Feb 21





By Christopher Musico

During a time in which the terms “housing”, “real estate”, and “subprime mortgage” are making the domestic and global economy shudder with fear and loathing, homebuilders — and some software providers — gathered in Orlando, Fla., for the 2008 International Builders Show to identify paths to success in the housing market.

CDC Software’s Pivotal CRM unit says it’s constructed a possible rebuilding tool for the industry: the new version of Pivotal CRM for Home Building and Real Estate 5.9. The updated software, now generally available, looks to help builders increase revenue and margins on home options, while reducing cost and effort of integration with common back-end systems.

Upgrades to the Pivotal CRM solution come directly from client feedback, says Steve Lewkowitz, professional services director for the home building & real estate group at CDC Software. “We have a very strong users group [whose members] help us prioritize or identify enhancements to our product,” he explains. “One of our goals is to constantly improve upon our product, so we [can] provide customers with all the information they need as the market changes — tools they need to really help them do better marketing, nurture leads, and hopefully convert leads into customers.”

Pivotal CRM for Home Building and Real Estate, according to the company, is designed to help firms in that vertical to “manage relationships throughout the customer lifecycle.” The solution includes help in marketing automation, lead management, sales automation, quoting and contracting, surveying, and customer care. Some of the new features in the 5.9 edition, according to the company, include:

  • product library enhancement with support for units of measure;
  • option rules and extended wildcarding;
  • group calendaring including support for delegation; and
  • C# conversion

Lewkowitz says the options/selections process was a major area of concentration for the updated version, especially with the growing trend among builders to move toward virtual design software. With that technological shift in mind, CDC Software constructed a two-way bridge for builders to use Pivotal CRM in conjunction with Envision, an enterprise suite of applications developed by New Home Technologies, a subsidiary of Builder Homesite, Inc.

The bridge enables builders to offer each buyer a personalized portal with only that buyer’s options for use in the design process. Lewkowitz says many builders, including his company’s clients, are using Envision in addition to Pivotal CRM. “[Envision] allows [builders] to graphically depict what their options are and provide warranty information — information they need so they can initiate the sales process,” he explains. “We felt a strong need to provide [the bridge to Envision] with our clients, streamlining the integration between the two systems.”

Lewkowitz says the newest version of Pivotal CRM is taking into account the notion that homebuyers are often extremely skeptical and slow to make a purchasing decision. “You want to make sure you are giving them as much information as possible and staying in contact with them because the selling process takes longer now,” he says. “People aren’t typically coming in and buying on the spot.”

Melissa Morman, vice president and general manager of Builder Homesite and New Home Technologies, says this integration will enable builders and real estate professionals alike to maximize sales, especially in the current fiscal market. “In today’s climate, our builders are looking for every possible way to not only maximize the take rate of [building] options, but also to drive more leads and sales on the front end,” she explains. “Having this integration in place helps builders take advantage of both these crucial opportunities while reducing implementation costs and speeding up launch cycles.”

Lewkowitz admits that “the feeling among homebuilders is that the market will remain soft in 2008.” However, he says, there is industry wide confidence about a rebound in 2009, and this year affords an opportunity to build up CRM technology in advance of the coming wave. “The [housing] market should start to pick up again in 2009, but a lot of homebuilders are looking to get their tools in place during this soft time. So, once the market turns, they will have tools in place to continue to sell.”

destinationCRM.com: CRM Steadies the Foundation of a Struggling Housing Market

Feb 19





Most People Offer IT Nothing But Problems
Posted by Ben Worthen

Sometimes it’s helpful to sit back, take a deep breath, and recognize how difficult we can make life for our businesses’ information-technology departments.

This video, which we saw on Roger’s Information Security Blog, shows what it’s like to manage your business’s tech needs when the people who provide your marching orders don’t understand tech at all. Disclaimer: It’s an advertisement for CDW, which sells tech products. We’re not encouraging you to buy from them, just acknowledging that the video is pretty clever.

“Any more unreasonable IT requests?”

Feb 15





Is Amazons Small Crash a Giant Crash for Cloud Computing?

