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Showing posts with label customer journey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label customer journey. Show all posts

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

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Five Critical Moments in the Customer Experience

Manage these situations well and customers will be yours forever. 

Veteran salespeople know sales ultimately don't come from a prospect's logical evaluation of a product's features, advantages and benefits. They know people make decisions based on emotions and then use logic to justify them. What matters is not what the product is but what it does and how buyers feel about it. Time and again, what makes top salespeople successful is their ability to link product benefits with the personal impact they make. 


But closing the sale is just the beginning in recurring revenue businesses. Customers must remain subscribers for years before they become profitable. Like experienced salespeople, Account Managers and Customer Success professionals must go beyond software usage, good NPS® scores or satisfactory customer service to influence what makes customers loyal. They must create personal attachment throughout the subscription experience so their customers continue to renew. 

Essential interactions

SaaS companies can systematically build affective bonds with their customers. It begins with knowing how the subconscious brain works, especially when it comes to subliminal needs for safety and security. When managers are attentive to the process and consistently orchestrate the following five encounters, they reduce fear and create ideal conditions for relationships to flourish. Customers are more than satisfied; they become loyal, raving fans. 

1. Moments of Connection. Humans naturally seek commonality. We engage in small talk, chatting about a bad call while sitting next to a stranger at a ball game or talking about the weather on a conference call with new vendors. When we have things in common, we sense we are among friends. We subconsciously gravitate to people like us because we feel safe with them. 

To create stronger connections, SaaS companies must set aside “zero touch support” and corporate façades and create warm, personal interactions early in their customer relationships. When customers feel they can relate to the people behind the brand, suddenly the company has a face. In the beginning, a friendly encounter with someone who seems familiar alleviates the customer’s subliminal anxiety. When a smart mix of personal and electronic communications follows, the relationship builds over time. 


2. Moments of Power. At times we have all felt powerless and out of control. For example, nothing rattles nerves more than driving in winter and sliding on a patch of ice. That gut-wrenching feeling is a natural defense mechanism that evolved over eons. Our emotional programming helps us avoid situations that put us at risk. In day-to-day life we compensate automatically by attempting to control outcomes, making us feel safer.  

SaaS companies can reduce natural anxiety by encouraging autonomy and choice. For example, customers can feel powerless learning how to use a new product. Customer Success Managers can lower tension using an onboarding process that helps customers quickly practice new skills and build proficiency. When the company allows customers options to choose from, customers also feel empowered. And as the adage goes, knowledge is power. Keeping customers informed is another easy way to soothe the psyche. 

3. Moments of Proof. Our deep hunger for certainty is another natural protection from our evolutionary heritage. Subconsciously we want to know what’s going on and what happens next, once again because it’s safer. We are comforted when things go as we expect and anxious when they don’t. 

SaaS companies can increase certainty in many ways, from demonstrating products to hosting quarterly business reviews to displaying system performance statistics. When the company makes promises and keeps them, expectations are met and customers become more confident. And when SaaS companies also prove that the business and personal outcomes they predicted came to fruition, they erase any remaining doubts in the customer’s mind. 

4. Moments of “Wow!” We cherish times when friends and family surprise us with simple acts of kindness, appreciation and gratitude. These occasions happen infrequently, but when they do, they leave profound impressions. Like all social animals, we reflexively evaluate our status and importance relative to others. Rank ensures we maintain a greater share of resources, which in turn increases chances for our survival. When someone surprises and delights us, we feel special and cared for—we find our prestige is greater than expected. 

Solving a problem meets minimum expectations, but going the extra mile on occasion makes customers feel important and desired. For example, resetting a password is a mundane task for Customer Support. But when a technician also takes a minute to check the customer’s system configuration and makes a change that speeds up system response times, the customer is thrilled. Simple acts of kindness pay substantial dividends. 

5. Moments of Truth. Life occasionally involves crises. When we have no choice but to rely on others, we find ourselves in our most vulnerable psychological state. How others respond when we need them most can make or break a relationship. As they say, when the chips are down, you find out who your friends are. 

In business as in life, stuff happens. Sometimes the ball gets dropped, leaving a customer with mess. Other times, issues are widespread, such as the havoc caused by a major outage or security breach. When SaaS companies use an effective service recovery process, one that restores confidence along with service, customers regain trust. How the company responds reveals character and can quickly turn around a bad situation. 

