The SaaS & Support Project research has been sponsored by the following organizations:
The Association of Support Professionals (ASP). The ASP is an international membership organization for customer support managers and professionals. In addition to its annual “Ten Best Web Support Sites” awards, the ASP publishes research reports on a wide range of support topics, including support compensation, fee-based support, and services marketing. You can learn more about the ASP at www.asponline.com .
OpSource
Cloud Operations for the Enterprise, SaaS and Web Companies. OpSource™ provides Cloud operations for Enterprise, Software-as-a-Service and Web companies. Many of the world’s largest and most innovative companies have selected OpSource, allowing them to focus their resources on building businesses rather than investing in and running IT infrastructure and support services. OpSource’s offerings range from cost effective enterprise-class Cloud infrastructure to sophisticated fully managed hosting and application management. Companies at any stage of growth, with any type of on-demand application will benefit from OpSource services.
Software & Information Industry Association (SIIA) Software Division. The SIIA Software Division provides a forum for companies developing the applications, services, infrastructure and tools that are driving the software and services industry forward. Through the division, executives of member companies meet to brainstorm, collaborate, and discuss the industry’s latest challenges. The division’s many programs offer excellent vehicles for companies to develop partnerships, boost their profile, and gain strategic insight on key issues. Contact Rhianna Collier, Director or Nate Philip, Program Manager, for more information.
TechAmerica is the leading voice for the U.S. technology industry – the driving force behind productivity, growth, and jobs creation. Representing approximately 1,200 member companies of all sizes from the public and commercial sectors of the economy, it is the industry’s largest advocacy organization and is dedicated to helping members’ top and bottom lines. It was formed by the merger of AeA (formerly the American Electronics Association), the Cyber Security Industry Alliance (CSIA), the Information Technology Association of America (ITAA) and the Government Electronics & Information Technology Association (GEIA). Learn more about TechAmerica at www.techamerica.org.
Revised: September 21, 2011









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.


