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Wednesday, August 24, 2016

How To Track Customer Acquisitions : Customer Lifecycle, Sales Funnel, and Content Strategy

Building an effective sales funnel that is able to manage and track a company's lead development and follow through is critical to any businesses' offline or online marketing success. Building that and being able to manage complex metrics and analytics makes it even more challenging. But if you can tie it to your content marketing strategy and you hit a home run! This lengthy article is one of the best written I have seen that takes the reader through the entire process.

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published by Myk Pono on The Startup, a Medium publication. The below is an excerpt from the post. You can read the full article here.


How To Track Customer Acquisitions:

Customer Lifecycle, Sales Funnel, and Content Strategy

This article will walk you through the customer acquisition funnel for SaaS companies. The primary goal is to help you design, analyze, and optimize your customer acquisition process. The secondary goal is to present different perspectives on moving customers through the lifecycle stages and to show how marketing, sales, and customer success teams should collaborate and where each team’s responsibilities lay. Hopefully, everyone will find at least one useful idea to try or to test.
The effectiveness of your customer acquisition funnel can be tracked by metrics that measure leakages when moving prospects from one stage to the other. The process of handing over prospects from the marketing to sales team and from the sales to customer success team presents higher than average risks of losing prospects, missing data, or miscommunication between teams about responsibilities, definitions, and success metrics.
Content strategy is one of the most effective ways for companies to increase the velocity with which prospects move from one stage to the other. As we go through each step in the funnel it will become clear why it is crucial to analyze content strategy from a customer lifecycle perspective. In favor of simplicity, the customer acquisition diagram is missing the reference to target customer profilesproduct positioning, and value messaging. These three topics require a separate discussion.
Other pieces that are missing in this diagram are Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) and Customer Lifetime Value (LTV). Again, this information was omitted for the purpose of clarity.
The customer acquisition funnel is a process of tracking and monitoring how effective the company is in attracting, engaging, converting, and retaining its customers.
Part 1 — Customer Acquisition Framework
1.1. What is the difference between a customer lifecycle and a sales funnel?
Customer Lifecycle helps companies understand how customers are experiencing your product and what actions they are taking.
Sales Funnel shows internal processes that companies need to follow in order to move prospects down the funnel effectively and efficiently.
The diagram shows that the sales funnel is shorter than the customer lifecycle. For companies that track both, the sales funnel is just one part of the overall customer lifecycle journey.
Customer Acquisition Framework
Sales-centric approach vs. Customer-centric approach
If we only discuss the Sales Funnel part of the Customer Acquisition Framework, it’s easy to forget that customers look at your product differently and there are multiple paths to conversion.
The sales funnel is used by organizations to analyze how effectively they move prospects through the sales pipeline. Sales funnel stages represent a prospect’s current stage as the company sees it. As a prospect moves down the funnel, the probability of closing the deal increases.
For example, a company may know they have a 30% probability (based on past sales) of closing a prospect once they reach the opportunity stage. They use this probability when doing sales planning and modeling. If they currently have $500,000 in opportunities, then they have a potential for $150K in closed business.
NOTE: If you are doing sales planning, you need to take into account the average time it takes to move a prospect from the opportunity stage to the closed stage. Using the example above, if it takes an average of 60 days to close an account after it becomes an opportunity, the company can forecast a revenue of $50K net 30 and the remaining $100K net 60.
Customer lifecycle is a framework that puts the customer at the center of the process and looks at how they move along the buying process. It provides insights on customer’s actions that identify an increased probability of buying your product.
For companies that have a freemium business model, the customer lifecycle funnel is more important than the sales funnel. A great example of this is Slack, which offers their basic service for free, but converts free customers into paid customers by offering additional features. Obviously, a sales funnel with MQLs and SQLs isn’t tracked at Slack since their bottom-up approach to customer acquisition eliminates this need.
Finally, it’s important to remember that the higher the product price, the more emphasis companies should place on monitoring sales cycle. For example, Salesforce’s free trial isn’t as useful as Slack’s since their product is too complicated and needs significant resources to be integrated. Therefore, following the internal sales funnel makes more sense.

