|
Telecom
CRM responsible for magic at Bharti
Bharti seeks out the world's best technology and puts it
at the service of its customers. CRM is part of this process
 |
One of the primary things that Bharti has done with
CRM is segmentation of customers, which has helped in providing customers
more value for their money, says Amrita Gangotra |
Bharti Tele-Ventures is one of India's leading private sector
telecom operators. Its cellular business, AirTel, is a leading mobile telephony
brand. Like any telco, Bharti considers information technology a key business
enabler. "For telecom, IT is like bread and butter. We believe it plays
two significant roles-it works as a support system, and it can also be a business
driver. Thus IT is very important to us," says Amrita Gangotra, vice president
of Information Technology at Bharti. It had a WAN in place with a mix of leased
lines and E1 and E3 lines. The company also has an extranet in place through
which it extends different applications to its dealers and partners. "We
have an extremely large infrastructure based on products from multiple vendors,"
says Gangotra. This includes a range of high-end servers from Sun and HP. "In
the telecom business volumes are very large. We have millions of records and
we process them everyday, so for us storage is in terabytes," she adds.
Bharti also has a storage area network (SAN) in place. The main data centre
is located in Gurgaon, Haryana. As far as software is concerned, some of the
applications that are running on its network are billing, fraud management,
revenue assurance and data warehousing. They also have some internal-facing
applications like Oracle Financial and Oracle HRMS.
The case for CRM
Initially, when Bharti started operations, the whole system
was run manually. "At that point of time only 40 percent of our customer
issues were getting resolved-this has now gone up to about 90 percent,"
reveals Gangotra.
"It is vital for us to manage the expectations of our customers and provide
them with innovative products and services in a manner which makes them loyal,"
explains Gangotra. To achieve this, Bharti needed the right tools. "It
is this need that made us opt for a CRM (customer relationship management) solution,"
she says.
Cherrypicking a solution
Today Bharti is using the Oracle CRM platform. "As part
of our vision, we intend to provide AirTel services anywhere and at any time.
A customer should get the same quality of service no matter which of our call
centres he contacts. This has been our vision, and because of that we have gone
in for a centralised application like CRM," Gangotra adds.
Before choosing its CRM tool, Bharti evaluated many options. It considered factors
like proper workflow automation, facilitation of knowledge sharing, and integration
with the billing system. After a thorough evaluation exercise, it decided to
go ahead with the Oracle CRM platform.
Roll it
After starting its services in Delhi, Bharti acquired many
circles and sought new licences in other circles; whenever they got a new licence,
they implemented the CRM tool immediately. But they had to put in a migration
strategy in those acquired circles which had an existing subscriber base. "The
migration had to be done in such a manner that the existing customer base did
not suffer; we have already completed this in 14 of the 15 circles that we operate
in," says Gangotra. The goal was that all the circles would go live by
the first quarter of 2004.
The biggest challenge for Bharti was to have a unified process in place. Once
this was done they faced the challenge of imparting training. "When you
go in for such a large-scale implementation you will definitely have problems,"
says Gangotra. "We also had certain technical difficulties during implementation,
but we were able to overcome them."
The CRM strategy at Airtel revolves around two aspects: operational CRM and
analytical CRM. The first is about helping their call centres in the workflow
part, helping them in their day-to-day activities. The second provides staff
with the required information on customers; this is used for business development
activities. Together they help Bharti provide better services to its customers.
Tailor-made schemes
Gangotra says it is important to understand and segregate
customer needs depending on the product and services he is buying. "One
of the primary things that we have done in this solution is the segmentation
of customers. With this, AirTel is now able to give its customers more value
for money," she says. With the help of CRM, they are able to provide customers
different schemes and services depending on airtime usage. If the customer is
a heavy user then they have some specific schemes; for normal users they have
other schemes. Apart from this, they have also managed to segregate their workflow
with the help of the CRM tool.
|