Every day, in too many companies, valuable customer relationships are being put at risk through confusion, inefficiency and disconnects between the Strategy, Process, People and Technology aspects of the customer contact center on one side, and misalignment with the overall profits-realization model of the company on the other. What MB&A offers is the ability to use the “big picture” to bring all of the details into harmony.
From Cost Center to Profitability Engine
Mikael Blaisdell & Associates have been analyzing, designing, building and re-engineering effective customer contact and relationship management centers for technology manufacturers for many years. We know the strategy, process, structure, people and technology of support and service, and how to migrate old-style cost-center groups into modern retention and revenue generators.

Optimizing a customer contact center begins with a thorough Assessment. The deliverable is a Report, defining the Current-State of the center and providing actionable recommendations for operational improvement. The next step is the preparation of a Future-State view, identifying options for revenue enhancement, to significantly increase the return on the investment the company has made in the center and its team. The blueprint created in this phase will describe the procedure for transitioning the department to where it can be managed as an authentic profit center, generating strategic-level profits for the company. The final phase is guiding the execution of the plan.
For more information on how MB&A can assist you to optimize your customer contact center resources to increase your overall sustainable profitability level and customer retention, please join us for a complimentary Office Hours discussion.
Revised: August 31, 2009










Since the beginnings of the software industry, Sales has claimed to own the customer relationship. Under the traditional premised-based model, the connection between company and customer is almost invariably transactional in nature, an exchange of up-front money for software licenses. Sales gets their commissions, and has but little interest in the customer afterward. The burden of extracting value from their technology purchase remains entirely on the customer, although software manufacturers have grudgingly been compelled to offer various forms of Break/Fix support. But while the SaaS/Cloud tsunami has swept away most of the traditional need for customer support, SaaS ISV management should think hard before rejoicing. The succeeding waves of change are redefining the product along with the nature of the transaction, opening the door to a new ownership of the customer and the relationship product — and that new owner could well be external to the company.
The accelerating shift to SaaS brings far more than just a new way of selling the same old technological features and functionality. The growing demand for interoperability will result in the plug & play ability to rapidly assemble modules from different manufacturers to create application suites. What is only starting to be recognized is that SaaS applications under this scenario are inevitably headed towards commoditization, where the features of product A are recognizably much the same as those of product B. The prices customers will be willing to pay for those module software licenses will decrease as competition exerts its force, and the remaining barriers to migration, almost eliminated by the removal of the required up-front bulk investment, are necessarily falling fast. The future profit picture for the sellers of software licenses is bleak indeed if code is all they have to offer.
The demise of the old bulk up-front profits-realization strategy took away much of the ability or motivation for a software manufacturer to field large sales forces. When the new strategy calls for the emphasis on sales via the web, where the contact between salesman and customer is minimized and the profit is both relationship-based and spread out over the long term, the old pattern of ownership is lost. Who is accountable now for maintaining that ongoing relationship, and whose performance review is based upon successful retention? In most SaaS companies, the accurate answer is: no one.
There is an ownership vacuum, and it will be filled by someone. Perhaps that someone will be a new form of what was once a channel partner, capitalizing on both proximity to the customer and specific expertise in their vertical. Or it could be that Support finally comes of age within the company, reinventing itself as an authentic profession. The key to success in this fast-paced game is in addressing what the SaaS sea-change has not touched, the burden of responsibility for making productive and profitable use of the technology. That value, not the code, is what the customer truly wants to buy, and will pay well for.
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