Customer relationship management in the Caribbean

Customer relationship management is key to attracting and keeping your customers. Often, effective communications hinges on understanding the psychology of human beings. We all like to belong, most of us like to be accepted, most of us like to be acknowledged, and if we’re paying you for a product or service, we most definitely like to be kept in the loop.

However, it’s unfortunate that many companies often miss opportunities to connect with customers who actually want to hear from them. Let me give you an example, at the risk of making my male readers squirm at girl talk. While in England, I discovered this lovely place called Bravissimo, which sells bras. Get it? Bras, bravissimo? Anyhow, they regularly sent me catalogues at my England address. However, when I returned to Trinidad I discontinued my mail there. The good thing about Bravissimo is that they ship products to the Caribbean. Yip, one company that doesn’t act as if we’re on the edge of the earth. But the icing on the cake was when I went through my mail last week, and I got a catalogue for their new designs. Now that made me feel really special. That’s what customer relationship management is about. So yes, they’ll continue to get my sterling pounds.

Customer relationship management in Jamaica

It’s great that I can count on my new friend Francis Wade of Framework Consulting to write some great pieces that give an insight to business in the Caribbean. I had the pleasure of meeting Francis and his lovely wife last week, and we had a good laugh over lunch.


Francis recently wrote a piece about customer relationship management in Jamaica.

Here’s a chunky excerpt:

“I suspect that Jamaica is representative of the region in many ways.

When I lived in the US, I, like many professionals, lived in an environment in which un-requested advertising - junk mail and spam - were a fact of life. Giving away contact information was always a question of how much unwanted advertising one would receive in return.

Here in Jamaica, however, just about no-one is interested in who I am, or in using targeted mail or even email.

Not that I miss being blasted with useless paper each day that only ended up in the garbage. However, the fact that I have not even gotten advertising addressed to “Occupant” tells me something about the way in which local companies are not using even basic, bread and butter techniques.

The fact that I live in a fairly affluent uptown community only adds to the mystery.

When I shop, bank or otherwise do daily business, only one or two companies have ever asked me for my email address or phone number. None of the one or two companies has effectively followed up with me after gathering the info. I can only recall a single company that did call me, and I seem to have fallen off their radar.

When the gym membership for my wife and I expired recently, we seem to have been the only ones that noticed. We received no calls, no mail, not a single email, and, it seems, no interest in continuing our infrequently used membership.

This all makes me think that the primary challenge in implementing CRM in Jamaica has nothing to do with the software or IT. Instead, it has everything to do with causing a shift away from mass-advertising to one-to-one advertising.

I recall up until a few months ago before moving, that trucks would pass by on
Constant Spring Road mounted with speakers turned up to full volume – the better
to be heard above the din of traffic and music.

It is classic interruption advertising conducted Jamaican style, turned up to “full hundred” levels.

Yet, the irony is that no-one really buys anything important in Jamaica without consulting the people in their network. In this small country, who you know and what they know is critical to getting things done, and the practice of asking for advice is the hallmark of the efficient professional.

Also, just about everyone in Jamaica carries a cell-phone that receives text-messages.

It seems to me that we are long overdue for a change to a form of that the uses brains as opposed to brawn, finesse as opposed to force. Since trust is the key currency of the land, and who you know is all important, companies that figure out how to gather the kind of information they need to build trust and learn who the customer trusts personally, will do very well.

They will however, have to demonstrate a key characteristic that our companies seem to lack in their marketing efforts – courage.

The first company that commits to building one-to-one relationships will probably make some very big mistakes in the beginning, and will probably face being shut down by the powers that be. However, if they persevere and are determined how to learn to do it right, I think that they would make themselves indispensable to thousands, including myself.”


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