians
excluding the hospitals is $500 M in 2004
and expects to grow to $ 5 B in 2008
J. Larson, The Arizona Republic
21
National Agenda for EMR
“ BY COMPUTERIZING HEALTH RECORDS,
WE CAN AVOID DANGEROUS MEDICAL
MISTAKES, REDUCE COSTS AND IMPROVE
CARE”
In the US, every patient should have EMR or EHR
within 10 years
President Bush’s State of the Union address, 1/20/2004
22
Electronic Medical Records
In Massachusetts, Blue Cross & Blue Shield of
Massachusetts plans to donate $50 millions to fund a
pilot project that electronically links patients’ medical
records between the hospitals and health care providers
in 3 communities.
The goal is building a statewide EM system that connects
hospitals and clinics. This mission has a widespread
support among insurers, hospitals and doctors.
L. Kowalczyk, Global Staff
23
Electronic Medical Records
(EMR)
Transition from paper medical records
(PMR) to EMR requires strong physician
leadership and institution’s committeemen of
human and capital resources
24
Case Study
MU Healthcare System
25
26
Case Study
MU HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
MU Health Care system consists of 2
operational entities:
School of Medicine (SOM)
University Physicians (UP): medical practice
MU Health Care
University Hospital
Columbia Regional Hospital
Clinics
27
MU School of Medicine
28
MU School of Medicine (SOM)
DEAN
Associate Deans
Chairpersons of Basic Science Departments
Chairpersons of Clinical Departments (Medicine,
General Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology,
Pediatrics, Family Medicine…)
UNIVERSITY PHYSICIANS
29
University Physicians
Headcount:
UP: 635 (370 physicians + 265 staff)
IT: 22 or 3.5% of total UP headcount
Budget:
UP ‘s revenue: 110 M
IT services: 2.7 M or 2.5% of revenue
Electronic medical records (EMR)
IDX system: scheduling and billing
30
MU Health Care
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
CIO, CFO
Hospital Directors
UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL
COLUMBIA REGIONAL HOSPITAL
CLINICS
31
University Hospital
32
University Hospital
Tertiary acute care hospital
All services except Women’s Health and
Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU)
Trauma Center
260 Beds
Number of patients served: 11,532 (2003)
33
34
Columbia Regional Hospital
262-bed acute care hospital
Surgery: Orthopedic Surgery, Urology, General
Surgery
Medicine
Women’s Health Services: Obstetrics, Gynecology
and others
Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU)
Number of patients served: 6,477 (2003)
35
MU Health Care
Headcount:
MU Health Care: 5700 employees
ITS: 108 or 1.9% of the total headcount
Budget:
MU Health Care: 620 M
ITS:
13.5 M or about 2.2% of the total revenue
50% of budget for personnel
50% of budget for hardware, software and outside supporting services
Total beds: 522
Total in-patients served: 18009
Total out-patient visits: 544,395
36
MU Health Care System
Customers:
Health care providers: physicians
Patients
Electronic clinical information is the
organization’s effort to recruit and retain
customers.
Operational efficiency
Improved quality of care
37
MU HEALTH CARE
SYSTEM
Hospital Clinical Information System
Electronic medical records (EMR)
38
MILESTONE
DEVELOPMENTS
Fall 2001, Vice Chancellor for MU Health Care System,
committed to develop electronic medical records.
Dean and Executive Director strongly supported the
project
A physician leader was appointed as a liaison between IT
leadership and physicians.
Cerner was selected as a technical provider for the
project.
Goal: Incremental implementation of system-wide
electronic health information (EHI)
39
CERNER RELATIONSHIP
December 2001
Technology fees, traditionally referred to as
“licensing and support”
Consulting (implementation) fees – pay as you
go
September 2003
Outside consultants to renegotiate the contract
40
CERNER CORPORATION
Founded in 1979
Headquartered in Kansas City
Leading supplier of healthcare information
technology, with more than 5,273 associates
and 1,500 clients worldwide.
In 2003, it had a revenue of $839.6 million
and net income of $42.8 million.
41
CERNER CORPORATION
Offers centralized electronic medical record to seamlessly
deliver health information such as laboratory results, images,
medication and allergy data to health care teams that depend
on complete, timely information. This increases measurable
quality of care
Enables executives to manage resources, comply with
regulations and recognize trends and best practices by
combing clinical, operational and financial data from across
the enterprise and the industry.
42
ELECTRONIC MEDICAL
RECORDS
The cost of converting paper medical records
to electronic medical records is $10,000 –
30,000 per physician.
The cost of electronic clinical information is
between $50 M – $100 M for health care
system of 2- 3 hospitals
L. Kowalczyk, Global Staff
M. K McGee, Informationweek.com
43
EMR’s Progress
2002
The projects was launched but progress was
impaired by concerns about MU Health Care
System’s fiscal situation.