Product value and quality matters, but how SaaS companies create positive emotional experiences over time ultimately tips the scale when customers consider renewing their software subscriptions. Understanding and responding to customers’ deep psychological needs is the first step to building stronger relationships and creating loyal customers. 

Net Promoter and NPS are registered service marks, and Net Promoter Score and Net Promoter System are service marks, of Bain & Company, Inc., Satmetrix Systems, Inc. and Fred Reichheld.

Excel-lens is a publication of Service Excellence Partners. We increase customer loyalty and business performance in the cloud computing industry. Contact us today.

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Why SaaS Needs Lean Six Sigma

The cloud computing industry loses about $10B every year due to customer churn, and in response, many executives launch improvement initiatives. They assign Customer Success teams to engage new customers, increase product usage and probe for sales opportunities. Other times, executives hold developers accountable for monitoring online customer behaviors and designing stickier user interfaces. Marketers sometimes get into the act, countering revenue losses through new customer engagement programs or by introducing renewal incentives. 

These isolated activities can incrementally reduce churn, but customer defection is a complex, enterprise-wide problem that requires joint effort. Customers leave when a number of deficiencies in sales, development, marketing, operations, and even accounting combine to frustrate them. Instead of assigning a single function or diluting efforts among multiple groups, SaaS companies should address customer attrition holistically with a disciplined and coordinated Lean Six Sigma approach.

Proven and unified

For decades, manufacturing and service organizations have used quality improvement techniques to satisfy customers, save money and increase revenue. Companies have shown repeatedly that relying on personal perceptions and making snap decisions leads to treating symptoms, not underlying causes. Using formal techniques, practitioners first explore difficulties from the customer’s perspective and then analyze data to uncover and resolve “root causes” of problems. As a result, improvements people make are dramatically better and more sustainable. Studies show that companies proficient in quality improvement practices consistently outperform rivals in growth and profitability by a factor of 2:1.1


Quality methods have evolved over the years to help teams be even more successful. Modern Lean Six Sigma techniques include rigorous financial analyses to target improvements and demonstrate monetary gains. Lean principles remove wasted time and effort, speeding cycle times in engineering, production, and service operations. But best of all, Lean Six Sigma espouses cross-functional teamwork instead of working independently. Ineffective, inefficient workflows and fumbled handoffs between departments are often the most significant obstacles. When greater customer focus and scientific methods combine with better coordination and cooperation, solutions transcend internal boundaries and deliver maximum impact.

Lean Six Sigma in action

A young firm introduces an app that allows people to capture and annotate photos taken on mobile devices. The software then automatically uploads images and links them with documents the user stores in the cloud. During early trials, the founders discover that the software has widespread appeal, so they introduce the product at a low price point, expecting it to sell in high volume. 

But after several months, the executives discover a problem. Monthly customer churn numbers run far above expectations. Rather than settling for myriad, piecemeal solutions, the executives form a cross-functional Lean Six Sigma team to address the issue from a broader and deeper perspective. The project follows DMAIC, the phased improvement process at the heart of Lean Six Sigma:

Define. The problem is straightforward: 2.2% of users cancel their subscriptions each month, costing the firm $5M annually. The team establishes a goal to significantly reduce this number.

Measure: Despite having extensive data on mobile and website usage patterns, the team realizes that little is actually known about their customer churn. Marketing had originally decided to capture only basic contact information in order to reduce sales “friction” during the sign-up process. As a result, there’s no data classifying behaviors by market segment. In addition, the team finds few customers complete the online exit survey upon cancellation, so the reasons why customers leave are unknown. The team hires a third party to collect the missing information. The vendor uses billing records to e-mail and call a sample of departed customers to ask questions about their experience.  

Analyze: The vendor finds that the company indeed attracts a wide range of customers, but after using Lean Six Sigma’s Pareto analysis, the analyst shows that just a handful of segments account for the majority of churn. Surprisingly, estimators at small auto body shops are the largest defecting group. Challenged with extensive visual inspections and impatient customers during peak times, auto estimators purchase the mobile app hoping to speed their quoting process by quickly capturing images and making shorthand notes for later documentation. But the estimators learn that the time they spend copying photos into their company quoting systems negates the time they save with customers. Getting assistance from the software firm to solve the problem isn’t easy. The company’s limited self-help resources and e-mail-only, 2-day customer response time prompts most estimators to abandon the idea after just a few months. 

