The Hotline Magazine
The Redefinition of Customer Support

Thursday September 9, 2010






Thoughts And Wisdom

 
When the profit from selling access to a technology completely depends upon the continuance of the relationship, the true nature of the “product” being sold becomes about the relationship much more than the technology.
 
 
Mikael Blaisdell -- (The SaaS & Support Project Report)

 

 

 

Through the Lens

The Broken Customer Support Group

There are vital clues and indications in the search strings that bring readers to The HotLine Magazine from around the world every day.  “What is the Definition of Customer Support?”  “What is the profitability of customer retention?” “Define the SaaS support model.”  “Usual customer retention rate for a SaaS company?”  “How to profit from SaaS support?”   All of these are indicators of the same fundamental problem.  Every so often, an inquiry comes along that goes to the heart of the issue and begs for an immediate reply.  “Fixing a broken customer support group” is a perfect example, prompting two immediate questions in return.  What do you mean by “broken?”  And how would you define “fixing?”  Almost invariably, the source of serious problems with a customer support group is external to the group itself; they are inevitably strategic errors.  Until the senior management team and the support executive or manager understand each other, and work together, producing a truly effective and lasting resolution for the broken group is unfortunately unlikely.

Defining “broken”

resource equation web small The Broken Customer Support GroupThe typical definition of “broken” when applied to a customer support group is expressed as “the customers are screaming.”  The usual pain point is transactional responsiveness; customers are having to wait unreasonably (in their view) long times before being heard or until issues are resolved.  This scenario is almost always due to a simple lack of resources, or mis-deployment of those that are available.  The support staffing equation is straightforward: if you want calls/cases answered and/or resolved within a particular time frame, the calculation can tell you very precisely how many staff members you must have ready to respond.  Support professionals all know this.  Senior management members typically do not; the business and operational case must therefore be presented to them in order to get the appropriate allocation for staffing.

Strategy Process People Tech 300x117 The Broken Customer Support GroupBut the ‘broken“ descriptor may also be applied where the senior management team perceives that the support group is out of step strategically with the rest of the company.  Here, too, the communications issue is often a key factor both ways.  If the CEO and other senior executives do not have at least a basic understanding of how contact centers work to balance demand and resources, their ability to make effective decisions on overall customer retention policy and center budget allocations will be hampered.  If the Support leadership cannot talk comfortably about customer acquisition costs as investments, and show how customer retention costs are factored in to assure a continuing and profitable income stream, they are unlikely to be taken seriously by senior management.  The two sides of the conversation will end up talking past each other, and the probable outcome will not be good for anyone in the long term.

Developing a Complete Resolution

If the immediate problem is about a lack of resources and/or inefficient organizational structure / deployment, there are several available options for easing the pain.  Senior management readers should start with this brief article on staffing levels, and look at this case study (free registration & log-in required) where reorganization had dramatic results.   While there are effective steps that can be taken to bring improvement in the short-term, developing a complete resolution will require comprehensive effort.  The prerequisite is getting an accurate view of the situation, covering both strategic and tactical factors.    With the facts in hand, establishing an appropriate global policy regarding customer retention and profitability is something senior management must do, together with setting a workable budget.  It will then be up to the support team to effectively apply that budget towards fulfilling the retention and profitability goals.

no churn TM The Broken Customer Support Group“It’s what you don’t know about your customer relationships that can cause you to lose them.”

–The SaaS Customer Retention QuickStat

TSSP print 300x150 The SaaS & Support ProjectThe SaaS & Support Project is about enhancing company Profitability and Customer Retention as a practical matter in the SaaS / On Demand / Cloud era.  It’s about the answers to the most vital challenges and questions faced by every CEO and C-Level officer.  Past the hype and the theory, who really “owns” the ongoing relationship with the customer, and is accountable for the results?  How are those owners to be compensated?  What are the “Best Practices” in satisfying and retaining customers over the years?  Which approaches have other companies tried, and with what results?

The SaaS & Support Project is also about the Redefinition of the profession and practice of Customer Support.   Even if you’re not yet ready to transition your company into the On Demand community, there is still a huge benefit to be realized from going beyond what we all know has never worked to anyone’s real economic advantage.  And if you are already a player in the SaaS ecosystem, the Project is about the way to win.

Membership

The advantages of becoming a member of The SaaS & Support Project include:

  • A copy of the Project Report 2009, and for 2010 when it is published
  • Access to restricted content on The HotLine Magazine as it is developed:
    • Articles
    • Case studies
    • Job descriptions / organizational charts
    • Compensation plan examples
    • Surveys, etc.
  • The opportunity to ask questions & participate in discussions as the Project unfolds.

The cost for a yearly individual membership is $95.  For information about Corporate or team memberships, and/or sponsorship opportunities, please contact Mikael Blaisdell.  To become a member, click here.

Published: June 24, 2009

Revised: April 9, 2010