The following is Pat’s response to the question, “You’ve advocated for risk forecasting rather than risk assessment. Can you explain the difference between the two, and recommend how other Customer Success leaders can establish a risk forecasting system?”
Over the last 10 years, particularly in Customer Success where there's a lot of focus around risk assessment, many of the tools and the data are tailored towards “highlighting” risk which we’re very good at and is a key component of CS. What I’m a big advocate for however is extending risk assessment into risk forecasting. The difference between these two is the difference between identifying a problem versus actually committing to an outcome.
For example, I’ve attended many risk and health assessment meetings where we spend hours in conversations around customers' health, assessing what the problems are, and what we should do about it next. But then, nothing happens because in many cases there aren’t any real individual consequences to inaction.
This is why I will always advocate for individual CSM risk forecasting as a key discipline in parallel to risk assessment.
Take a look at a high functioning Sales organization. The ability to forecast deals is a non negotiable. It's the ability to know where you're going to be at the end of the quarter and then give your manager the confidence that you're going to land within that range. In most cases, Sales managers don't care what the actual makeup of that spread is, as long as the salesperson hits within that committed range.
I see Customer Success, particularly higher touch CS, as being no different. CSMs have a book of business and in many cases a clear commercial event (renewal). It’s the CSMs responsibility forecast where they will land within that range of ACV, churn, MRR, etc and hold themselves to account for that. Without this discipline, It's very easy for a CSM to find themselves at the end of the quarter in the same situation they were in at the beginning of the quarter, because at no point during the quarter were they put under scrutiny to make that call and to deliver on that commitment.
One question that can come up around this topic is about who in the organization should own the renewal forecast—CS or Sales. From my perspective, the CS organization should own the call on the renewal forecast. Acting on that forecast call comes down to CS aligning with the Sales or renewal org to pull the strings to make it happen. Responsibility for making a forecast call doesn't mean that you necessarily need to be personally in a renewal commercial conversation. What it does mean is that as a CSM, irrespective of what your comp plan says and of what your KPIs are, your job is to ensure that customers see value in what they originally invested in your product to achieve, and to make the call as to whether or not that's the case and if they will renew or not.
It’s one thing to want to be a CSM, to want to be making connections, to want the org to acknowledge the work we do. But real excellence comes from having the discipline to be able to commit to a forecast and an outcome that you know will be difficult and could leave you exposed but you do it non the less. In terms of skill sets, I believe this is a gap in CSM enablement. I am obsessed with discipline and with training CSMs the same way as a Sales organization views enablement.
We need to evaluate CSMs on areas like:
A more commercial, sales-led approach, irrespective of who owns what, is critical to having a high-performing Customer Success organization. Deep discovery, champion building, and risk forecasting are all part of the DNA of a high-quality CSM, and the best CSMs don't ignore these activities just because they aren’t metrics within their comp plan. This toolset is simply part of how they operate. And as their manager, the contract I have with CSMs is that it's my job to enable them and to give them the skills to be able to do that exceptionally well and in return, they put themselves out there and commit.
PERFORMANCE REVIEWS
Performance Reviews Should Be Unsurprising, Fair, and Motivating
It’s performance review season for many companies, so here’s Lara Hogan on how to thoughtfully facilitate these sessions in a way that provides actionable feedback for your direct reports. Among her advice, she says to consider how you can personally own the feedback even if the feedback originally came from other people, and also “frame the biggest behavior change you’d like to see from your direct report in terms of what they are currently optimizing for.”
BUDGETING
Takeaways From Our Survey on Customer Success Budgeting
This post recaps the results from a survey on how SaaS companies are thinking about their 2021 CS budgets. Among the findings: “Companies are investing in CS Operations. We’re now seeing an average ratio of 16:1 in terms of CSM FTEs compared to CS Ops FTEs.”
COMMUNICATION
How CSMs Can Help Customers With the Change Management Process
Here’s a quick article with advice on how CSMs can change a customer’s behavior. Stay focused on the customers’ “why” to motivate them to change, help them know how to speak about the product internally, and don’t be shy about repetition.
REMOTE WORK
I've Spoken to 2,000 Companies About Their Plans for Remote Work, Here's What I've Learned
Chris Herd shares a list of trends he’s seeing in regards to remote work. Most of it isn’t new information, but a few nuggets stand out including this one: “In the same way companies are finally realizing the power of community externally – internal community may become even more important to a company's success.” It’s worth thinking about how you can start to establish a “community” feeling amongst your CS team.
Success Happy Hour is a weekly newsletter for Customer Success leaders. Each week we feature one digestible piece of advice or a framework from a top Success leader, along with the best resources from that week. Subscribe here.