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Data is one of the critical elements of doing business and just generally functioning in life these days. It’s collected and utilized in many ways and is particularly vital for organizations to take care of.
No matter what you sell or who your clients are, you should be collecting, tracking, managing, and utilizing valuable customer data of all types to maximize sales and profits. You can do multiple things to effectively handle customer data in your venture today and into the future.
Get Clear on Data Types
First, get clear on the different types of data you may encounter and need to handle in your business over time. It helps to tailor approaches for collecting data according to the type of data involved. You might work with information sets such as first names, email addresses, phone numbers, and the like from leads, or various details from current clients that you obtain from orders, queries, testimonials, reviews, surveys, feedback forms, referrals, and other communications.
You will likely obtain significant amounts of information from online traffic, too. For instance, you can learn details about where the people who visit your site are located, the amount of time they spend on each page, how many pages they go to all told, and more. Plus, you may get data coming in from sales calls, the quotes you provide people, customer service inquiry responses, and so on.
Once you know where data can come from and what you might track, collect, manage, and use, you can put a comprehensive data governance framework in place to ensure all the details are effectively stored and utilized without putting people’s privacy at risk. Understanding your venture and how external data flows to, from, and around it will help you see the best sources of information collection to focus on, too.
Know Your Goals for the Data
When it comes to data, you need to know exactly what your goals are. Clarity on what you’re trying to achieve with data management will help you to see where to concentrate your energies. You’ll be better able to do some strategic planning and thinking over time, too. There are numerous goals you might have in mind.
For instance, you might want to learn about the buying habits and shopping patterns of your target demographic or really go after a particular buyer type. You can use data to improve or automate processes in your business and make better and timelier decisions, too. Plus, your goals for collecting and using data may revolve around enhancing your firm’s sales and marketing techniques or cutting costs in multiple places.
Honing in on where you want to go with your business and how data can help you will lower the chances of failing to get the necessary info from shoppers or ending up with too much irrelevant detail that clutters up your systems.
Secure and Back-Up Data
In this day and age, when hackers are rife and keep coming up with more and more sophisticated ways to break into systems, steal information, hold accounts to ransom, and beyond, security needs to be top of mind. In particular, you need to do everything you can to ensure that customer details can’t get breached.
It’s a good idea to store and back data up online, in the cloud. Hard copies are more likely to be mislaid, stolen, trashed, or otherwise misappropriated. Set up automatic cloud-based backup systems and teach your team to be careful about which links they click on and emails they open when using office computers.
Password-protect your computers and Wi-Fi, not to mention logins to online accounts, too. Choose solid passwords that are eight or more characters long and made up of a mixture of upper- and lower-case characters plus symbols and numbers. Be as vigilant as possible to avoid a hack and the situation where customers are angry with your firm due to their details getting into the wrong hands. Also, limit the number of people who can access and use data to have less risk of leaked information.
Be Open with Clients About the Data You Capture and How You Use It
Another customer management tip is to ensure you’re as upfront and open with consumers as necessary about how you track, store, and use their information. Whenever people opt-in to share details, such as when signing up to newsletters or creating a website account, enable them to easily find a privacy policy that gives them the understanding they may want about what happens to their information once they input it. Plus, enable people to quickly and simply opt-out of newsletters, mailouts, accounts, and more if they wish to.
Managing customer data takes effort but should be a priority, no matter the type of business you run. Remember that you can take advantage of helpful tech tools, too, and train your team in best practices so they support you at the various steps along the way. Start thinking more seriously about data management today.
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