Tag: Dynamics 365

  • The Role of User Adoption in Maximising CRM ROI

    The Role of User Adoption in Maximising CRM ROI

    Like any tool, the CRM can only provide value when it is well used. User adoption is integral to a CRM deployment’s success or failure. Low user adoption is almost always why CRMs don’t deliver the expected return on investment (ROI). Acknowledging this risk enables you to prepare accordingly and eliminate those issues that obstruct or dilute a successful CRM deployment.

    Equally, so is understanding the human factor behind low user adoption. Some team members may fear the technology, and others may fear for their jobs. In most cases, the reluctance to adopt any new solution usually comes from a lack of understanding.

    This is entirely forgivable considering how broad the term CRM has become and how complex a platform like Dynamics 365 can be.

    While it may seem straightforward to state the benefits of a CRM, the reality is getting to grips with Dynamics CRM takes time, support and training.

    However, before you can consider training you first need to establish what you hope to gain from deploying a CRM. Defining what success from your CRM project is fundamental to its success from the perspectives of user adoption and ROI.

    How to calculate the ROI of a CRM

    Return on investment, or ROI, is a simple measurement to evaluate how well an investment has performed. For something like an ad campaign, this is straightforward: the cost of the campaign versus the revenue it generated. Calculating the value of your CRM can be harder to quantify. It’s not easy to put a price on better customer service. Similarly, it’s not always apparent how many opportunities would be lost by team members not being able to collaborate via a single platform.

    As with other SaaS platforms, establishing a means of measuring performance will indicate how your CRM is performing.  For example:

    • Time to close – With a stronger customer relationship and a better-informed approach, it should be easier to close deals, reducing the time spent on each sale.
    • Increased deal size – As above, a CRM supports sales and should help increase the value of every deal.
    • More sales – With a smarter sales approach, you should also be able to increase the number of deals closed.
    • More repeat customers – Happy customers return for more, so if you’re using the CRM to strengthen the customer relationship you should see customers returning and referring.

    There are, of course, additional benefits that may be harder to monitor. Closer collaboration across departments results in an improved work environment. Happier staff stay in their jobs for longer, meaning your team gains experience. It must be said, though, that a good CRM tool alone cannot achieve all these things. It’s just a tool – designed to make the job easier, not to replace people or the relationships they form. So, the number one key to CRM success is user adoption.

    an isometric illustration of the evolution of business and product adoption with people interacting at the different stages.

    User adoption – the make or breaker

    The success of any software deployment hinges on both the rate and duration of user adoption. The faster your team picks it up and the longer they use it, the more successful that deployment is.

    In our experience, low user adoption is the main reason CRM systems fail to deliver the expected ROI.

    Despite the sophisticated capabilities of modern CRM systems, you have to think of them as a tool, just like any other. Any tool used incorrectly will, over time, degrade or even break.

    This is true whether you’re using a hammer, machinery or sophisticated software. But rather than blame our poor adoption or lack of training, we usually blame the tool, replace it and the whole thing starts again. The frequency and severity of the misuse will directly correlate to the speed at which it becomes unusable.  

    User adoption is a journey; it cannot be forced, although many try. In WalkMe’s annual report State of Digital Adoption 2022, 60% of decision-makers are concerned about whether digital projects will provide the expected ROI because end-users aren’t adopting the technology quickly enough.

    Low user uptake results in poor performance and poor performance results in lower user uptake. It becomes a vicious cycle that’s hard to break.  The key, therefore, is understanding what obstacles exist in your organisation that could hamper adoption.

    This is something of a hard look-in-the-mirror conversation, as those obstacles can be anything from capacity to budget to individuals.

    Failure to Adopt

    There are many reasons why users don’t engage with new software. The first and most obvious is resistance to change. People may not be entirely happy with the status quo, but at least they know where they stand. Introducing new software, especially something as vast as a CRM, can be intimidating. Not least because it can often mean a change in process, or a formalisation of processes when historically team members have been free to operate as they saw fit. Some may perceive the CRM deployment as an unnecessary change – especially if they haven’t understood the benefits.