9/2003
The project was reactivated on an accelerated
time frame.
44
Patients' Medical Information
Clinics
Demographic information including
insurance
History: allergy
Physical examination
Laboratory: blood tests, radiographic images
Diagnoses
Treatments
45
Patients’ Medical Information
Hospitals
Demographic information including
insurance
Physician’s initial evaluation
History
Physical examination
Laboratory: blood tests, radiographic images
Diagnoses
Treatments
46
Patients’ Medical Information
Hospitals
Subsequent visits:
Progress notes: medical students, residents and
attending physicians
Physicians’ orders
Nursing notes: vital signs and assessment
47
Traditional Medical Information
Drawbacks
Important clinical information is not timely
available:
outpatient information is not available when the patient is
admitted to the hospital
Consultations
Inefficiency:
Duplication of effort
Time consuming
Illegible records
Missing medical records
48
HCFA
Compliance
Consultants
Med record
OR
Transport
Family
Ethics Pharmacy
Techs
Attending
PATIENT
Residents
Student
Nurses
Clerks
Xray
Lab
Insurance
Student
JCAHO
Policies
Computer
49
Hospital Clinical Information System
UH
CRH
Medical records
Cerner
HBOC
Orders
Cerner
HBOC
Materials management
Procure
IMMS
Clinical pathology
ALG (UH only)
ALG (CRH only)
Anatomic pathology
CoPath M
Western star
Pharmacy
Pharmakon
HBOC
Operating room
SurgiServ
ORSOS
Radiology
MARS
HBOC
Cardiac cath lab
Whitt (UH only)
Whitt (CRH only)
50
Accomplished Projects
Hospital clinical information system (UH)
Physicians’ orders
Profile (medical records management) system at UH
Document imaging – clinical and financial
EMR (UH and Clinics)
Clinical information is flowed into the Central Data Center
and thus retrievable through Powerchart
Documentation with Powerchart
FirstNet – Emergency Department’s tracking and triage
Cerner runs the Central Data Center off campus
Power Chart is an electronic format of standard
consultation notes, progress notes and operative notes.
51
POWER CHART
Physicians’ electronic medical records
Structured documents:
Consultation notes
Progress notes
Operative notes
Secured electronic signatures
52
Current Projects
2004
Pharmacy system – UH – complete
Operating Room Management system – UH
Replacing:
Radiology system - UH/CRH
Anatomic pathology system - UH/CRH
Clinical pathology system - UH/CRH
Blood bank system - UH/CRH
Physician and nursing documentation on-line for inpatent documentation
“Power Chart office” in the clinics
53
EMR Program’s Goals
Patients: Improved quality of care
Providers: Better working environment
MU Health Care System: Enhanced
financial performance
54
EMR’s BENEFITS
Patient care will improve
Better health outcomes
Higher satisfaction
Providers’ lives will be better
Easier, more time to provide good care from
improved efficiency
The bottom line will be enhanced
Decreased costs, increased revenues
55
What are medical errors?
Adverse event (AE): injury or death of a patient
Near miss: an event or situation that could have
resulted in AE but did not
Medical Error:
failure in execution of plan and its details OR
use of wrong plan
56
Complex Nature of Medical
Care
ICU study
Average of 178 “activities” per patient per
day
99% proficiency rate means 1.7 errors per
patient per day
Even 99.9% may not be safe enough
57
Latent Errors in System Design
Three Mile Island, Bhopal, Chernobyl,
Challenger disaster
“Accidents waiting to happen”
Human error is proximate cause
Root cause(s) present in system - long time
The error is a symptom of the underlying
systemic disorder
58
Perspective on medical errors
Physicians, nurses, pharmacists are highly trained,
careful, and dedicated professionals
Lack of awareness of scale of problem
Most errors do no harm
Most errors are symptoms of the underlying
systemic disorder.
EMR is one of the solutions to the systemic
disorders of the health care delivery
59
The Work of Providers
What is the real work of health care
providers, i.e., those with direct patient
contact?
