Report shows a 14.6 percent gain in productivity from mobile capabilities and 11.8 percent from social CRM
BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--A Nucleus Research survey of CRM decision makers found that organizations can significantly increase returns on their CRM investments by adding mobile and social capabilities, particularly for salespeople. Nucleus surveyed 223 CRM decision makers and found an average productivity gain of 14.6 percent from mobile capabilities and 11.8 percent from social CRM.
?Given the relatively low price point of many mobile CRM applications and the fact that most social capabilities are bundled into CRM at no additional per-user price, organizations that do not explore mobile and social strategies are likely to lose competitive advantage in 2012 to those competitors that do embrace these technologies,? said Rebecca Wettemann, Vice President of Research, Nucleus Research.
Mobile CRM
While salespeople have used mobile devices for some time, the 14.6 percent productivity increase seen in this report is driven by the development of custom, device-specific applications that take advantage of the form factors of individual devices. Vendors and consultants are increasingly delivering task-specific, role- and vertical-based views of mobile CRM data that make it easier for salespeople to go beyond updating their pipeline via their smart phone.
Social CRM
Nucleus has found that early adopters of social CRM have recognized clear benefits, such as increased visibility and productivity. The 11.8 percent productivity gain is high, and Nucleus expects adoption of social CRM, particularly by salespeople, to grow not just in real numbers, but also in frequency of activity as users become more aware of the technology?s capabilities and as vendors? offerings mature.
The full research note includes four case studies of organizations leveraging mobile and social CRM capabilities and is available at NucleusResearch.com
About Nucleus Research
Nucleus Research is a global provider of investigative, case-based technology research and advisory services that provide real-world insight into maximizing technology value. For more information, visit NucleusResearch.com or follow us on Twitter (@NucleusResearch)