    Be under no illusions, you need to get your deployment right. Bad software deployment can cost time and money to remedy or replace. In extreme cases, they can be an existential threat when you factor in the potential data loss that can ensue.

    To make your deployment successful, you must treat your team like customers. Take them on a journey of the new CRM and get their buy-in.

    Another common reason for low user adoption is poor communication around the new system. This encompasses both the ‘why’ – the reason for bringing in a new CRM – and the ‘how’. If users aren’t properly trained to use the CRM, they won’t understand how to maximise the benefits. It’s unreasonable to expect users to ‘have a play’ and ‘come back to us if you have any questions’. Especially with something so complex and feature-rich as a CRM like Microsoft Dynamics 365.  Take a user-centric approach to both CRM design and rollout to ensure maximum adoption.

    Anything that stands between your CRM and user adoption also stands between your CRM and ROI.

    It’s critical to think about CRM rollout and onboarding while you’re choosing which CRM to go with. Not only the functionality and how quickly it can be deployed but how quickly it can be adopted.

    How to improve user adoption

    The best way to improve CRM user adoption is to help users understand the WIIFM (what’s in it for me). Communication is key, and it must start before you introduce the new system.

    Involve users in the selection process

    Talk to users about what they like or don’t like about the current way of working. This will allow you to build a picture of what they need from a new CRM system. Make sure they understand the change is to benefit them, so you need their feedback on what ‘better’ looks like. Of course, they won’t necessarily know all the capabilities a CRM can offer and what those benefits could be. Take the time to introduce the options fully before making a decision.

    Talk up the benefits

    You know the pain points from both a business and user perspective. Use this information to communicate the benefits of the chosen CRM – and communicate them widely. Don’t rely on sporadic updates to get the message across. Think about what channels are available to you and how they can be used to get your message out. Put posters on the wall if that’s what it takes.

    Build a pilot team

    Often when new software is rolled out across a business, you start with a core team who are committed to the project and willing to be the guinea pigs. Starting small doesn’t enable you to get the full benefit of the CRM, but you can hope to develop an evangelical group of ‘experts’ who have familiarised themselves with the system enough to help communicate those benefits to the wider team. These evangelists will help boost adoption.

    Streamline and customise the CRM to meet user needs

    As a result of that earlier work liaising with and seeking feedback from users, you should have a good idea of what you want to achieve with your CRM and how you can tailor the system to meet your usage. Customising the interface to directly align with those needs demonstrates that you’ve listened to and understood your users’ WIIFM and ensures they can get maximum use out of the CRM.

    Provide comprehensive training and support

    If people don’t know how to use the CRM, they won’t use it. Or they’ll use it poorly, which amounts to the same thing – a low ROI. We would suggest training is offered on both a mandated, regular basis during rollout and on-demand long term. Easy-to-access resources allow users to solve issues as they arise. Long, information-heavy, webinars are unlikely to inspire anyone; you’re better off with a little-and-often approach, such as weekly ‘lunch and learns’ that break down the CRM’s capabilities piece by piece.

    Establish clear expectations The less people use a CRM, the less effective it is. Make it clear from the outset that this tool is not optional; it is mandatory – not just for the individual user’s benefit, but for the entire business. Be strategic about the rollout and set clear goals. Your CRM provider should be able to help define those with you and set out ways to measure progress so that you can assess how successful your rollout has been.

    Illustration of a user accessing support resources.

    Pulling the Trigger

    An advanced, customised CRM system can transform your business through effective management of customer relationships throughout the sales and after-sales process. But this is only made possible by people using it properly and often. Low user adoption is the number one reason CRM implementation fails, so getting users onboard from the outset is critical.

    Think about this as a sale – you’re selling users on the concept of CRM, so you need to pull out all the same tools you would ordinarily deploy to close a deal. Understanding their pain points; refining the solution; talking up the benefits and supporting them once the deal is done to ensure you end up with a happy customer. This is how you guarantee a good ROI.


