Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Competing for Customers, Blog 2: The Value of Customer Success

Unlike a house, when it comes to business solutions, why own when you can rent? That's the sentiment of more and more businesses these days when it comes to acquiring everything from the software that runs your company to the boost in power you need from your wind farm. We believe this shift in mindset and buying habits represents nothing short of a sea change in the structure of the modern economy and we rank it alongside the Customer First Revolution as one of the two mega trends businesses must come to grips with in the coming decade.
We define the Subscription Economy as the fundamental transformation from an economy based on high capital-intensive sales of products into an economy based on services that you pay for as you use them, or as specific outcomes are realized.
The Subscription Economy as a pervasive phenomenon is still in the early innings, but its growth is visible all around us and massive disruptions are sweeping through key industries from high tech to transportation to manufacturing. If you intend to win the competition for customers, you would be smart to understand why businesses are flocking to the subscription model of doing business, and begin to think creatively about how you can make your own business "subscription friendly."
Given the fundamental shifts in financial rewards and buying behaviors (and clout) that B2B providers will experience with a subscription model, it's imperative that business leaders have a blueprint for making retention and customer success part of their organizational DNA. We see customer success as the ongoing capabilities organizations bring to bear to ensure their customers are achieving the full potential value from their products/solutions. This is the fundamental difference with other customer focused programs such as customer centricity, loyalty and others. It makes customer value/business outcomes the primary objective and the central theme of what companies should focus on.
The great thing about customer success is the payoff for those who can do it well. As you can see from the chart below, the economics of success are significant and they fall into what we see as three major categories: Preserving revenue, expanding revenue, and referral revenue:

Preserving revenue -- Customer success practices help manage customer churn by ensuring optimal product usage and the loyalty of the customer. Customer churn acts like a negative interest rate, compounding lost revenue year after year and ultimately putting the brakes on your business' growth potential. Companies who are able to reduce churn by 5 points are typically seeing a 20% increase in revenue over five years (Blaisdell, 2014)
Expanding revenue -- While greater customer retention rates drive revenue gains, companies we studied also reported improvement via selling more products and services to existing customers. With most companies, according to Marketing Metrics, the probability of selling to an existing customer is 60-70% (Farris, et al, 2010). The bonus is that thecost of selling to an existing customer is reduced by 80-90% (Scout Research, 2015)
Referral Revenue -- Managing customer relationships and increasing the likelihood of your customers' success helps to drive customer referrals and advocacy. While much has been written about strong word of mouth (WOM) marketing, when customers are achieving their business outcomes they are much more likely to recommend your solution and company to others. In addition, customer success practices, such as providing quantifiable proof points from existing customers and helping new customers justify the investment based on evidence of value, can accelerate the sales process by 20-30% (Mainstay, 2014)
And, lastly, it's worth mentioning that enormous benefits from delivering customer success practices accrue to THE CUSTOMER. What customer doesn't want their provider to systematically assure that they are successful?
The bottom line is customer success pays! The question is, do you really care about customer success?
Jeb Dasteel
Amir Hartman
Craig LeGrande

Monday, September 28, 2015

Is Customer Success the New Marketing?

On October 1, 2015 we are hosting an executive roundtable to try and answer this broad question.  along with our friends at Gainsight we are bringing together a dozen marketing and business leaders with the aim of discussing questions around the future of marketing and in the age of the customer.

Our fundamental assumption if that the relationship between the buyer and seller is forever changing. Power has shifted to the customer and they are expecting their vendors to deliver success in the form of business outcomes.

The difficult truth is that customers don’t really care about your products, they care about the results you can help them achieve. And although most companies feel they are focused on customer success, the evidence from customers themselves tells us otherwise.

This roundtable will try to address some of the following questions:
·        Who should benefit from marketing?
·        What marketing programs are most valuable to customers?
·        How should companies organize to deliver these programs?

·        What emerging capabilities will organization need to develop?

Monday, September 7, 2015

Competing for Customers, Blog 1: The New "As-Needed" Economy

Oracle OpenWorld 2015 is in two months. From this week forward, I will publish a blog series on Customer Success. I have asked two of my colleagues, Amir Hartman and Craig LeGrande, to help me write these blogs. Amir, Craig, and I have been writing a book together. It's called Competing for Customers, and we've just about wrapped it up. We want to share some of our insights with you as you gear up for Oracle OpenWorld.
Competing for Customers, Blog 1: The New "As-Needed" Economy
Whether you realize it or not, everything about how you sell to customers is changing; everything about how you market to them must be rethought; and everything about how you keep customers loyal needs a fresh look.
The rise of the "as-needed" economy is having a profound impact on companies of all sizes and industries. In particular the relationship between the buyer and the seller is fundamentally shifting, with the customer in the driver's seat. This is particularly so in the B2B space. For most organizations, the sales process is turning upside down right before our eyes. Rather than paying for products upfront in a single capital outlay, customers are spreading the purchase over many years -- and constantly evaluating whether to renew their relationship with you. Under this scenario, your "sale" is no longer a one-time event. Instead, it's a "relationship" that demands continuous care and nurturing if you hope to retain your customers long-term and fully realize the value of your sale.
This leads to the central thesis of our book, Competing for Customers -- your success in this new economy will greatly depend on your ability to sell AND deliver measurable business outcomes to your customers. Indeed, we believe that driving customer value will be one of the few ways companies can attract and retain lasting customer relationships. If you're not generating tangible value for customers, you will lose them!
Are you read to compete for your customers?
Next week: Quantifying the value of Customer Success.
Jeb Dasteel
Amir Hartman
Craig LeGrande