1.2. Customer Lifecycle Funnel
The Customer Lifecycle is often drawn as a circle, but in this case we use a vertical representation to make it easier to visualize the relationship between the customer lifecycle and sales funnel. There are six stages the customer has to go through in order to “complete the circle”. Each transition between stages corresponds with a direct action that customer has to do or achieve. Think of this process as different levels in a video game.
To become a visitor, somebody needs to visit your company’s website. When they submit a form or sign up for a free trial, they become a prospect. Prospects then become activated users when value is delivered or a certain level of usage is reached.
Let’s quickly go over each stage.
Customer Lifecycle
Visitor-Visitor is a very broad category that includes everyone who lands on your website. In theory, every visitor is a potential customer (not really). When a visitor signs up for a free trial or downloads something (e.g., case study, ebook, etc.), they become a prospect.
Action required to move to the next stage: Conversion
Prospect-A visitor becomes a prospect once they convert on a website. A prospect is a potential customer who has expressed interest in the pains, solutions, products, or materials related to your company. The contacts on a list that your marketing team might buy from a third party are not prospects since they haven’t actively expressed interest by sharing their information nor have they been qualified by your sales development team.
Metric: Conversion Rate
The conversion rate, in a sense, tracks the effectiveness of your website and content. Overall, the conversion rate for your website is a more generic metric (and can be ignored), but the conversion rate for free trial and product signups pages are more explicit and actionable.
Action required to move to the next stage: 1st value delivered
Activated User-Not tracking user activation during the initial signup or a free trial is one of the most common mistakes SaaS companies make. They are focused vastly on getting customers into the product that first interaction with the product becomes an afterthought. Tremendous resources are spent to get prospects in and even more resources should be allocated to designing the first experience and getting prospects to the aha-moment when first value is delivered.
The primary goal after getting a prospect inside your product is to activate them by delivering the core value unit for the first time. You entice the prospect to reach your pre-defined activation level.
As discussed in The Cost of Poor User Onboarding, Slack user activation happens when a team chat reaches 2000 messages.
Other examples of user activation goals:
  • Subscription billing: connecting your payment options or bank account can be used to activate a user.
  • Platform connecting farmers, distributors and chefs: activation can be tracked when a first order is placed.
  • Airbnb: an activated user could be a new visitor that saves their first listing.
  • Lyft (yes, I’m rooting for the underdog!): an activated user could be one who connects a credit card to the app.
You get the point.
Metric: Activation Rate
The activation rate is a ratio to track how effective the company is in delivering first value and designing the first experience with the product. Activation rate simple shows the percentage of prospects who actually activate their free trial and received a first value unit.
Action required to move to the next stage: Customer Paid
NOTE: It can be extremely challenging for a SaaS company to use a third party onboarding solution. User-onboarding is such a critical step that it’s almost impossible for someone outside of your company to design a product that perfectly meets the needs of your customers. Your product team needs to own it.
CustomerA user or prospects becomes a customer as soon as he/she pays. Your team’s next goal is make this customer an active one. Two questions you want to ask your team:
  1. Do all of our customers use our product regularly?
  2. Are they happy with how much value your solution delivers?
Metric: Daily / Weekly Active User Rate
Action required to move to the next stage: regularly use product
Active CustomerYour customers can pay for the product but not use it very often or at all. An active customer is one that regularly uses your product and therefore receives value and installs habits of using your solution on a regular basis. SaaS companies need to identify what usage correlates with high Lifetime Customer Value and a higher renewal rate.
Metric: Renewal Rate / Churn
Action required to move to the next stage: Renew / Upsell
Loyal CustomerWhen a customer renews or signs up for additional features (e.g., extra seats or API access), they become a loyal customer.
Metric: Net Promoter Score / Referrals
The customer lifecycle helps you understand how customers experience your product and company. It’s a customer-centric approach in which customer action drives the funnel.
Takeaways:
  • Each stage that a customer goes through is preceded by a specific action.
  • Effectiveness of each stage needs to be tracked and optimized with conversion metrics.
  • For products that have free trials, it’s crucial to track ‘Activated Users’. This metric is an important checkpoint for measuring intermediate steps between the ‘prospect’ and ‘customer’ stages.
  • Companies need to know how often customers use their product/solution and how much value they derive from it.
NOTES:
Buying decisions for larger companies are rarely done by one person. Because of this, the “Customer Lifecycle” refers to everyone (i.e., whole account) involved in the purchase and use of the product, not just one manager or one end user.
A company can request case studies and referrals from a customer as soon as it make sense. Make sure that the customer receives consistent value before asking for a case study or referrals. The customer should be at least an active customer.