    If you want to ensure a successful CRM implementation, talk to us about how we can help you maximise your ROI.

    Woman on a call using white headphones

    Let’s Talk

    Get in touch with us today to learn more about how we help businesses like yours navigate Microsoft Dynamics 365 recovery and deployments.

  • How AI is Revolutionising CRM Strategies and Operations

    How AI is Revolutionising CRM Strategies and Operations

    The better you know your customers, the more you can offer them. For SMEs in particular, the value of this resource should not be underestimated.

    But just because the tools exist to mine this data gold, it doesn’t mean businesses know how to use them. One of the core challenges QGate helps people deal with is rescuing CRMs that are underperforming – either through low user adoption or a lack of understanding around the features and opportunities on offer. One way QGate can help address these challenges is through AI-based tools that help create efficiencies, generate insights, and generally leverage your data for improved sales performance.

    The AI revolution in CRM

    CRM systems contain some of your most vital and valuable data, ripe for AI-driven efficiencies. 

    AI can save you precious time and put you in a great position to increase sales, from aggregating and sorting relevant customer information to help you decide on marketing strategies or even product development to providing insights and sales forecasts that would previously have taken you days to write up. 

    Some examples of how AI can help your business succeed include:

    Talking the talk

    Many businesses use chatbots to help answer customer questions and act as a triage to direct questions to the most appropriate respondent. 

    Chatbots have come a long way in recent years, and the availability of AI-powered chatbots with natural language abilities ensures you can provide personalised service 24/7/365. And of course, your CRM can record all these conversations for further analysis and follow-up.

    From the customer side, receiving a quick, helpful and ‘human’ response will help ensure customer loyalty.

    AI prompts

    The kind of data analysis offered by AI goes beyond what most people would be able to manage themselves. 

    It’s possible to analyse everything from customer interactions, like clicks on your website, to customer sentiment, such as on social media or chatbot conversations, to empower salespeople to make the right offer at the right time. These nudges might include specific products or offer recommendations that help drive sales.

    Sales forecasts

    Gone are the days of spending hours – if not weeks – of your life trying to build a detailed sales report, including a forecast for the next quarter. AI-powered algorithms can analyse historical data and relevant market trends, providing comprehensive reports that enable you to plan and ensure you’re well-placed to meet demand.

    AI can massively streamline some workflows and replace others altogether. However, to make the most of this opportunity, businesses must have a joined-up strategy that connects the dots across all CRM-based workflows. 

    It’s also vital that AI tools are provided with good, accurate data to help them work more accurately and efficiently. Implementing AI-powered CRM tools to improve the performance of a system full of inaccurate or incomplete data won’t bring the desired results.

    illustration of ai interacting with different marketing channels

    Addressing common CRM pain points with AI

    In our experience, there are five core pain points with CRM systems:

    • disappointing ROI 
    • lack of strategic alignment 
    • operational inefficiencies
    • low user adoption
    • deteriorating relationship with the current CRM partner

    AI can help address many of these challenges and support end users to get more from their system.

    Disappointing ROI

    A disappointing ROI is often the result of low or inefficient use of the system. AI-powered CRM automation helps reduce workloads – making the sales process more efficient – but also opens up new opportunities by delivering customer insights and prompting salespeople to create the right offer at the right time. 

    Strategically using these tools will empower salespeople to make data-driven decisions that increase ROI.

    Lack of strategic alignment

    When a CRM isn’t meeting its potential, it’s often because there’s no alignment between CRM use and business goals. Are you mining the CRM for relevant data to help meet those goals? Did you use CRM data to help inform your strategy? 

    If the answer to these questions is no, then you have, if not a problem, a missed opportunity. AI-powered CRM tools analyse your data to provide insights that can shape your strategy. Plus, they can automate many processes that help you reach your targets.