The team then examines internal factors. Investigating the technical issues, they learn that the company’s online database can’t exchange data in the formats commonly used by repair quoting systems. Customers buy software online and the firm provides no special attention or information to help estimators in the beginning. The company’s heavily burdened customer support team handles all tickets on a first-come, first-served basis, forcing customers to wait equally long periods for help. When estimators get into trouble, their options are few. It’s no wonder they’re leaving in droves.  

Improve: The team enhances the product and redesigns the process to make estimators more successful. Engineers research the most common exchange formats and discover they can develop an API that automatically imports images into quoting systems without the need for manual intervention. The plan calls for Marketing to add a single question during the sign-up procedure to assign each user to their respective market segment, allowing the company to better track behaviors. The team then proposes hiring a Customer Success Manager to reach out each estimator within a day of their subscription to help integrate the API, ensure the estimator gets the results he or she desires, and create a stronger working relationship. The team advocates “triage” (a Lean Six Sigma technique) in Customer Support to separate the estimators’ trouble tickets and deal with them first. Thanks to the use of simple statistical tools, the team calculates that the improvements will recover about $1.5M in lost revenue. Adding up the cost of implementation, the team finds the expense makes up a small fraction of the segment’s expected customer lifetime value. Management gives the go-ahead and the team coordinates and implements the changes. 

Control: Estimators are delighted with their new experience. Churn drops 82% in the segment and more auto shop estimators join based on strong recommendations from their associates. Overall, the company’s monthly churn drops by 38%, boosting topline annual revenue by $1.9M. What’s more, estimators who left come back, generating another $220K in revenue. Product managers notice new product and service opportunities in the market segment, promising to grow it even further. The Lean Six Sigma team then standardizes the approach and turns its attention to next group of departing customers. They repeat the DMAIC cycle and lower churn even further. 

It’s a better way

Had each SaaS company function done what they naturally do and worked within their own silos, the results would not have been the same. They would have proceeded without an in-depth understanding of their customers’ challenges. Functional leaders would have prioritized their activities around their favorite projects or according to whatever was most pressing at the time. As a result, improvements would have been typically myopic and disjointed, failing to benefit specific customers or deliver clear economic gains. 

Perhaps it’s time for a different strategy. The Lean Six Sigma method encourages SaaS functions to join forces, focus intently on customers, develop comprehensive solutions, and achieve more impressive results. A holistic improvement strategy may be just what the industry needs to retain more customers. 

Excel-lens is a publication of Service Excellence Partners. We increase customer loyalty and business performance in the cloud computing industry. Contact us today.

Source:
1. Hendricks, K. and Singhal, V. March, 2000. The impact of Total Quality Management (TQM) on financial performance: evidence from quality award winners. DuPree College of Management, Georgia Institute of Technology

Friday, June 20, 2014

Why Customer Defections Mean Things are Worse Than You Think

“A bird in the hand beats two in the bush.”
John Ray's A Hand-book of Proverbs, 1670

Most SaaS executives assume customer churn rises the minute a company loses its competitive edge. Not so. If customers are switching to top rivals in appreciable numbers, executives should be especially nervous—the situation is already much graver than they think. Research suggests customers leave because they’re long dissatisfied and now view the competition is twice as good. Executives must heed the warnings and overcome their own biases if they want to turn things around.

Thinking that doesn’t add up

Strangely, people tend to avoid loss even when they are faced with the possibility of larger gains. Research shows that people require more compensation to give up a possession than they would have been willing to pay to obtain it in the first place.1 Even when all things are equal, repeated experiments show people subjectively weigh gains much differently than losses.

In 1654, French mathematicians Blaise Pascal and Pierre de Fermat proved that the expected value (EV) of an investment depends on the amount (x) and the probability of its outcome (p):

EV = px

For example, say a coin flip determines you collect $100 for heads and $0 for tails. Since the probability of obtaining heads using a fairly balanced coin over a large number of trials is 50%, the likely payout, on average, is $100 * 50% = $50. As shown by the charts, this relationship is true no matter the amount or the probability used in the calculation. Today many financial decisions are made using Pascal and Fermat’s expected value.