Process information
Apply technical skill
Build relationships
60
Information Processing
Start with a baseline knowledge and experience
Acquire information from the patient
Supplement with examination and diagnostic
testing – both past and present
Use baseline knowledge, occasionally
supplemented information at time of care, to
formulate a plan of care
61
Information processing
Communicate the plan
Orders/prescriptions – i.e. information transfer to
other providers
Information transfer to the patient
Information to referring physician/PCP
Orders implemented
Charges applied to services rendered
Interfaced with IDX system for efficient billing
and collection
62
Physicians and Information:
Communication
With each other…
InBox messaging
With our patients…
IQ Health
With our referring physicians
Auto-fax
Direct access
Employers
63
PHYSICIAN’S ORDERS
ORDERS HANDWRITTEN
0:02min
Doctor writes order
0:33
Average until unit secretary enters order
0:11
Unit secretary enters order
0:34
Average until nurse begins to verify order
0:06
Nurse verifies order
1:26
Pharmacy receives order
ORDERS GENERATED ONLINE
0:03
Doctor writes order/Pharmacy receives order
Source: Modern Healthcare, 2001
64
EMR and Physicians’ orders
In hospitals, when physicians order
medications for patients electronically,
serious medical errors were reduced by 55%.
D. Bates, M.D., Brigham and Women’s Hospital.
65
Documentation
Documentation occupies a significant
portion of physicians’ effort in providing
medical care.
Good documentation improves medical care
and a defense against medical lawsuits
More lawsuits are defended because of good
record keeping than because of actual events.
66
Credibility of Medical Records
Delayed filing of lab results
Incomplete files
Illegible records
Altered records
Fabricated records
Loss and concealment of records
67
Physician Documentation
MUHC is in the forefront of implementing
these capabilities
Over 100,000 Power Notes have been completed
– almost all inpatient
We have the skill and commitment of
physicians necessary to continue progress in
this area
68
Plan of Care
The most appropriate plan of care requires
the presence of all needed information at
the point of decision-making
In its simplest – this concept means everything
now available on paper spread out across a
system of care is available instantly in an
organized, retrievable fashion at all locations of
care via the EMR
69
Physicians and Information:
Knowledge at the Point of Care
On-line resources
Structured documentation
Order sets
Alerts & reminders
Continuous Quality & Safety Improvement
70
71
Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA)
Secured access to the data:
Password
Electronic signature
Close monitoring access to EMR:
Employees are prohibited to view even their own
medical records.
72
Benefits of EMR
Improves quality of care
Information available at time and place of care
Reduces medical errors
Improves coordination of care
Providers’ better professional lives
More efficient
More effective
Less professional liability
Ref 3, 4, 5, 6
73
Benefits of EMR
Improves the institution’s financial performance:
Improves billing and collections through timely and more
accurately submitting the charges to insurers.
Reduces healthcare costs resulting from inefficiency and
incomplete information
Reduces the cost of professional liability
Increases volume by retaining and recruiting more
patients and physicians
Ref 3, 4, 5, 6
74
CRM Strategy
Balance the business in favor of the customer
Maintain customer loyalty
DATA, DATA, DATA
Qualitative research to understand customers
Develop specialty programs that meet customers’
interests
Know which markets and marketing strategies are
the most profitable
Ref. 26
75
CRM Best
Practices
76
Best Practices
Vision / Strategy
Know your Customer
Differentiate
Technology – data requirements
Metrics
Monitor
Nelson, Scott, “Eight Building Blocks of CRM” Gartner Group, June 19, 2003;
http://www2.cio.com/analyst/report1483.html; last accessed October 25, 2004.
77
Vision / Strategy
Alignment of vision/strategy with:
Business objectives
Customer requirements
Organizational readiness, including
capabilities, policies, incentives and
practices
Nelson, Scott, “Eight Building Blocks of CRM” Gartner Group, June 19, 2003;
http://www2.cio.com/analyst/report1483.html; last accessed October 25, 2004.
78
Customer Analysis
Identify -- know who your customer is
Segment -- high-value, high-potential, lowpotential
Profile -- know your customer’s habits,
behaviors and profitability
Nelson, Scott, “Eight Building Blocks of CRM” Gartner Group, June 19, 2003;
http://www2.cio.com/analyst/report1483.html; last accessed October 25, 2004.
79
Technology – data requirements
Define and map data requirements
What customer data is necessary?
What system will the data come from?
Nelson, Scott, “Eight Building Blocks of CRM” Gartner Group, June 19, 2003;
http://www2.cio.com/analyst/report1483.html; last accessed October 25, 2004.
80
Metrics
Metrics & goals must be established
up front
Nelson, Scott, “Eight Building Blocks of CRM” Gartner Group, June 19, 2003;
http://www2.cio.com/analyst/report1483.html; last accessed October 25, 2004.
81
Monitor
Get feedback from customers
Audit customer experiences by periodically
sampling customer touch points
Use this information to measure effectiveness and
identify areas for improvement
Nelson, Scott, “Eight Building Blocks of CRM” Gartner Group, June 19, 2003;
http://www2.cio.com/analyst/report1483.html; last accessed October 25, 2004.
