Our advice: A goal of almost any business is to serve more customers, better, and more profitably. In a traditionally high-touch business, whether B-to-B (such as management consulting) or business-to-consumer (such as a doctor's office), this is accomplished by creating opportunities to spend time with more prospects and more customers, to constantly add value for them, while simultaneously striving to reduce the cost associated with the service delivery. Customer Web portals can help accomplish all three objectives:
The value that a customer receives in a typical high-touch business can be depicted as a bell curve, with "value received" on the Y-axis and the "time sequence of touch-points" on the X-axis. While the high-value touch-points toward the center of the service cycle are hard to replace by the use of a portal, since they require the personal expertise of the service provider, many of the touch-points before and after these high-value touch-points can at least partially be offloaded to a self-service portal.
Portal Features
What makes a customer Web portal effective, efficient, and useful are some or all of the following features:
Critical Success Factors
Here's a checklist of the most-critical aspects to consider when implementing a customer Web portal:
Stakeholder Advantages
The various internal and external organizational stakeholders are affected as follows:
High-tech and high-touch don't have to be mutually exclusive. Instead, implemented properly, they leverage each other's strengths, and support one another in areas where the other may present such opportunities. While technology won't replace the human touch, it can and does enable humans to serve others more quickly and efficiently.
--Sanjay Anand
Sourabh Hajela, TAC Expert, has more than 15 years of experience in strategy, planning, and delivery of IT capability to maximize shareholder value for corporations in major industries across North America, Europe, and Asia. He is a member of the faculty at the University of Phoenix, where he teaches courses in strategy, marketing, E-business, and leadership. Most recently, he was VP and the head of E-business with Prudential Financial.
Humayun Beg, TAC Thought Leader, has more than 20 years of experience in business IT management, technology deployment, and risk management. He has significant experience in all aspects of systems management, software development, and project management, and has held key positions in directing major IT initiatives and projects.
Sanjay Anand, TAC Expert, has more than 20 years of IT and business-process-management experience as a strategic adviser, certified consultant, speaker, and published author. More than 100 personal clients, large and small, have included companies from a diverse array of industries and geographies, from academia to technology and from Asia to the Americas. Often referred to as a "consultant's consultant" for training and mentoring skills. He is author of books "The Sarbanes-Oxley Guide for Finance and Information Technology Professionals" and "J.D. Edwards OneWorld: A Beginner's Guide."