    Operational inefficiencies

    If people don’t know how to use the CRM fully, or they’re not aware of all the available functions, then they won’t see the value of it. They might even see it as just another job on their list – when, in fact, the AI-powered CRM tools within an advanced system like Dynamics 365 could reduce their workload. 

    Automating repetitive tasks and using AI assistants like Microsoft Copilot, which integrates with Dynamics, enables you to automatically input data with a simple click – for example, updating contact information or copying across meeting summaries or task lists. These features streamline workflows, enabling you to gain efficiencies.

    Low user adoption

    Low user adoption is usually a side-effect of other challenges – when users do not see the benefit of a system, they won’t use it. 

    Every CRM implementation should begin with a good roll-out plan and ongoing training. You can also utilise AI to support this process with personalised data-led recommendations, such as those prompts mentioned above, which increase user engagement and adoption rates.

    Deteriorating relationships with current partner

    If you have lost faith in your CRM supplier due to poor results, talk to our team. We can help rescue your CRM and empower you to achieve the performance you hoped for – or even better – using all the functionality (AI and otherwise) of your CRM system.

    QGate’s approach to AI-powered CRM recovery & optimisation

    We have a four-phase approach to helping customers rediscover the value and potential of their CRM, including AI-powered CRM recovery and optimisation. It begins with a system audit, where we seek to understand your business, goals and ambitions and how you currently work. We then conduct a thorough review of your CRM setup to identify the performance gap between where your usage currently sits and where you need it to be to meet your business goals. 

    At this stage, we’re looking at the quality of your data, how it’s structured, to what extent you’re using the features included in your CRM and your business processes. This leads us to phase two, in which we gather user feedback to understand pain points from the end user’s perspective, as well as areas for improvement. This helps us understand priorities as we move forward with fixes and enhancements.

    Phase three is where we customise and optimise your CRM based on the information gathered in the first two phases. Depending on your priorities, this might include adjusting workflows, improving data quality, or integrating with other systems to enhance functionality.

    Finally, we reinforce user training and support to ensure everyone is empowered to use the system to the best of its ability. We can offer ongoing training sessions and a helpdesk for CRM-related queries if required.

    The future of AI-powered CRMs

    Looking to the future, it’s easy to imagine a time when you will have an AI assistant managing many of your tasks. You might come into your office in the morning and ask your assistant – is today a good day to approach X company? – and rely on your assistant to draw on what they know of a contact’s calendar, business and market context, plus history with your own company, to give you an answer. Better yet, they will probably be able to trawl your CRM to tell you (without waiting for you to ask) which customers should be on your target list for the day. With AI tools developing at speed, all of this will be on the radar sooner rather than later.

    For SMEs, this means less time wasted and more time selling, shorter sales cycles and more personalised, higher-value deals. 

    Of course, just as with existing CRM technology, availability does not necessarily equate to a good user experience. It remains important to align CRM use with business strategy, to take the time to communicate both things to end users and to support people to get the most from their CRM. Also, bear in mind that not every system will suit every business, so take your time before investing to ensure you have selected the CRM and integrated tools that work for you. 

    If you have questions, we’re always happy to advise. Get in touch with our team today for further advice and information.

    Start the Revolution

    AI and CRMs are natural partners: one a data mining and analytics superstar and the other a hub for all your customer-related data. Their co-evolution will bring tremendous benefits to businesses – but only if businesses are both open to and aware of the value on offer.

    We’re excited about the transformative potential of AI and highly focused on providing a kind of ‘translation service’, bridging the gap between the two and empowering businesses to make the most of the services and solutions available to them. If you’d like to talk about how AI-powered CRM can transform and supercharge your business performance, get in touch.

    Let’s Talk!

    Woman on a call using white headphones

    Get in touch with us today to learn more about how we help businesses like yours navigate Microsoft Dynamics 365 recovery and deployments. Learn more

  • How CRM Automation can boost productivity in Recruitment

    How CRM Automation can boost productivity in Recruitment

    The recruitment industry runs on relationships. Without the ability to act as mediators, negotiators, and advisers recruitment consultants struggle to build trust. This is made harder still as they have to nurture relationships with two distinct audiences: candidates and clients. Both require much of the same level of care and attention, but have very different needs and measures of success. Without a robust CRM and CRM automation, maintaining these relationships becomes difficult.

