Windows Presentation Foundation scores with SaaS CRM Vendor
By Don Burnett
This is a great story for Rich Internet Applications, and Smart Client Applications in the Software as Service arena for WPF based Windows Applications and their incredible win over competing products outside the web browser, which can be chalked up to a better User Experience with WPF.
My Preface:
Now this is what I like to read at ZDNET!! One of their Blogger's Phillip Wainewright has a great article about a CRM vendor who has it has cut its customer acquisition costs by a massive 80 percent. How did they do it? Answer: abandoning the browser was the key to achieving this remarkable turnaround.
Quoting the article:
"SaaS CRM vendor Entellium this week released a new smart client version and said it will phase out its existing browser-based product over the next 12 months. It’s doing so, I can exclusively reveal, because of business metrics (which I’ll quote below) that show its smart client product — called Rave — achieving some kickass conversion and retention rates in the past year since first release [disclosure: Entellium is a former client and I have a small investment in the company]...
Like its browser-based predecessor, Rave is still based on a fully hosted, multi-tenant application infrastructure-in-the-cloud, but the user experience executes on the desktop using Microsoft’s Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF). That has allowed Entellium to pioneer an approach to contact management and sales and marketing automation that’s tailored to the get-things-done needs of the small businesses that make up its target market."
Further they go on to say:
" Three characteristics in particular combine to make Rave stand out against other on-demand CRM packages in the market:
- Liquid interface. Rave fully exploits all the client horsepower that WPF delivers, and the ease and visual feedback when rearranging information on the screen has to be seen to be believed. I’ve pasted a screenshot below the jump, but a static image just doesn’t do it justice. This is the first on-demand product I’ve seen where the client interface is so fluid, you need video to really convey how it looks. The purpose is not to look ‘cool’ though, it’s so sales users can organize the screens how they want them and get down to work as fast as possible.
- Gamer-influenced design. The product borrows proven techniques from games software — but again, the intent is serious not frivolous — to get users started quickly and keep them engaged. For more on this, see my post from April last year, Gaming comes to business software, plus this New York Times article on Why Work Is Looking More Like a Video Game.
- Results focus. The entire user experience is built around the core premise of “How should I spend my time most profitably?”. For example, a new analytics module lets users compare key metrics to industry benchmarks to help decide where they most need to focus attention. "
and further...
" Entellium’s CEO Paul Johnston has given me a private peek at a string of metrics collected over the past year of selling Rave and the difference is stunning. It’s proving three times easier to close prospects on Rave than it was on the browser-based version, with two in every five prospects closed. The sales cycle is twice as fast, down to an average 11 days. Churn is down massively to low single figures. Win rates against Rave’s main competitors, Salesforce.com and ACT, are above 90%. And most tellingly of all, the direct marketing cost to acquire each customer is a stunning 82% lower, at less than $1,000. Not surprisingly, Rave has now overtaken the browser-based eSuite product as a percentage of new acquisitions."
and what do they attribute to that change that makes the difference?
"Johnston ascribes a large part of Rave’s appeal to its downloadable client. “The smart client approach enables a SaaS distribution model you can’t replicate with a browser-only product because [with a browser-based product] there is nothing to ’ship’,” he explained. Entellium will exploit that advantage, using digital retailers as its core distribution channel for Rave.
Interestingly, the realization that the client download was the key element in Rave’s better close rate came through experience of selling the product rather than any advance plan. But once it became evident, it became a no-brainer to phase out the existing browser-based product in favor of a new Rave version, introduced this week. Existing eSuite customers will have a free migration path and are able to use Rave in parallel with the old interface, allowing them to move users across gradually. All will have to have made the move within the next twelve months, when the old interface gets turned off — although the browser will still be used for certain functions."
His closing comments (WOW I have been looking forward to case studies like this)...
“The industry is somewhat ‘deer in headlamp’ about the browser,” Johnston told me."..."“Our assessment is that there is a role for the browser but it is a minimized role. We do have some task- and role-specific functions that will be delivered in the browser when rational use of a browser makes sense.” Examples include a systems administrator setting up users or a CEO quickly checking static metrics in a dashboard."..."But the core application needs a smart client, he said. “What we wanted to do for the CRM experience could not be delivered purely through the browser."...
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Don's Final Thoughts...
This is some major news in a very competitive market about exactly what WPF is bringing to the table as a smart client (R.I.A. application) outside of the web browser. In a few words of my own... "An Incredible User Experience that beats the pants off of a web application."



