Customer service transformation for one of the leading steel service centre organisations in India

    Delivered significant improvements in customer service to the client by implementation of key account management framework and supply chain management planning tool
    Customer service transformation for one of the leading steel service centre organisations in India

    Highlights

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    224 per cent improvement in key account management (KAM) maturity index.

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    87 per cent improvement in complaint resolution turn-around time.

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    14 per cent improvement in customer excellence score.

    Client challenge

    The client aspired to be the industry benchmark in customer service and sought assistance in the following areas:
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    Identification of key processes and technologies for service excellence leading to enhanced customer experience

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    Strategic customer management approach focused on key account management

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    Phased roadmap and change management plan to ensure sustainability

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    • Lack of structured customer-wise growth plan and key account management
    • High turn-around-time (TAT) to resolve customer complaints
    • Lack of digital tools for front-end teams and customers to track order status.
    • Refine the make-to-stock strategy and campaign plan to better align sales efforts with production forecasts and improve efficiency.

        

    Middle-office challenge
    • Low delivery performance (On Time In Full (OTIF))
    • Frequent non-availability of raw material
    • End-to-end (E2E) manual supply chain operations
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    • Lack of a dedicated customer experience (CX) focussed department
    • Sales order execution opacity impacting customer commitment

    KPMG in India’s approach

    KPMG in India deployed a cross-functional team, comprising members of customer and operations – commercial, digital solutions and strategy, and design thinking, to transform front, middle, and backend processes, identify automation opportunities and implement supply chain management (SCM) planning tool network-wide. This was done in three phases.

    Phase 1: As-is assessment

    Conducted diagnostic workshops across plant locations and interacted with various customers to assess:

    • Customer requirements, journeys, and friction areas
    • Client and competition customer experience performance
    • Sales approach
    • Complaint resolution approach
    • Key account management
    • Supply chain management
    • Digital and IT capabilities
    Phase1

    Phase 2: ‘To-be’ process design

    Phase2

    Redesigned customer journey and key processes impacting customer experience, including:

    • Supply chain management (SCM) process and OTIF methodology
    • Complaint management playbook
    • Key account management (KAM) framework document
    • Customer feedback management framework
    • C-SAT survey
    • CX survey template
    • Prioritised digital interventions to improve customer experience, including SCM planning tool, ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning), MES (Manufacturing Execution System) and WMS (Warehouse Management System)
    • Sustenance framework including standard operating procedures (SOPs), roles and rewards

    Phase 3: Implementation

    Drove implementation by PMO (Project management office)/execution, involving:

    • Setup of new central customer delight vertical
    • Implementation of key account management (KAM) framework, redesigning of SCM processes, complaint resolution processes across all plant locations
    • Deployment of SCM planning tool across the organisation
    Implementation

    Result

    • 224 per cent improvement in key account management (KAM) maturity index
    • 87 per cent improvement in complaint resolution turn-around time
    • 25 per cent improvement in digital maturity score
    • OTIF improvement of 61 per cent in plant one and 21 per cent improvement in plant two
    • 14 per cent improvement in customer excellence score

    Why KPMG Connected Enterprise?

    The focus on customer excellence through digitalisation and continuous improvement of processes rendered KPMG Connected Enterprise an appropriate framework for addressing the client’s challenge. The project was driven by the importance of the customer satisfaction to achieve operational excellence and entailed application of the KPMG Connected Enterprise framework, the six pillars of customer experience framework, the key account management framework, and the curated ‘7R’ framework for enhanced business-to-business customer experience. The project was powered by five of the eight capabilities of the connected enterprise framework: digitally enabled technology architecture, insight-driven strategies and actions, aligned and empowered workforce, experience-centricity by design, and responsive operations and supply chain.

    Overview of the case

    Client

    One of the leading steel service centre organisation in India.

    Client

    Challenge

    Customer service transformation.

    Challenge

    Outcome

    KPMG in India identified automation opportunities and implemented SCM planning tool network-wide, yielding significant customer service improvements for the client, including 224 per cent improvement in key account management (KAM) maturity index, 87 per cent improvement in complaint resolution turn-around time, and 25 per cent improvement in digital maturity score.

    Outcome

    Key Contact

    Jeffry Jacob

    Partner, Business Consulting

    KPMG in India

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