    With so many active candidates and clients, managing the flow of information and communication manually can create bottlenecks and manual errors. This should be where a CRM system comes into its own, automatically capturing key information and adding it to candidate and business records.

    By creating a single source of truth for their data, recruiters can leverage all the information available to them. Without the tedium of searching through emails or spreadsheets. Despite this, some recruitment consultancies see CRMs as another tool to maintain, despite it’s capacity for integration and automation.

    CRM – A Recap

    Originally, the CRM was a way to store all customer details in one place; essentially a database with a decent UI. Today, CRMs still retain the capacity to house a lot of data, but they take care of how the data is gathered and provide the means to communicate.

    The ability to gather, house and segment data allows businesses to gain actionable insights faster. Specifically, when it comes to candidates, a CRM like Microsoft Dynamics 365 allow you to identify which candidates have skills that match open roles.

    This alone can save considerable time as candidate CVs no longer need to be screened. Rather an alert can be created so recruiters know when a candidate has come in with the desired skillset.

    This shortens the hiring cycle as recruiters can draw up shortlists without manually scrutinising hundreds of CVs. Similarly, when a strong candidate lands in an inbox, recruiters can use Dynamics 365 and tools like it to cross-reference those key skills with the kind of skills their clients look for.

    This increases the hit rate of speculative CVs when they go out.

    In addition to all this, the CRM should also keep the specifics of every interaction with both candidates and employers. Everyone in the business can see the latest developments allowing for a slicker more professional experience. When used well, the CRM enables you to:

    • Attract and engage the right candidates.
    • Collect and maintain relevant and searchable candidate data.
    • Facilitate easy communication with candidates and employers and provide accurate, real-time updates.
    • Report on your processes. Reports give you oversight on the whole recruitment process and identify potential issues early.
    graphical representation of a CRM automation process in action

    What is CRM Automation?

    Without functionality like CRM automation, working with so much data has the potential to be highly labour-intensive. With recruitment so dependent on building strong relationships and the ability to respond quickly, it’s hard to scale.

    The challenge is that the processes exist for a reason and mistakes can be costly. Especially if a recruiter misrepresents a role or a candidate.

    Similarly, as recruiters are often targeted on the amount of outreach they do each day, manual processes can cause good recruiters to fail simply because they’re busy.

    Fundamentally, there are only so many vacancies that one recruiter can manage, and so many conversations they can have. This can lead to frustration on an individual and business level because it leaves roles unworked and stalls growth.

    Reducing the level of admin and manual processes allows everyone in the business to go faster which allows for more profitable business outcomes.

    Business Process Automation (BPA) and Robotic Process Automation (RPA) come in. By automating repetitive and time-consuming tasks, such as CV screening, interview scheduling, and reference checks, CRM automation allows recruiters to give their time to high-value people-centric activities, such as candidate assessment and client relationship management, and reduce the workload of administrative tasks.

    How can CRM automation help recruiters?

    Manual processes are always at risk of errors. Mistakes get made and a certain margin for error is acceptable. But the busier we get or the more pressure we feel, the propensity for making mistakes increases. Between the many steps of the hiring process and the number of people involved, it’s all too easy to lose a CV, miss an email, or schedule an interview for the wrong time. Any of which could impact any deals that are in the works. Automated workflow systems ensure that recruitment processes follow standardised procedures, reducing the risk of errors and ensuring consistency across the organization.

