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The SaaS & Success Project

Friday May 18, 2012





Through the Lens

Does Your Company Have a Customer Success Management Group?

In the course of The SaaS & Support Project research, I began asking companies about two related roles that have been popping up in organizational charts of all sized firms for some time:  Customer Retention and Customer Success.  I’ve found that Customer Retention managers tend for the most part to be “firefighter” positions, called in when a customer is known to be at-risk or has actually announced plans to depart.  Customer Success, on the other hand, is something different — with intriguing possibilities.

Towards a Definition of Customer Success Management

CSMI 02 Does Your Company Have a Customer Success Management Group?The Customer Success management (CSM) role is a developing one in the SaaS/Cloud sector.  In a few companies, the title has been used for or within the Implementation team, with staff members acting as technical account managers to see that all goes well with the project.

In other companies, however, the CSM role is much more senior — it’s the actual owner of the ongoing customer relationship.  In such cases, it’s more than an Account Manager role, for it also includes insuring that the customer is getting real economic value from their investment — and that they know it.  The CSM maps out the customer relationship, and is responsible for moving the customer along and up the profitability chain for both parties.

Does your company have a Customer Success Management team?  If so, what responsibilities/authorities do they have?  What performance metrics are in use? What were the driving factors that brought the group into being?   What do you look for in recruiting CSM staff?

The Mission of the Customer Success Group

no churn Does Your Company Have a Customer Success Management Group?In a previous article about the need to change the role of Support to being about much more than just Break/Fix, I suggested that the new mission for the group in the SaaS/Cloud era should be:

“We directly contribute to making more sustainable profitability faster/better for your company and ours, and we can prove it! “

THL mailing list2a 203x300 Does Your Company Have a Customer Success Management Group?That’s not  a bad starting place for developing a mission statement for the Customer Success Management team, but it needs to go even further.  If you have a CSM team, I’d like to talk directly to you about it — off the record, or on.  Please use the message form on the contact page, or send me an email directly.  If you’d like to be kept informed about progress on this subject, please join the mailing list and also consider becoming a basic/subscribing member of The HotLine Magazine.  There is no cost for a Basic Membership.

Recommended Reading for Customer Success Management

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    One of the most significant results of the rapid development of the PC market was the creation of a new box in the standard software company organizational chart.  Driven by floods of calls for help from new customers, the technology manufacturers quickly created “Tech Support” departments and staffed them with mostly entry-level personnel as a way of avoiding burdening expensive engineering staff resources.  The charter for the new group was simple: “Handle the calls as best you can and don’t bother the Engineers.”  Members of the Support staff soon learned that the only way to win was to transfer elsewhere in the company, proving the barbed comment: “The only good tech-support rep is the one that left last week to take a real job in Engineering.”

    The Call For Something New

    TRCS print V2 SM 300x134 The Redefinition of Customer SupportWhile a lot has changed for the better over the years as “Tech Support” has slowly become “Customer Support,” too much yet remains unfortunately as it was in the beginning.  The complaint of generations of support reps and their managers about being accorded less status in the organization than “illegitimate red-headed stepchildren” is still often heard today.  There can be little doubt about the underlying message in historically being the first group to be affected when budgets are reduced and headcount must be cut, and the last to benefit from better economic times.  There is no future in the Break/Fix role, in being predominantly about reacting to customer problems.  A fundamental change is needed in the way that the technology industry perceives the role, profession and practice of Support.  It is time for something new.

    In professional conference presentations, published articles and columns in the trade press, Mikael Blaisdell has been advocating a new vision for the profession of managing customer relationships for more than 20 years.  Now, with the advent of the SaaS/Cloud business model and its inherent shifts, powerful forces are at work in the technology industry.    It’s time for the emergence of a new profession, solidly based in the production of strategic economic value to both customer and company, and measured on profitability and customer retention.  Companies and individual professionals are invited to become a part of the process of change, to shape and seize the opportunities that are becoming available.

    For more information, please call or email Mikael Blaisdell.

    Recommended Reading:

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    Published: August 5, 2010

    Revised: September 21, 2011
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