Home arrow Blog arrow 2008 arrow 02 arrow 05 arrow Using EDM to effectively allocate resources
5th February 2008

Using EDM to effectively allocate resources

James Taylor Posted by James Taylor

Continuing my series on using EDM to manage in a recession, allocating resources effectively. In a recession resources are, almost always, constrained and so the proper and effective allocation of resources can be critical. Enterprise Decision Management, EDM, is particularly useful in allocating resources to customers. This plays out in a couple of key ways.

Firstly, think about all the occasions when staff have to make judgment calls about customers and whether to allocate resources to them or not. When someone returns something without a receipt, when someone asks for a discount or a special privilege. All too often companies rely on front line staff to make these decisions unassisted or only provide tools to access data, something front line staff rarely have the time or skills to do. EDM can be used to automate these decisions, applying the rules established by the company and, in particular, the rules about who is and who is not a valuable customer. Predictive analytics can also be used to apply those resources where they will have the most impact. Instead of relying on how a customer looks or how pushy they are, staff allocate resources systematically and effectively. Check out this story about returns, for example.

For organizations that have loyalty programs a similar argument can be made. The purpose of a loyalty program is, of course, to make customers more loyal and more profitable. Allocating resources purely on the basis of prior behavior, however, is very inefficient. Using EDM you can apply your resources where they will make a difference. You can make an offer to someone that will make them more likely to become a better customer, you can target loyalty rewards to someone whose behavior you predict will change when you do so. You can change and adapt the rules of your loyalty program to allocate resources effectively as conditions change and so on. Applying more sophisticated decision making logic to loyalty programs can boost returns and allocate resources more effectively.

The first two examples were focused on customers but there is potential on the supply side too. Automating decisions about suppliers and reordering can ensure that the best value suppliers are used and that order volumes and timing are optimal for profitability. Ensuring that resources are not wasted on unnecessary stock or poorly performing suppliers can squeeze expense from your supply chain.

Finally you may feel you don’t know exactly what will work as the economy changes. Adaptive control and constant challenging of what you believe to be your most effective approach is key. As the economy changes and people respond to those changes, your challenger strategies help ensure that you are using the most effective approaches.

EDM brings rigor and analytics to operational decision making and so can really improve the allocation of sparse resources.

Related posts:

  1. How to prioritize the use of EDM in a recession
  2. Using EDM to keep loyalty where you want it
  3. Using EDM to personalize your business
  4. Using EDM and adaptive control to respond to uncertainty
  5. Using EDM to thrive in a recession

This entry was posted by James Taylor on Tuesday, February 5th, 2008 at 11:30 am and is filed under Adaptive Control, Business Rules, Customer Experience, Decision Management, Predictive Analytics. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

There is currently one response to “Using EDM to effectively allocate resources”

Why not let us know what you think by adding your own comment?

  1. 1 On February 6th, 2008, Nathan Jones said:

    Hi James,

    Thanks for taking the recession idea on. I thought the cost control article was very useful, the examples are real-life enough to get a good feel of what to do to sell EDM to business people.
    How have you found the process of thinking about EDM in this way? Is it constraining or creative?

    Cheers
    Nathan

Leave a Reply


First time on the Smart (Enough) Systems blog?
Check out the First Time User's page, subscribe to the blog feed, buy the book or visit the Wiki.

Related posts:

  1. The power of decision automation - CapOne’s Card Lab
  2. Using EDM to improve first call resolution
  3. Using EDM to personalize your business
  4. Using EDM for ‘Long Tail’ Algorithms
  5. Here’s how one company is using EDM to improve healthcare

Related Posts

Recent Posts