Posted by Ben Worthen

Today was a bad day for a new computing model that could one day be the norm. Amazon’s S3 service –which companies can use to rent data storage on Amazon’s tech gear — crashed this morning, knocking many small businesses offline and highlighting one of the model’s drawbacks: You’re putting your operations in somebody else’s hands.

cloud_art_160_20080215181731.jpg

For some reason clouds are the go-to metaphor for the Internet

Many pundits believe that so-called cloud computing, where information is stored on centralized tech equipment and accessed over the Internet, is the computing industry’s evolutionary next step. Amazon’s S3 service is one of the most prominent clouds around. Customers rent space for their information on Amazon’s tech equipment – it costs $0.15 per GB a month to store data, with additional fees to transfer data in and out – which is often cheaper than buying and operating equipment of their own. On its Web site, Amazon touts that S3 allows customers to scale their data demands up or down rapidly, and that the service is available 99.99% of the time.

Amazon broke that promise today, albeit barely. S3 was down from around 7:30 am to 10:15 am EST. Several businesses that use S3, including the blogging service Twitter and the New York Times, were affected. Customers were understandably angry. “My business is effectively closed right now because Amazon did something wrong,” says one message board poster quoted by the Times. “I’ll have to reconsider using the service now.”

A two to three hour outage, while not common, is the sort of problem that a corporate information-technology department experiences from time to time. It’s bad for business, but not the end of the world. But when you’re dealing with something that challenges the status quo routine, problems invariably draw attention to shortcomings with the model. In this case, it isn’t your techies that are trying to get your business up and running, but Amazon’s. You’re left to twiddle your thumbs while customers check out your competitor’s site. Will a black eye turn out to be a knock-out punch in this case? Probably not, but it’s a bigger story than if a few businesses had their sites go down.

Feb 7





NetSuite CEO Zach Nelson Named Top 5 CRM Influencer

SAN MATEO, Calif., Feb 07, 2008 /PRNewswire-FirstCall via COMTEX/ — NetSuite Inc. (N), a leading vendor of on-demand, integrated business management software suites that include Accounting / Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), Customer Relationship Management (CRM) and Ecommerce software for small and midsized businesses and divisions of large companies, announced today that Inside CRM ranked NetSuite President and Chief Executive Officer Zach Nelson as one of the Top 5 CRM Influencers of 2007.

Mr. Nelson, along with other industry leaders including Marc Benioff of salesforce.com and Greg Gianforte of RightNow, was recognized as one who changed the CRM software landscape in 2007.

“Nelson’s advocacy for the on-demand model over the on-premise model, at a time when companies like Microsoft and Oracle are still trying to figure out how to exist with one foot in each world, bodes well for the company’s future,” said the Inside CRM article. “Nelson and Evan Goldberg [Founder and Chief Technology Officer] also clearly see the ability of CRM software to branch out into informing other aspects of a business, but they’re conservative enough to know that the time for that will not come until CRM can be a proven success with more customers.

ShareBuilder: Research News

Feb 5





Google releases code to help make social data portable
Posted by Heather Havenstein

February 4, 2008 (Computerworld) Google has unveiled a new API that it hopes will make data created by users of social networks portable.

The Social Graph API makes information about the connections people have with each other on different Web sites easily available, said Brad Fitzpatrick, a Google software engineer. Once the data is available, developers can solve the problem of requiring users to search for and add friends to new social applications and sites every time they join them, noted Fitzpatrick in a blog post.

“[The new API] makes information about the public connections between people on the Web easily available and useful,” he wrote. “You can make it easy for users to bring their existing social connections into a new website and as a result, users will spend less time rebuilding their social networks and more time giving your app the love it deserves.”

This is better than asking users to search for and add their friends - because they likely will tire of the chore if its required for very social network, he added.

The API, unveiled late last week, crawls the Web to find publicly declared relationships between people’s accounts, just like Google crawls the Web for links between pages, Fitzpatrick explained. But instead of returning links to HTML documents, the API returns data structures representing the social relationships discovered. When a user signs up for a new application, a developer can use the API to remind them who they’re friends with on other sites and ask them if they want to be friends on the new site, Google said.

Social Graph marks Google’s latest effort to make content created on social networks more easily shareable across the Web. Last month, Google and Facebook both announced plans to join the Data Portability Project, which is working on standards to allow user-generated content to be more easily shared among social networking sites.

Josh Catone, a blogger at Read Write Web, noted that the Google API could be an important tool in the data portability movement because “it allows users to find and evaluate their public social connections and take control of that information. As more and more users are beginning to suffer the effects of ’social networking fatigue,’ anything that helps automate and make easier the process of adding your existing connections to a new network is a useful tool.”

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Google releases code to help make social data portable

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