82
Lessons Learned
Need to pay close attention to triangle: people,
process, and technology
Get executive involvement – top down
Establish measurable business goals
Implement incrementally
Ensure CRM architecture will scale to future needs
as you grow
Spitz, Keith. “Lessons Learned by a CRM Veteran.” Computerworld. Sep 20, 2004. Vol. 38, p. 26
83
The Future of CRM
Top 5 CRM Trends for 2005
Optimizing past CRM investments
Customer retention
Data analysis
Channel integration
Partnerships
84
Questions
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
85
References
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
Goodhue, D. L., Wixon B. H., and Watson, H. J., “Realizing Business Benefits Through CRM: Hitting the Right
Target In The Right Way” MIS Quarterly Executive, Vol. 1, 2, 2002, pp. 79-96.
Swift, Ronald S., “Executive Response: CRM is Changing Our Eras, the Information we Require, and our
Processes” MIS Quarterly Executive, Vol 1, 2, 2002, pp.95-96.
Chin, Tyler, “Data Mining,” American Medical News, Vol 46, p. 19.
Swartz, Nikki, “Doctors, Hospitals Advised to Keep Records Electronically” Information Management Journal,
Vol 38, 1, 2004, p.9.
Swartz, Nikki, “A Prescription for Electronic Health Records” Information Management Journal, Vol 38, 4, 2004,
p.20-22.
Finkelstein, Joel B., “Health IT chief: Public-private partnership needed for EMRs” American Medical News, Vol
47, 28, pp. 5-6.
Pastore, Michael, “CRM Spending Increases Despite Myriad of Market Players,” November 2, 2000;
http://www.clickz.com/stats/big_picture/hardware/article.php/5921_502171; last accessed on October 11, 2004.
http://www.crmtrends.com/crm.html; last accessed October 28, 2004.
McGovern, Todd and Panaro, Joseph. “The Human Side of Customer Relationship Management” Benefits
Quarterly, Vol. 20, 3, 2004, pp. 26-33.
Powers, Thomas L., and Bendall, Dawn. “The Influence of Time on Changes in Health Status and Patient
Satisfaction”. Health Care Management Review. Jul-Sep 2004. Vol. 29, 3; pp. 240-248.
Vandermerwe, Sandra. “Achieving Deep Customer Focus,” MIT Sloan Management Review. Spring 2004. Vol. 45,
3; pp. 26-34.
Mello, A., “Watch out for CRM’s hidden costs” October 17, 2001;
http://techupdate.zdnet.com/techupdate/stories/main/0,14179,2818263,00.html; last accessed on October 29, 2004.
86
References
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
Miller, Robert H. and Sim, Ida. “Physicians’ Use of Electronic Medical Records: Barriers and Solutions.” Health
Affairs: Mar/Apr 2004. Vol. 23, 2; p.p. 116-126.
Krass, P., “CRM: Once More, Without Reeling” March 17, 2003;
http://www.cfo.com/article/1,5309,8948/BS/12/4,00.html; last accessed October 15, 2004.
.
http://www.peoplesoft.com; last accessed October 17, 2004.
http://www.sap.com; last accessed October 17, 2004.
http://www.onyx.com; last accessed October 17, 2004.
http://www.amdocs.com; last accessed October 17, 2004.
http://siebel.com; last accessed October 17, 2004.
Spitz, Keith. “Lessons Learned by a CRM Veteran.” Computerworld. Sep 20, 2004. Vol. 38, p. 26.
Bleicher, Paul. “An Imposing Change.” Pharmaceutical Executive. Jun 2004. p.p. 26-30.
Lipscomb, Darrin, “Making the Case for Customer Relationship Management” CRM Guru, April 12, 2004;
http://www.crmguru.com/articles/2004/Making the Case for Customer Relationship Management; last accessed
October 15, 2004.
“Making the most of CRM” http://www.pharmafile.com/pharmafocus/Features/feature.asp?fID=357&m=7; last
accessed October 12, 2004
http://guide.darwinmag.com/technology/enterprise/crm/index.html?; last accessed September 27, 2004.
Nelson, Scott, “Eight Building Blocks of CRM” Gartner Group, June 19, 2003;
http://www2.cio.com/analyst/report1483.html; last accessed October 25, 2004.
Nancarrow, Clive and Rees, Sharon and Stone, Merlin, “New Directions in Customer Research and the Issue of
Ownership: A Marketing Research Viewpoint,” Journal of Database Marketing, Vol. 11, 1, 2003, pg. 26.
Dyche, J., The CRM Guide to Customer Relationship Management, Addison-Wesley, Boston, 2002
87
References
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
Larson, J., The Arizona Republic
President Bush’s State of the Union address, 1/20/2004
Kowalczyk, L., Global Staff
McGee, M.K., Informationweek.com
Modern Healthcare, 2001
Bates M.D., J. Brigham and Women’s Hospital
88