Executive Programmes are at the heart of every Enterprise Customer Success team.
The goal is to:
But the problem is that most Executive Sponsor programmes SUCK (I wrote about this here)
They were created using an old formula from a time when customers were working with a handful of tools. Nowadays, companies use over 300 SaaS tools, and every single one of them wants to engage at the highest possible level, using the same lacklustre formats.
It’s simply not feasible for any executive to invest time on each of these relationships.
Over the past few weeks, I have talked to CS Leaders across some of the top SaaS companies to learn about their executive programmes and to gather ideas on building a modern executive engagement programme.
In this newsletter, I’ll share some of the lessons from those conversations and give you 5 ideas to build an Executive Sponsor Programme that decision-makers love.
What is the Executive Sponsor Programme?
It’s important to differentiate an Executive Sponsor Programme from overall executive engagement.
An EBR for example, is an engagement you would like the executive to attend. However, it’s not part of the executive sponsor program per se.
The Executive Sponsor Programme is about matching executives from your business with key executives across your top-tier customers to build a deeper connection and relationship.
Let’s deconstruct it:
Miss any of these key blocks and you’ll likely see engagement dropping.
For example, if you match your VP of Customer Success with the customer’s CFO, the CFO might not feel they have much to get from that engagement. Now.. If you match them with your own CFO, that would be a much more appealing prospect.
Who is the Executive?
While all of us would love to have a 1:1 relationship with the C-suite of our top customers, the reality is that most executives won’t be able or want to engage 1:1 with every company they do business with.
A few things will determine how high you need/get to go:
Ask yourself, who signs the check?
That’s who your target executive should be.
(Don’t forget to record this information in the CRM, which allows you to tailor your customer experience per persona).
The biggest mistake companies make here is to “accept” the person below the executive as an executive POC in the programme. This is often the business leader that heads up the front line and is using your product daily.
The problem is that this POC is over-serviced.
They have a CSM, webinars, your annual conference, the community etc. They are already bought in. Investing your executive in this POC isn’t going to move the needle where you need it.
What do Executives want?
From my interviews with CS Leaders and years working with executives, I learned that 3 things motivate them to engage:
A mistake people make is thinking that executives want an opportunity to share feedback or make product requests.
At this level, if the executive has to come to another executive with product roadblocks or constructive feedback about their team’s experience, many things have gone wrong before it.
A great executive sponsor programme should completely avoid everyday-ness.
Executives at your top-tier customers aren’t likely to be using your product.
They are either getting reports from their team on the results your product enables or logging in to see a dashboard.
Focus on fulfilling their needs for networking, learning and status.
5 Innovative Ideas for the Sponsorship Programme
Whatever you do avoid landing pages, automated emails, inbound material etc. Invites and content should come directly from your executive's email address and feel like they are one of the only people getting it.
If these programmes sound like huge investments, it’s because they are!
But what do you get out of it?
An engaged executive that:
And that my friends, is why the executive sponsor program exists!