词条 | Customer success |
释义 |
}}{{merge|customer-relationship management|date=January 2019}} Customer success is the function at a company responsible for managing the relationship between a vendor and its customers. The goal of customer success is to make the customer as successful as possible, which in turn, improves customer lifetime value (CLTV) for the company. Customer success is an emerging role in business. It is known as CS. The function is most commonly used in the software world and most prevalent among software as a service (SaaS) companies. Because customer success is a nascent field of business, its organizational alignment and activities are still evolving.[1]{{rp|1}} There is still a large amount of variance with respect to its scope of responsibilities, reporting structure, terminology used for describing its activities, metrics used for measuring its performance and more. While deviations exist in the specifics of the function, it always refers to the customer relationship management after the initial sale. Key sub-functionsAs customer success is a nascent and fast emerging field, variance is still high with respect to its scope, reporting structure, terminology used for describing its activities, metrics used for measuring its performance and more. However, the key functions the CS team is often responsible for include:
Customer success managers (CSM)Presently, the customer success function within most organizations is embodied in the customer success manager (CSM) job title. The CSM acts as the main point of contact and as a trusted advisor for the customer from the vendor side as they are the one ultimately responsible and accountable for that customer's success.[4] The function may share many of the same functions of traditional account managers, relationship managers, project managers, and technical account managers, but their mode of operations tend to be much more focused on long-term value-generation to the customer. At its heart, it is about maximizing the value the customer generates from utilizing the solutions of the vendor, while enabling the vendor the ability to derive high return from the customer value. To enable that, the CSM must monitor the customer's usage of and satisfaction from the solutions of the vendor, identify opportunities and challenges from the way the customer engages with the solution and take action to help resolve challenges and foster expansion of the usage as well as the value from the solutions (to both sides) over time. As a consequence, relentlessly monitor and manage the customer health is a key success factor for every CSM[5] as well as the need to deeply understand the drivers of value the customer gains from the solutions provided by the vendor.[6] Without such deep and timely understanding of these two aspects of the customer, the CSM will not be able to act effectively. In young organizations, where the total number of employees (and customers) is small, the CSM may be the first employee of the customer success team.[4] As such, they will be responsible for most of the functions described above, which over time may be fulfilled by more specialized team members. Ownership of commercial responsibilities by CSM vary among companies. While some believe a CSM's neutrality from sales or commercial conversations may make a customer more likely to respond to and engage with a CSM, other view the ownership of the commercial relations natural to a long-term relations between a vendor and a customer and more empowering to the CSM. For CSMs to fulfill the responsibilities of their role, they must be empowered by an organization's executive team to navigate freely among all parts of an organization.[7] This maintains the CSMs credibility with the customer as an effective resource. In organizations where CSMs are just another level of abstraction or a "screen" between the customer and the resources they need, the credibility of the CSM is compromised and the customer experience eroded which may result in a customer not renewing or expanding their business with the vendor. Furthermore, lacking the top-down support, will deprive the CSM the ability to garner the right resources needed by them to complete their jobs. Virtual customer success managers (VCSM)Virtual customer success managers are remote points of contact for customers and monitor the success of customers, providing important feedback.[8] Background/historyEvery company that sells its products and/or services to customers has functions responsible for managing the customer fulfillment and relations. In traditional businesses, those functions are referred to most commonly as "Fulfillment", "Post Sales" or "Professional Services".{{cn|date=June 2017}} In the world of technology, companies have been developing, selling and enabling software solutions for many years. At most of those companies the function responsible for managing the relations with customers used to be called "Account Management", "Operations" or "Services".