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| CUSTOMER:
The Seattle Times Co. |
Headquarters
Seattle, Washington
Type of Business
Press, Advertising, Circulation, and
Marketing
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Consider what makes a newspaper successful and you’ll
likely think of scooping the competition.Great newspapers do this, but
to be truly successful, they have to perform in advertising sales,too.
So, when The Seattle Times Co. realized it was losing advertising
revenues because it was losing track of its advertisers, the company
began looking for a solution.
“If a rep moved from one territory to another, the new
rep coming in wasn’t given a whole lot of information. They started from
scratch, without knowing who had advertised with us in the past,”says
Brian Jonas, advertising CRM administrator for the company. “We wanted
an approachable and intuitive tool that sales reps could use to capture
who they were talking to and share thatinformation.”
After looking at three-dozen products, including
GoldMine, Onyx, and Siebel, Jonas discovered Sage SalesLogix. He got in
touch with a Sage Software business partner. “We decided Sage SalesLogix
would be easily understood and would enable us to share information,”
Jonas says.
Adams adds, “They liked the flexibility Sage SalesLogix
provided and the way it could be customized to meet their exact needs.
Plus, they could work with Sage SalesLogix very much like they did with
ACT! by Sage. That combination of flexibility, familiarity, and ease of
use really sold them on Sage SalesLogix.”
Sage SalesLogix
KnowledgeSync Brings Advertisers Back
In addition to the problem of salespeople moving
territories, Seattle Times Co. was faced with the complication of
tracking occasional advertisers. These businesses place seasonal or
special interest ads only during certain times of the year. “Many of
these were falling through the cracks until we rolled out Sage
SalesLogix,” Jonas says.
To address the organization’s unique business, Sage also
recommended the use of Sage SalesLogix KnowledgeSync, which provides
automatic business alerts and notifications. Sage created check boxes in
Sage SalesLogix for seasonal advertisers so that 60 days before their
advertising time, the appropriate salesperson receives a reminder to
contact the customer. “That’s been a huge help!” Jonas adds.
Sage SalesLogix KnowledgeSync also
generates alerts in Sage SalesLogix for advertisers who have been
inactive for a time, encouraging sales reps to get in touch with them.
“Sales reps previously had that
information available to them through business system reports, but they
didn’t look at them, as there were too many,” Jonas says. “The simple,
easy e-mail alerts that we’re generating from Sage SalesLogix have been
very well received. Reps say, ‘It’s great. This is just what I need.’ I
know we’ve saved a lot of advertisers from going inactive. It’s
difficult to track that, but that surely translates into revenue.”
“ The simple, easy
e-mail alerts that we’re generating
from Sage SalesLogix
have been very well received.
Reps say, ‘It’s
great. This is just what I need...”
Only the Beginning
Jonas has long been involved in helping The Seattle
Times Co. apply technology to its sales processes, but his background is
as a salesperson. In doing so, he said, “I’ve always taken my sales
background and said, ‘You run the machine this way, but here’s how you
sell with the machine.’ Here’s what you do to make a sale using this
program.”
He expects to be applying Sage SalesLogix to the
company’s business processes for a long time to come. The Seattle Times
Co. currently has nearly 130 people using Sage SalesLogix and will soon
expand that number to about 150. It’s just the beginning of a four-year
plan the company has for its CRM initiative with Sage SalesLogix.
But, that plan is built on a series of little
successes. And little successes—like small, occasional advertisers—can
add up to a lot. Jonas sums it up well: “Sage SalesLogix stops those
little disasters from happening.”
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