In 2009, The SaaS & Support Project research revealed some fascinating insights – and a range of issues that ought to be of serious concern to senior management teams and support professionals alike. The research of the Project continues in 2010, and will involve three separate surveys. The Issues survey looks into the importance of specific issues and initiatives involved in SaaS/Cloud customer support. The Strategy & People survey, examines how companies define their products and structure their organizations to maintain the ongoing customer relationships. The third survey, which will open later, will gather data about the process and technology of SaaS customer support departments. Participation in the surveys is free, and respondents will receive a free copy of the individual Briefing for the surveys they complete. Participants who complete all three of the short surveys will also receive a free copy of the 2010 Report of the Project.
About the Strategy & People Survey
There are only 12 questions in the Strategy & People survey, plus two optional additional queries if you have either of two specific roles in your company’s organizational chart. The first two questions ask for company and respondent identification. (Remember that all information you give will be kept strictly confidential.) Questions 3 & 4 ask you to indicate which revenue channels are in use by your company and which, if any, group “owns” the ongoing customer relationship. The next three questions ask for your self-evaluation of the scope and quality of delivery of your company’s support services, and the utilization level of your support team members. The remaining questions are about your organizational structure, numbers of people (FTE’s) assigned by role, responsibilities, hiring qualifications and the measurement methodologies you use for the overall group. If you have either a Customer Retention or a Customer Success role in your organization, the last two (optional) queries are about how those roles are defined. The whole survey should take less than 15 minutes. To download a copy of the survey form to use as a worksheet, click here. (Free registration as a subscriber is required for downloading, and you must be logged in.)
To begin the Strategy & People survey, click here.
The Issues Survey:
There are 8 questions in the Issues survey, and it will typically take only 10-15 minutes to complete. Participants are asked to fully identify themselves and their companies, and then to rate the importance of specific issues and initiatives in four categories: Strategy, Process, People and Technology. A fifth category is just for those companies who are transitioning from traditional models of product distribution to SaaS. The final question asks the participants to indicate their level of interest in some specific resource types. To respond to the questions, a pull-down menu is provided for fast completion. 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. To begin the survey, click here.
To begin the Issues survey, click here.
TSSP Survey Methodology
For all of The SaaS & Support Project research surveys, participants are required to fully identify themselves and their companies so that we may provide them with the results of the surveys and to ensure accuracy of the data. Only aggregate data will be used in reporting, and all information will be kept in strict confidence. Neither your identity nor your specific answers will ever be shared with anyone else.
The Benefits of Participation
Everyone who fully completes a survey will receive a copy of the Briefing that describes and analyzes the results of that survey. There will be three surveys in all from The SaaS & Support Project this year — those who fully complete all of them will get a free copy of each individual Briefing -and- the end-of-year Project Report for 2010 as well.) Most of the questions include a space for comments, where participants can suggest other issues of concern and/or explain their responses as well.
Revised: July 26, 2010










It’s a widely accepted business and leadership premise that in general, you get what you pay for or reward people to do. While in theory, everyone in the SaaS vendor organization should be focused on preserving customer relationships, the actuality can be quite different. The “relationship” may have many definitions. To the Support and/or Training personnel, whose job performance metrics tend to be very specific and incident/result related, the relationship that counts is the human connection between individuals rather than the economic one between the companies. This can easily result in a scenario where the employees of the customer company are very pleased with the day to day relationship they’re receiving from their SaaS vendor even as their senior management is making the decision to end it. How did this happen? Assumptions were made, went unquestioned and the result was neglect. The only people that had a connection to the customer’s senior management were the Sales team — who have long since turned their attention elsewhere in pursuit of new sales.
But isn’t Sales measured on renewals, and therefore incented to keep relationships fresh in anticipation of the day when the contract comes up again? Although technically correct in theory, in actuality there is often an assumption that Support will be looking after the customer from day to day and that all Sales will have to do is to come back into the picture to finalize the renewal. The stage is set for failure, because the crucial message to the customer’s Management about the value they are receiving from their relationship with the SaaS vendor is simply not being addressed. When the anticipated renewal doesn’t happen, when the customer declares their intention to leave, the pressure is suddenly on to Re-Sell The Sale. And, of course, to pay the Customer Acquisition Cost all over again.
When the customer’s intention/decision to leave has been announced or discovered, it’s necessarily time to play catch-up, with all of the increased customer re-acquisition costs of that game. Send in the Sales pros, perhaps assigning talent by amount of revenue potential, and hope for the best — while watching very closely to learn every possible lesson you can from the exercise.
Don’t, however, let a disaster take you by surprise by assuming that it can’t happen to you — it can. It will. The sooner you design and implement corrective action, the less it will cost and the more effective it may be. The first step is to identify the at-risk companies and relationships. For each and every customer on your list, ask yourself: “If a renewal contract was submitted today, how likely would they be to sign it?” Pay close attention to how the answer is justified. How do you 


