Welcome | Sign In
CRMBuyer.com
Enterprise Apps

RightNow Rearchitects CRM Suite With Version 8

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
RightNow Rearchitects CRM Suite With Version 8

In addition to a newly architected interface, RightNow version 8 includes three vertical industry applications -- one targeting the business-to-business sector, one geared toward the business-to-consumer sector, and one for the public sector.


To thrive in today’s highly competitive business environment, you need innovative approaches to attract and retain customers. Click here to see how Salesforce.com, West Marine, and VForce-AAA Ohio use LiveOps to optimize their customer experiences.

RightNow Technologies (Nasdaq: RNOW) will be introducing version 8 of its CRM suite next Monday in conjunction with the company's eighth annual user conference and the 2006 Gartner (NYSE: IT) Customer Relationship Management Summit. RightNow 8 will be available in December 2006.

Representing a US$25 million, two-year investment, version 8 has a completely rearchitected user interface, RightNow CEO and founder Greg Gianforte told CRM Buyer. "We have moved away from browser-based AJAX technology to smart client technology. This is the platform on which we will take RightNow to the next level of development."

In practical terms, Gianforte compared the changeover to the difference between the desktop version of Outlook and the Web-based version of the product.

Click here for LiveOps

Knowledge Placement

Three new industry applications are also included in RightNow version 8: one targeting the B2B (business-to-business) sector, one geared toward the B2C (business-to-consumer) sector, and one for the public sector. These verticals, Gianforte said, provide the groundwork for additional industry sector applications that will be introduced throughout 2007.

Another key change is the inclusion of several new features that he said were designed with the goal of placing knowledge at the point of customer Learn how SugarCRM will improve your business. Free Trial. Click here. interaction.

Customer Experience Designer

The Customer Experience Designer is a combination modular workflow engine and graphical design tool.

It allows business users to design, deliver and modify processes that span sales , marketing and customer service. Examples include complaint management, new customer welcomes and online product registration.

RightNow Feedback

Like most feedback applications on the market now, RightNow Feedback allows users to capture and measure customer opinion at all channel points and in real time. Companies can then take appropriate actions based on the feedback.

RightNow offers as an example a company that can route customer comments on products to design teams, who can then contact customers to solicit more-detailed information that may be incorporated into future products.

Packaged templates can gather, monitor and act on customer satisfaction and service issues, or collect insights from a firm's own employees.

Gianforte noted that customer feedback software -- once a niche, stand-alone product -- is rapidly becoming a mainstream module for CRM operations.

"Enterprise feedback management is growing 35 percent a year annually, and both Gartner and JupiterResearch have begun tracking it as a separate category," he pointed out.

RightNow Analytics

New analytics functionality includes a Report Design Center -- a drag-and-drop tool that enables users to assemble and present information such as tables, charts and fields in customizable formats.

Another new feature is historical trending, which allows users to collect, analyze and compare current and projected information with historical data, and to compare sales pipelines, lead conversion rate trends, customer satisfaction rankings and other performance metrics.

Workspace Designer

A drag-and-drop layout design feature, Workspace Designer allows users to customize their desktop workspaces by adding, deleting, moving or changing fields, tabs, analytics and tasks.

Packaged templates include role-based sales, marketing and customer service profiles at the executive, manager, sales rep and agent level. Also, role-relevant analytical information can be embedded into profiles that can be used in customer interactions.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Erika Morphy


More by Erika Morphy

Palm Beats Itself to a Pulp
March 19, 2010
Palm's inability to excite consumers over the Pre is a colossal marketing failure, suggested Patrick Gilbert, CEO of 4Smartphone. "This is not a tech or design issue -- the problem is they haven't been able to reach out to users or the developer community," he said.
Survey Totes Up Value of Excellent Online Customer Service
March 19, 2010
There's gold in the e-commerce hills for companies willing to take their customer service to a higher level. Consumers are willing to pay almost 11 percent more to get excellent customer service along with their purchases, according to an Ovum survey, yet few e-tailers meet that standard. Heading a list put together by StellaService, which commissioned the study, are Zappos.com, Diapers.com and BlueNile.com.
Twitter Flies the Coop
March 16, 2010
Twitter has found a way to flit around to other Web locales through a feature called "@anywhere." Amazon, eBay, The Huffington Post, YouTube and others will be able to open a Twitter window to users, allowing them to send and receive messages without leaving the site. Social media marketers are salivating at the possibilities.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network