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Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Why Trust Matters for Customer Success

Software usage is just one driver in customer loyalty

A widespread belief shared by Customer Success professionals is that promoting software use early after the sale leads to less churn. It makes sense. But usage is just one factor leading to customer retention. Studies show building trust is equally important for retaining customers and growing revenue. To generate high loyalty and more business, SaaS leaders must pay as much attention to affective processes as they do effective ones. 

Usage: the good and the bad

We’ve all had the experience of canceling an unwanted magazine subscription. Perhaps we signed up impulsively after reading a good article on a plane, or subscribed as part of a fundraiser to help a favorite charity. We thought it was a good idea at the time, but eventually the magazines stacked up—we didn’t have the time or the interest to actually read them. Eventually when the envelope asking us to renew came in the mail, we just tossed it. Since we didn’t use the subscription, it had no value to us. 

The same applies in software subscriptions. If customers invest in new applications but don’t use them, it’s hard to justify the ongoing expense. That’s why SaaS companies pay so much attention to user adoption. Customer Success teams spend much of their time onboarding new customers and helping them achieve early results. It pays off. Data from Scout Analytics by ServiceSource suggests that customers who use their new software at least once per week over the first six months are about 50 percent less likely to churn.1 

But high usage doesn’t necessarily equate to high retention. In the wireless industry, for example, heavy users are more likely to churn.2 Why? Experts cite poor service quality (dropped calls in particular), price sensitivity due to high monthly bills, and preference for more advanced capabilities they find somewhere else. Similarly in the SaaS business, “power users” tend to be the most valuable but come with a downside. They’re the first to notice company “warts”—software bugs, system downtime, or poor customer service—and may be the first to leave.

Factor ignored?

SaaS companies frequently overlook an important loyalty dimension: trust. Researchers define it as the confidence business partners have in the reliability and integrity of each other.3 Studies in technology markets show that high trust leads to affective commitment; in other words, people are inclined to stick with a supplier because they want to, not because they have to.4 The lower the trust, the more customers revert to calculative commitment, considering other alternatives and spending time weighing product costs and benefits vs. the competition. Relationship factors are therefore as essential as product attributes and market variables when it comes to loyalty. Companies increasing trust increase loyalty.  



Despite the numerous shortcomings of Net Promoter Scores (NPS®),5 its fundamental question, “How likely are you to recommend our product to a friend or colleague?” offers a practical example of how we view trust. Recommending a vendor to a friend or colleague, for any of us, is a risky proposition. Our trust in the supplier’s ability to satisfy must greatly exceed the chance of impairing an important relationship. 

Brain trust

Neuroscientists say we learn to trust people in much the same way we learn about everything else. A part of the brain called the striatum specializes in social decision making, detecting and evaluating levels of fairness, cooperation, and reciprocity. Social learning begins with a bias, or cognitive “anchor,” which is surprisingly sensitive to what people say about others.6 As we learn about people, we compare situational outcomes against our expectations and subconsciously adjust our mental anchors along the way. Through experience, feelings of certainty and fairness acquired from multiple interactions then grow into a generalized sense of trust, a bias which in turn influences our future decisions. 

Our evolutionary biology explains why we developed the need for trust. Humans became the most successful species on earth primarily because of our ability to cooperate and learn from each other. But not all people work towards mutual interest. We subliminally perceive social deviations as threats, which in turn activate the ancient “fight or flight” mechanism in our reptilian brain. Low trust means high risk, prompting us to avoid the situation in the future.  

How to build trust

Software companies can grow trust in a number of ways. When organizations carefully and consistently set and meet expectations, it creates harmony in their customers’ minds. When things go wrong, leaders taking responsibility, communicating frequently, and quickly resolving problems build confidence. And when administering policies, treating customers fairly helps, too. Since a customer’s trust perception is strongly influenced by what others say, companies must guard their reputations with the same vigilance as their intellectual property. SaaS executives should be especially concerned when they see low NPS scores, indicating trust is low and further investigation is warranted.

Customer Success teams play a critical role as well. They can create more mindful customer experiences that systematically build trust in addition to early usage. The trick is to examine the customer’s journey and design processes that satisfy a customer’s effective and affective needs. For example, besides helping customers learn new software, CSMs can sow the seeds of trust by simply making a personal connection during an onboarding call. Doing so increases a sense of relatedness which quells the customer’s natural, subconscious threat response when encountering new people. Customer Success teams that skillfully manage five critical moments in the customer experience create conditions for strong, trusting relationships to form. Lower churn and greater revenue from up-selling and referrals result. 

SaaS companies must create and deliver value to be successful, but their loyalty efforts must extend beyond increasing software usage. It starts by understanding human nature and the factors that ultimately drive renewal decisions. Deliberately and systematically influencing these factors in turn makes SaaS subscription businesses thrive. 

Excel-lens is a publication of Service Excellence Partners. We increase customer loyalty and business performance in the cloud computing industry. Contact us today.
Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a registered trademark of Fred Reichheld, Bain & Company, and Satmetrix

Sources:

  1. http://research.scoutanalytics.com/churn/the-data-behind-adoption-and-retention-in-the-customer-journey/ 
  2. Ahn, J.H., Han, S.P., Lee, Y.S.: Customer churn analysis: Churn determinants and mediation effects of partial defection in the Korean mobile telecommunications service industry. Telecommunications Policy 30 (2006) 552–568
  3. Morgan, R. M., and Hunt, S. D.: The Commitment-Trust Theory of Relationship Marketing. Journal of Marketing 58, 20–38 (1994).
  4. Ruyter, K., Moorman, L., Lemmink, J.: Antecedents of Commitment and Trust in Customer–Supplier Relationships in High Technology Markets. Industrial Marketing Management 30, 271–286 (2001)
  5. Sauro, J.: Should The Net Promoter Score Go? 5 Common Criticisms Examined. Measuring U. July 22, 2014 https://www.measuringu.com/blog/nps-go.php 
  6. Fareri, D., Chang, L., Delgado, M.: Effects of direct social experience on trust decisions and neural reward circuitry. Frontiers in Neuroscience, 16 October 2012

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