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ITProPortal: 2016 predictions: What’s next in the world of big data and CRM?

By Craig Zawada

December 8, 2015

As companies invest in CRM and CPQ solutions, big data has become a priority for many organisations as the main vehicle to drive revenue growth. In 2016, we will see changes in the big data industry as more companies use predictive and prescriptive analytics to stand out from their competitors.

1. 2016 is the year of predictive and prescriptive analytics

In 2016, organisations will realise that data has uses far beyond seeing what happened in the past with descriptive analytics. They will use analytics, aided by data science, to develop prescriptive actions, including what customers are most likely to buy and what prices will win business. Companies will realise the benefits of these analytics and identify actions they can take. These prescriptive actions will set a path to drive meaningful revenue and margin growth, and deliver material and measurable business impact.

2. Chief Revenue Officers and Chief Insight Officers are the next big things

Chief Revenue Officers will take on an expanded leadership role in 2016 as companies realise they need an executive specifically responsible for profitability. This role will incorporate both sales and marketing functions in an organisation, uniting business goals and removing obstacles that are inhibiting the organisation’s ability to drive revenue growth.

In 2016, Chief Insight Officers – versus Chief Data Officers – will emerge as crucial leaders in big data compilation and as drivers of actionable insights that generate meaningful revenue growth, and expand and sustain profitability.

3. CRM and CPQ are 2016’s dynamic duo.

For years, CRM has been a functionally-oriented tool, driven by process automation, forecasting and reporting, and designed for sales leaders to keep tabs on their sales teams. It’s been a tool many sales teams despise.

In 2016, CRM will evolve as CPQ – configure, price, quote – adds capabilities that help sales teams drive real revenue and profit growth. By enabling teams to configure offers for customers with data-driven pricing, they can respond quickly with quotes developed in minutes, not weeks or hours. We’ll see a shift from CRM oversight to CRM productivity, resulting in revenue and margin benefits for companies.

We’ll also see CPQ and price optimisation gain more awareness. The new and emerging secret in CPQ is the magic “P” that incorporates data-driven price optimisation. 2016 will be the turning point for smart pricing as CRM and CPQ converge so marketing and sales teams are far better positioned to generate revenue growth.

4. 2016 will be a challenging year for meeting sales quotas

Forecasts indicate that sales growth will be sluggish in 2016 based on a broad range of global factors: China’s economic slowdown, industry layoffs, depressed oil prices and a low GDP, plus the continued volatility in global currencies, raw materials and global competition. In 2016, companies will deal with a simultaneous barrage of these factors, with dramatic pricing deltas beyond typical expectations. We expect to see the broad population face facts about paying off debts from the 2008 crash, leading to less spending across the economy.

In 2016, procurement organisations will increase their negotiating pressure and hammer teams to lower prices. Organisations that don’t use data-driven predictive and prescriptive analytics to advance selling will find themselves behind more agile competitors. By using CRM systems enabled with CPQ, organisations will be ahead of the pack and winning deals.

5. Companies relying on oil and oil-based derivatives to produce products will continue to experience increased pricing pressure

Companies in the chemicals and transportation industries consistently deal with volatility in managing their businesses. With the 2015 downward spiral in oil and gas, we expect 2016 will be another challenging year.

Suppliers should be prepared for continued pressure from customers demanding lower prices when they know input costs have decreased. Suppliers need to understand each customer’s profitability and know where they can lower prices – not margins. Smart suppliers will selectively maintain price points, while keeping customers profitable and competitive with other companies.

6. Commodity food prices will fluctuate even more, as oil prices remain depressed

In 2016, we’ll continue to deal with volatility in the food industry, which continues to be inextricably linked to depressed oil prices. Uncertainty caused by the actions of global players, including China and Russia, will likely be a factor. Successful companies will identify the path to profitability using data science and prescriptive analytics to align product, demand and availability, generate meaningful revenue growth, and expand and sustain profitability.

7. Currency volatility and instability will continue to create difficulties for global food suppliers

As companies deal with customers in countries where global currency swings are the norm, they must be prepared to take advantage of these fast-changing markets and protect their profitability. Prescriptive, data-driven analytics will play a key role in enabling them to realise their own revenue and profit potential amidst the chaos.

8. The age of scientific pricing is here to stay

In 2015, there has been a lot of talk about dynamic pricing, from ride-sharing services, sporting events, and even governments using it to manage traffic and parking congestion. In 2016, we expect to see broader adoption of dynamic pricing as companies strive to better balance supply and demand, and get comfortable with the available data and technology needed to adopt this practice. Consumers are also becoming more accepting of companies that use these practices, as long as the bounds of price variability remain reasonable.

By: Craig Zawada, PROS Chief Visionary Officer

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