The Hotline Magazine
The Redefinition of Customer Support

Thursday September 9, 2010





Page Two




Related Materials
Below Are Excerpts From Articles Related To The One You Are Now Viewing

Creating and Sustaining Profitable SaaS Customer Relationships

The essential key to long-term success for a SaaS company is simply stated: No Churn.  Get the right customers and keep them.  But all too often, Software-as-a-Service companies fall into the bad habits of their traditional-model predecessors by focusing only on acquiring new licensee customers.  The resulting unconscious assumption that all customer relationships will automatically persist and/or be profitable is a huge and largely invisible risk for a SaaS company.   It’s time to ask some poss

More on page 568

SaaS, Success and Counting

“How many SaaS companies are there?”  At the recent On Demand conference in San Jose, I asked several key members of the SaaS community this seemingly simple question.  “Around 2,500,” one said. “Most of whom you’ve never heard of because they’re too small to attract much notice.”  Other estimates I’ve heard  in the past few weeks give the current number of SaaS players at 1,600  to 2,000.  More companies are entering the SaaS ecosystem every day, as existing software manufacturers create on dem

More on page 633

SaaS & Professional Change

Awareness of the fundamental changes driven by the shift to SaaS to the profession and practice of Customer Support, both to external Support and internal IT Help Desks, is growing.  The Help Desk Institute has asked me to write a two-part series on the subject for their SupportWorld magazine, drawing on the continuing research of The SaaS & Support Project (tm).  The first article, on “SaaS, Cloud Computing and The Redefinition of Customer Support,” explores the changes to Support when a co

More on page 719

The SaaS & Support Project Research

As the Software As A Service business model continues its rapid advance, the inherent changes for both vendor and customer are both substantial and significant.  But once again, Customer Support is in danger of getting shoved to a back burner.  I’m sure you’ve heard the usual statements of “strategies:”  “SaaS doesn’t need Support, it’s included in the subscription.” “We’re going to do it all via web self-service.”  “The social networking community will take care of it for us.”  And, of course,

More on page 562

Dollars & Sense

Return-On-Investment estimates are always a big part of any sales presentations for contact center technology suite components. " This [insert name of technology] is so powerful, it will pay for itself inside the first 5 months," says the manufacturer's sales team. You can't blame them for their enthusiasm; they know that the decision-makers want to hear about ROI. But the essential flaw in all such claims is that they are estimates based on guesstimates. The sales team is relying on the operati

More on page 62

By Mikael Blaisdell

TSSP print 300x150 Calculating the Return on Customer RetentionPreliminary results from The SaaS & Support Project’s 2010 research show that some aspects of the software industry haven’t changed much despite the accelerating shift to SaaS.  In the 1st survey for the year, Issues, TSSP participants are asked to rate the level of importance to a range of issues.  “Managing Customer Relationships in a Cost-Effective Manner” is being  overwhelmingly rated as of “Critical” concern both by all respondents and specifically by SaaS-only companies as well.  When asked to identify how their customer support teams were chartered, nearly half across the board are saying that theirs were set up as cost centers, with another significant bloc of companies landing in the “Not Sure or It’s Complicated” camp.  Less than 25% of the respondents so far have indicated that they run their customer support teams on a Profit-center basis.  But regardless of business model and accounting status, the responses indicate that a serious problem which has plagued the industry all along is still with us. Two thirds of respondents say their need for a method for calculating the costs of providing support is either Critical or Serious.   How can a company authentically determine its return on customer retention without accurately knowing the costs?

The Issues survey is still open for participation by CxO’s and/or senior Support executives & managers.  More information about the survey is available in The SaaS & Support Project section.  There are 8 questions in the survey, and it will typically take only 10-15 minutes to complete.  While all participants are asked to fully identify themselves and their companies, all information will be kept in strict confidence.  Neither your identity nor your specific answers will ever be shared with anyone else; only aggregate data will be used for reporting. Companies that fully complete the survey will receive a free copy of the Briefing on the results.

Danger:  The “Guesstimation” of Retention Costs

Question mark and money symbols SM 300x300 Calculating the Return on Customer RetentionOver the past 30 years, cost accounting in software companies has always been a troubling issue.  In the turmoil of the startup process, finding the “bandwidth” to do accurate collection and assessment of cost data is understandably difficult.  Unfortunately, this lack at the beginning has tended to set a pattern that perpetuates itself.  How much are we spending to acquire customers?  There is no generally established and accepted methodology for determining customer acquisition costs, nor for how often the process should be done.  As a result, few companies can accurately say how much it cost them to acquire a given customer.  The effect of fuzzy acquisition cost data is compounded by the near-total lack of any authentic methodology or process for measuring actual retention costs.  While there is enough revenue data so that successful companies have a view of their profitability, the lack of a solid cost foundation reduces effective decision-making to “guesstimation” when it comes to retention issues.

money symbol in maze vsm 300x217 Calculating the Return on Customer RetentionThe profits-realization strategy of traditional software companies tends to obscure the lack of authentic cost data by the large bursts of profit infusions from new sales.  The connection between retention and long-term profitability is given much less emphasis.  For SaaS companies, however, the importance of customer retention is sharply increased, and the lack of effective cost accounting methodologies and intervals is a serious threat to long-term corporate viability.

Building a Foundation for Success

Calculator and stickman SM 300x202 Calculating the Return on Customer RetentionThere have been some good articles on the variables to consider in calculating customer acquisition costs for SaaS companies, and on the importance of doing so both regularly and by customer.  Joel York’s Chaotic Flow blog has an excellent series on financial metrics for SaaS companies beginning here.  He covers the importance of and the how-to for using the major variables of the equation; I think the next step is building a methodology for calculating the costs associated with all aspects of customer service, support and success.

For many years, my standard Assessment procedure for technology firms has included a calculation for the real costs of providing support & service to a company’s customers.  Using that experience as a base, I’m now putting together an initiative to develop a standard methodology and template for SaaS companies to use in calculating their costs for the full spectrum of customer retention efforts and resources.  If you’d like to be a part of that effort, please call or email me as soon as possible.  This topic will also be discussed in The SaaS & Support Forum on LinkedIn.

no churn TM Calculating the Return on Customer Retention“It’s what you don’t know about your customer relationships that can cause you to lose them.”

–The SaaS Customer Retention QuickStat