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01.08.07 Vendor Relationship Management (VRM) By Christopher Carfi
This post continues where this one, which gives a bit of background on VRM, leaves off.
In a December, 2006 SuitWatch piece in LinuxJournal, Doc Searls writes that there are a number of parts of VRM, which include:
• Data Independence - "Individuals needs to own and control their own data, independent of vendors"
• Customer-Centricity - "Customers are at the center -- at the inside -- and relate outward toward any number of vendors"
• Reputation, Intention and Preference - "All three bear on relationships, and there is an enormous amount that can be done with each of them."
Of these three areas, the one that I see as key (and, of course, the hardest one to implement) will be the adoption of true customer-centricity in the marketplace. Why is this the hardest problem? Because, although there are some technical components, this is much more of a "soft" problem, one of culture and mindset, rather than a problem of RFCs and technology. Doc continues that we need to think about:
"...the inside-out nature of relationships between customers and vendors. That is, customers are at the center -- at the inside -- and relate outward toward any number of vendors. The idea is not to take the old top-down few-to-many pyramid of vendor-controlled markets and turn it upside down, with customers now on top. Instead, we equip customers with the means to function in more ways inside marketplaces, at the center of relationships with any number of vendors."
With this, I strongly agree.
However, one of the other areas of concentration that Doc proposes is the idea of a "personal RFP." On the concept of the personal RFP, Joe Andrieu writes:
"I think what we are actually seeing is more of allowing people a way to post a personal digital RFP which will require some sort of shared API. Interestingly, corporations could also use a digital RFP, since it is all the same to the marketspace."
There is also now talk of creating a Firefox plugin for personal RFPs. (In fact, there's already the beginning of a spec.)
To this, I need to say "whoa, cowboys." Take a step back from the keyboard. There are two reasons for this.
Reason One: Immediately diving into code is going to take us exactly down the same path that CRM did, and focus on the technology, instead of the people.
Remember that little "R" thing in the middle of both CRM and VRM? The one that says "relationship?" Finding a better way to have vendors compete solely on price does not a relationship (or even a conversation) make. It's simply a different way to do transactions. (My thoughts on the "transactions to communities" path here, from August, 2005.)
Focusing on the transaction alone doesn't help.
Continue reading this article.
About
the Author: Christopher Carfi, CEO and co-founder of Cerado, looks at sales, marketing, and the business experience from the customer´s point of view. He currently is focused on understanding how emerging social technologies such as blogs, wikis, and social networking are enabling the creation of new types of customer-driven communities. He is the author of the Social Customer Manifesto weblog, and has been occasionally told that he drives and snowboards just a little too quickly.
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