    CRM automation allows you to:

    • CV screening – CRM automation systems can scan CVs and applications, extracting relevant information such as skills, experience, and qualifications. By using predefined criteria, these systems can filter out unqualified candidates, reducing the chance of human oversight or bias in the screening stage.
    • Skill matching – Automated tools can compare the skills and qualifications of candidates with the job requirements. By analysing keywords and contextual information, these tools can identify the best matches, ensuring recruiters don’t overlook qualified candidates or mistakenly shortlist unsuitable ones.
    • Updates – Automated communication tools can send personalised emails to candidates at different stages of the recruitment process, providing updates on their application status, next steps, and relevant information. This keeps candidates informed and reduces the likelihood of miscommunication or missed notifications, while also freeing up the recruiter to focus on what they do best.
    • Document-gathering – Leveraging functionality in tools like Dynamics 365, you can enable checks at various stages in the recruitment flow. This will ensure documentation is received, the candidate has the required right to work, references and visas. You can add and track various types of compliance documentation checks such as proof of ID, visa status, qualifications, or certifications, ensuring nothing is missed.

    Scaling with CRM Automation

    Above all, CRM automation helps you do more with less. Growing your revenue doesn’t have to involve increasing your headcount when you’re freeing up your team by automating labour-intensive tasks. CRM automation enables you to handle larger volumes of applicants and applications giving you a segmented talent pool that is easy to access and utilise. Automation can help recruiters shortlist candidates efficiently, and manage multiple hiring pipelines simultaneously without sacrificing the quality of the candidates or the service.

    To learn more about how CRM automation within Dynamics 365 can transform your recruitment consultancy, speak to a member of the team, today.

    Woman on a call using white headphones

    Let’s Talk

    Get in touch with us today to learn more about how we help businesses like yours navigate Microsoft Dynamics 365 recovery and deployments.

  • How CRM can help you to deliver agile customer service and improve the customer experience

    How CRM can help you to deliver agile customer service and improve the customer experience

    Delivering exceptional customer service is more important than ever. Poor customer service creates a negative impact on your organisation, resulting in the loss of customer loyalty, repeat business, profits, reputation and even good employees.

    Ensuring that your customer service is up to scratch is more challenging as the number of communication channels has expanded. Long gone are the days of just letters, telephone calls and face-to-face interactions. Companies must now be able to deliver omnichannel service across their customers preferred routes including email, live chat, and social media.

    As the number of contact channels has increased, the challenge of storing and organising of data has also increased. The details and purchase history of a single customer may now be spread among several channels and multiple employees.

    Increasingly, businesses are looking at how artificial intelligence (AI) can help to augment customer support. Chatbots and customer self-service can be used alongside service agents to streamline and automate your response to routine customer enquiries and frequently asked questions. The benefits are 24/7 availability to your customers, fast response times and the freeing up of customer service agents to work on more complex issues.

    Achieving all of this without an effective customer relationship management (CRM) system is impossible. CRM is a powerful software solution which offers a range of capabilities to help improve your customer experience:

    • Keep in touch with your customers with personalised communications across multiple channels
    • Deliver a consistent and high-level customer experience
    • Use data to help you to understand your customers better and build targeting marketing strategies
    • Send relevant information automatically through grouping of customers or triggered by specific events
    • Provide attentive customer support by utilising automation and AI to provide swift, focussed responses to customer issues

    Microsoft Dynamics 365 CRM for Customer Service

    Microsoft Dynamics 365 provides an agile customer service solution that will increase productivity, reduce costs, identify sales opportunities and improve the customer experience.

    Deliver customer service across multiple channels
    • Provide Self-service Support – Offer your customers immediate access to the right content at the right time on the right channel
    • Personalise Customer Service Engagements – deliver consistent, connected experiences across multiple channels from a unified agent desktop
    • Empower service teams with tools for Increased Productivity – enable agents to resolve customers’ issues swiftly
    • Analyse and learn from comprehensive support insights – track success against KPIs and adapt quickly.
    Five Ingredients to Ignite Always-On Service

    Free Microsoft Ebook

    Five Ingredients to Ignite Always-On Service

    • Maintain quality of service when customer demand spikes
    • Improve efficiency and automation to reduce costs
    • Support remote teams to work effectively
    • Deliver connected, valuable customer experiences

    >> Download the Ebook

    Next Steps