But that's not how most people make decisions. Faced with a choice of receiving $3,000 for sure or taking an 80% chance to win $4,000, most people will keep the money, even though the expected value for taking the risk is greater ($4,000 * 80% = $3,200). Prospect Theory in modern economics asserts that rather than apply logic, people instinctively determine value (V) by weighting differences in probabilities (p) and amounts (x) shown below:

V(x,p) = w(p)v(x)

The clean, linear function reflecting objective reality is suddenly replaced with this subjective, nonlinear aberration:2

Intuitively, the irregular curves hold water. People would rather take a 95% chance losing $100 than pay $85 for sure because amounts “feel” equally painful and 95% probability “feels” less than certain. On the other hand, people will take a 5% chance to win $100 instead of choosing $13 cash because $100 seems a lot more than $13, and 5% seems like a realistic chance.

Scientists also discovered that when they tested 50-50 win-loss scenarios, subjects said the following ratios equally attractive to when compared with receiving nothing:3

In other words, faced with even odds, most people want 2:1 upside before taking a risk. A bird in the hand is indeed worth two in the bush!

Why do we think this way? Most scientists believe it’s a vestige of our human evolution. In prehistoric times, survival probably depended upon playing it safe when we had resources and taking risks when we had none. In the modern age, however, our success depends on scientific and social advances, situations requiring thoughtful reflection instead of impulsive action. But since our complex reasoning evolved relatively recently, it often takes a back seat to our more primitive instincts, even when the consequences aren’t life or death. Despite today’s advances, subconscious emotion, not conscious logic, often rules the day. This explains why regardless of the odds, we continue to buy lottery tickets.

Tip of the iceberg

Evidence shows people are far more likely to stay in a bad situation than pursue a better one. What this means for SaaS companies is that once customers subscribe, they are likely to stay. But when customers switch, it’s very serious. Their actions show they’ve already had enough and customers realize competitors offer significantly greater advantages.

As humans themselves, executives likewise have a choice. They can either look logically at their company’s performance gaps and do something about them, or scoff at their customers’ subjectivity and do nothing at all. Like their customers, executives must overcome their own, natural inclination to preserve the status quo even when things are going south. If they can see the advantages of change and take risks to improve organizational performance faster than their customers get fed up and go elsewhere, churn reduction has a fighting chance. Otherwise, perhaps, companies with more evolved thinking will be the survivors.

Excel-lens is a publication of Service Excellence Partners. We increase customer loyalty and business performance in the cloud computing industry. Contact us today.

Sources:

  1. Kahneman, D., Knetch, J. L., and Thaler, R. H. (1990). Experimental tests of the endowment effect and the Coese theorem. Journal of Political Economics, 98, 1325-1348.
  2. Kahneman, D., and Tversky, A. (1979). Prospect theory: an analysis of decision under risk. Econometrica, 4, 263-291
  3. Tversky A., and Kahneman, D. (1992). Advances in prospect theory—cumulative representation of uncertainty. Journal of Risk Uncertainty, 5, 297-323

Monday, May 19, 2014

Why a CSM's First Impression Means So Much

“My good opinion once lost is lost forever.” 
― Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice


Eye contact. A smile. Friendly conversation. We all know first impressions mean a lot when we meet someone new or interview for a job. The same is true when it comes to customer interactions. How things go at the outset makes a big difference in the final outcome. Research offers intriguing insights why getting off on the right foot in the SaaS business is so important for reducing churn and building customer loyalty down the road. 

Most managers, including many prominent Customer Success consultants and authors, assume that all customer interactions have equal importance. Science, however, suggests that some carry far more weight than others. While the ultimate goal may be continuous improvement at every point along the customer journey, managers should start by concentrating on the critical few areas that yield the greatest impact. And the most essential exchanges occur in the very beginning. 

What starts right, stays right

Research from the wireless industry shows that first encounters matter.1 Investigators studying wireless subscribers hypothesized that customers “anchor” their satisfaction and value perceptions based on their service history, incrementally modifying their beliefs by incorporating new information after each interaction. They found that customers who had many months of positive experiences early in the relationship weighed them more heavily than they did later experiences. But if new customers had early disappointment, they became particularly vulnerable to churn. 