{{cn|date=June 2017}} As the business world is changing and evolving into new fields, the method by which software is enabled to customers changes. One of the most significant changes in recent years has been the emergence of software as a service (aka SaaS).{{cn|date=June 2017}} SaaS is a method of enabling a software solution to customers in a subscription model that departs from the "old" model of granting a perpetual license that enables the customer to own the solution and therefore use it as they see fit (but also be responsible for its operation). Rather, when enabling a solution to customers as a SaaS, companies offer their products as services instead of physical objects, moving the economy to a subscription model.[1]{{rp|2}} The customer "rents" the solution and is able to use it only for the period they have rented it for. The vendor enabling the solution provides not only the solution itself, but also the infrastructure that supports it. The key implication of this new model is a fundamental shift in the engagement model between the software vendor and its customers. If in the traditional "enterprise software" model, a customer buys the license to the software and pays the vendor then, regardless of its actual usage, in a SaaS model, the customer pays a (much smaller) rent for the software every month.[9] The software vendor must therefore ensure the customer is using the solution and seeing value from it if they wanted to ensure the customer continues to pay their rent. This fundamental shift in the software industry's operating model revealed a need for a function at the company to own and ensure that success of its customers.[10][11] The emergence of this function is what is now being referred to as customer success (CS).{{cn|date=June 2017}} While the trend towards SaaS has been going on since the beginning of the 21st century,[12] the understanding of the need for much stronger focus on customer success and therefore the creation of the field of customer success only began around 2010–2012.[13]{{rp|183}} On LinkedIn, the world's largest repository of professional bios, only a very small number of people had titles that included "customer success" in 2010 or 2012. By 2015, this number was huge and growing rapidly. The reason is that the impact of customer success on the performance and value of a SaaS company is huge. The CS function is responsible for retaining and growing the business that the sales team has secured. Case studies show that companies with strong CS teams outperform peers with weak or no CS teams in a multitude of financial criteria including customer retention (also measured by "churn", which is the opposite of retention), revenue growth rates, gross margin, customer satisfaction, and referrals. In fact, customer experience is the greatest untapped source of both decreased costs and increased revenue in most industries, but only if companies take the time to understand what underpins it and how they can benefit financially from improving it.[13]{{rp|20}} References1. ^1 Forrester Research, Inc. An Executive Primer to Customer Success Management. April 2014 2. ^Rogers, Everett M.. Diffusion of Innovations, Fifth Edition. Free Press, 2003 Chapter 9 3. ^{{cite web|url=http://sixteenventures.com/customer-success-definition,|title=Customer Success: The Definitive Guide 2018|author=Lincoln Murphy|publisher=sixteenventures.com|date=2015-08-11}} 4. ^1 Nirpaz G., Pizarro F., Farm Don't Hunt: The Definitive Guide to Customer Success, March 2016, p. 91 5. ^Mehta N., Steinman D. and Murphy L.: Customer Success: How Innovative Companies Are Reducing Churn and Growing Recurring Revenue. Wiley. February 2016, Chapter 8 6. ^Mehta N., Steinman D. and Murphy L.: Customer Success: How Innovative Companies Are Reducing Churn and Growing Recurring Revenue. Wiley. February 2016, Chapter 7 7. ^Mehta N., Steinman D. and Murphy L.: Customer Success: How Innovative Companies Are Reducing Churn and Growing Recurring Revenue. Wiley. February 2016, Chapter 14 8. ^{{cite web|url=https://esgsuccess.com/|title=CSaaS - Customer Success As A Service - ESG Success|website=CSAAS - ESG}} 9. ^Wood J.B., Hewlin, Todd and Lah Thomas, B4B: How Technology and Big Data are Reinventing the Customer-Supplier Relationship, 2013 P 152-3 10. ^Bliss, Jeanne. Chief Customer Officer: Getting Past Lip Service to Passionate Action. Wiley, 2006 P. 5 11. ^{{cite web|last1=Prohorchik|first1=Ekaterina|title=The Retail Challenge: Reaching your Connected Customer via the IoT|url=https://www.iflexion.com/blog/the-retail-challenge-reaching-your-connected-customer-via-the-iot|accessdate=20 June 2017}} 12. ^Barret, Larry (27 July 2010). "SaaS Market Growing by Leaps and Bounds: Gartner". Datamation. QuinStreet, Inc. 13. ^1 Manning, Harley and Bodine, Kerry. Outside In: The Power of Putting Customers at the Center of Your Business. Forrester Research, 2012 2 : Business process|Customer experience |
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