Digital CS often performs significantly below High-Touch CS.
What I've seen in most organisations is:
But, does it need to be this way?
Absolutely not.
Companies like Atlassian have proved that you can have scale CS and high GRR at the same time (they reported 98% GRR in their 2021 financial report).
In this week's newsletter, I will share how to start building a modern CS program that delivers results for your customers and your business.
🤖 Back To Basics
Building a highly efficient and effective CS program starts with first-principles thinking.
In my talk at Pulse, I shared an analogy that HubSpot's CEO Yamini used a few years ago...
You can't build the Burj Khalifa using the same tools and methods of building a two-storey house. Everything you know about construction and engineering needs to evolve, to make a building that is half a half-a-mile in height possible.
It's the same for Customer Success.
You cannot build your digital-first, AI-enabled CS organisation by using the same processes and systems that you use today for your human-first programme.
Why is that?
The main problem with today's processes and playbooks is that in most cases companies don't actually know if they work.
Today, customers are targeted with dozens of CS programs.
Calls with their CSM, webinars, social posts, community forums, EBRs, courses etc, but we don't have the rigour that helps us understand which of these touchpoints are effective at driving engagement, usage and outcomes for our customers.
If you automate what you have today, you might just end up doing more of what doesn't work.
⚡️ Reverse Engineer Success
If you want to design an effective and efficient CS model, you have to forget most of what you think you know about delivering Customer Success.
Allow yourself to re-imagine what delivering CS looks like by reverse engineering from the desired end-state.
What's the desired end-state?
Delivering valuable and tangible outcomes for customers, quickly.
To do that, I recommend you follow these 5 steps:
TL’DR
If you are hoping to scale your CS organisation but are finding that the more "scaled" you go, the worse your GRR is trending, you might want to re-think your strategy.
My advice is:
Avoid the temptation of automating what you already have. There are too many gaps and old assumptions in there to make it a good ground for the new model.
By designing your CS programme from a blank page, you might end up with very different processes, systems, team structure and roles, than normal CS organisations.
And that's ok.
In the words of architect Mies Van Der Rohe... Form follows function.
You wouldn't want the Burj Khalifa to look like 163 houses stacked on top of each other.
So don't make that mistake with your CS team.
See you next Friday!