Creating positive outcomes from the beginning yielded significant financial impact. The study found that one in four longer subscriber durations could be attributed to a series of satisfactory experiences. Doing a better job right from the start made a big difference. Simply having agents spend twenty additional minutes helping wireless customers activate and successfully use their phones cost the company $888K more each year, but the revenue increase due to churn prevention was estimated to be a whopping $4.48M. This represented gain of 2% in company profits, or an ROI of about 4:1.

Roots in biology

Neuroscience explains how anchoring works on a cognitive level. Our minds use reward prediction error (RPE) to gain new knowledge and skills because it is the fastest and most efficient learning method.2 The brain subconsciously encodes differences between how rewarding something is compared with how rewarding it was expected to be. The brain then recodes expectations after each experience, and with successive cycles, outcomes eventually match expectations. RPE therefore serves as the anchor by which the brain evaluates its next learning experience.  



Learning is a mentally costly and permanent process. The brain consumes a great deal of energy building new circuitry by releasing neurotransmitters, firing millions of neurons, and modifying synaptic weightings. Given the high resource burden it places on the body, the brain is selective about what it learns, and it creates efficiencies by constructing new neural connections upon old ones. As a result, neural architecture has intrinsic latency. Once the mind learns, the underlying neural patterns are difficult to change, which explains why perceptions linger. 

When circumstances are unique, however, our expectations are undefined, and our protective evolutionary biology kicks in. In these cases, RPE is very high, and the brain subconsciously reacts to the increased uncertainty. We perceive novel situations as risky, and our cave man brain releases a neurotransmitter called norepinephrine, a stress hormone that increases attention and concentration and facilitates learning. The amygdala, the part of the brain responsible for encoding and evaluating our emotional responses, is on high alert. Norepinephrine also catalyzes our autonomic “fight or flight” system, readying us for possible action. Just like our primitive ancestors, new situations put us on edge, grab our attention, and sharpen our senses. We’re ready to learn quickly because our survival may depend on it.

Learning is rarely a matter of life and death in the modern world, but our brains are conditioned to respond to new situations in much the same way. Faced with uncertainty, the brain sets the first and most impactful cognitive anchor upon which all subsequent learning is based. Our neurobiology therefore predisposes us to automatically place more importance on first impressions. Subsequent learning then reinforces our initial experiences, and in time our cumulative perceptions evolve into long-term biases. First impressions are meaningful because it’s how our brain works on a fundamental level.   

Getting off on the right foot 

Customer Success Managers face a challenge to make their customers’ journeys optimally productive and enjoyable from the outset. Customers’ tendency to quickly judge the value of the product and the quality of the relationship means onboarding must go smoothly. CSMs should do their homework, researching the customer and their business and reviewing account history during the sales process. During the call, the CSM should take the time to understand and respond to the customer’s cognitive state, both effectively (meeting utility needs) and affectively (meeting emotional needs). When CSMs are mindful of conversations that gratify both conscious and subconscious needs, they not only solve problems but promote the conditions that lead to stronger relationships. If action items must be addressed after the call, prompt follow-up and follow through are critical because the customer is primed to learn if the CSM can be trusted and relied upon.  

As the customer learns to use their new software, they continue to refine their understanding about the nature of the relationship, too. The CSM should check in frequently in the early stages, helping the customer overcome obstacles in a friendly way. In the first few months, customers will not only come to appreciate the value of the product, they will do the same with the CSM and the company they represent, and the positive effects will stick. If the findings in the wireless industry are any guide, the financial outcomes are dramatic.

Contrary to popular belief, science shows not all interactions are created equal—first impressions really matter. Research from another industry and advances in neuroscience confirm the effects and demonstrate the financial impact. For CSMs, doing things right from the beginning sets the stage for stronger relationships and significantly lowers customer churn.

Excel-lens is a publication of Service Excellence Partners. We increase customer loyalty and business performance in the cloud computing industry. Contact us today.

Sources:

  1. Bolton, Ruth N. “A Dynamic Model of the Duration of the Customer’s Relationship with a Continuous Service Provider: The Role of Satisfaction.” Marketing Science, 17 (1), 1998, 45-65.
  2. Frank, M., Munakata, Y., Hazy, T., and O'Reilly, R. (2012). Computational Cognitive Neuroscience, Kindle Edition.