1.3. Sales Funnel

Whereas the customer lifecycle is driven by customer actions and tracks how they experience the product and company, the ultimate goal of the sales funnel is following specific actions, processes, and workflows to track and optimize the sales process effectiveness.
Questions that your sales funnel has to answer:
  • How does your team prioritize leads?
  • How does your team nurture prospects?
  • What prospect actions correlate higher with closed deals?
  • How long does it take for your SDR team to reach out to leads that reach a qualifying lead score?
  • How long is your sales cycle?
  • What metric best represents efficiency of moving prospects from one stage to the next?
  • When and how do your teams handoff prospects in the funnel?
  • Do you have an onboarding plan?
Let’s take a closer look at the sales funnel.
Sales Funnel
Leads-Leads can enter the sales funnel from outbound and inbound channels.
Outbound leads  are leads created by Sales Development Reps (SDRs) by carefully targeting accounts that may have never heard about the company. Outbound email outreach is still one of the most effective tactics for generating outbound leads. Cold calls, direct mail, sending messaging on social media are all part of the outbound channel.
LEARN MORE: get everything you need to know to start outbound sales for your startup with Steli Efti’s ebook — “The Ultimate Startup Guide to Outbound Sales”.
Inbound leads  are leads created when prospects submit information in exchange for an asset (whitepaper, case study, etc.) or signs up for a free trial.
NOTE: In account-based selling approach where SDRs pre-qualify accounts before initiating an outreach prospects that showed interest can be assigned to Sales Qualified Lead (SQL).
Action required to move to the next stage: filtering bad data, enriching           inbound leads
Two things usually happen after lead data is entered in a company’s database whether it’s marketing automation or CRM: 1) filtering bad data; 2) enriching incoming leads with more information using 3rd party solutions. (insert your ad here — just kidding :) )
Marketing Qualified Lead (MQL)-Not every lead is created equal so it pays to have some sort of lead scoring system that correlates with the historic probability of closing a deal.
Lead nurturing campaigns help companies communicate with prospects. Educational content is a great way to nurture leads. Drip campaigns, newsletters, and webinars can help your marketing team qualify leads and understand when they are ready to discuss their specific problems with you. As soon as prospects hit a certain lead score they are moved to the Sales Qualified Leads stage.
LEARN MORE: In some cases MQL could be completely abundant. Tom Wentworth makes an interesting point about this in his article “Why I’m Killing the Marketing Qualified Lead”. My take on this subject is this: if your average deal size is large or your solution can’t be self-trialed by customers, then generating leads using marketing assets can still be effective. But if you are selling a self-serving solution like Slack, Dropbox or Google Apps, then you can drive customers directly to your product and skip lead forms. However, you still need to find a way to nurture and prioritize people coming through your product gates. Another interesting take on this topic by David Cancel and Dave Gerhardt from Drift — “Why We’re Throwing Out All Of Our Lead Forms And Making Content Free”.
Action required to move to the next stage: Lead score reaches the level needed to be moved to the SQL stage.
Sales Qualified Lead (SQL)At this stage, a sales development team conducts lead qualification. The qualification process depends on your target audience and it should provide your sales team with enough information to establish the level of pain or interest that the prospect has.
The BANT framework can be used in qualification process. The BANT stands for Budget, Authority, Need, and Timeframe.
NOTE: We need to also mention that if a company sells a complex solution or multiple people are involved in the purchasing process (decision maker, influencer, end-user), then a good qualification process will identify the goal and value points for each party involved in the buying process. Decision makers in two different companies might look to solve two different problems and your account executive will have more ammunition if the SDR can identify these differences.
Action required to move to the next stage: The SDR qualifies prospect using BANT approach.
OpportunityWhen a lead passes all the necessary qualification parameters, it becomes an opportunity. The SDR will schedule a demo between the prospect and account executive.
It’s a very useful practice to assign a dollar amount based on the projected deal size for every opportunity. Doing this will help the SDRs to be become more skilled at qualifying and targeting outbound accounts. It’s also a good idea for account executives to prioritize opportunities based on deal sizes.
The account executive gives a demo to the prospect and setups a guided free trial. Getting customers to agree on specific metrics to measure the success of a free trial can increase the probability of closing and reduce the length of the sales cycle.
Action required to move to the next stage: Completed demo or guided free trial.
Proof of Concept (PoC)The higher the deal size, the more important the proof of concept becomes in the sales process. For fully self-serving products, it’s easy to show a demo and give full access to the solution for a prospect to play with. But what if your product requires integration with third party data platforms?
Since setting up a trial period for a more complicated product requires extra resources from your team, the account executive and the prospect should agree on how success will be measured and what the potential deal size will be if the trial is deemed a success.
For technical products, a sales engineer can be brought into discussions with prospects.
Action required to move to the next stage: Negotiation and proposal delivery
ClosedThis is the funnest stage of all. The customer sends the signed proposal and pays for the first invoice. You ring the sales bells while everyone celebrates with champagne. But the real work actually begins now. The customer success team needs to train and fully onboard the customer so that everyone on their team can access your product.
Action required to move down the funnel: product setup
OnboardingThe customer success team (CST) leads the onboarding process by training customers on how to use your solution. In some cases, the solution will have different user roles and multiple levels of access which complicates the onboarding.
Some companies run weekly product training webinars for all customers. During these sessions, the CST can walk the customers through the most common user path and showcase new features and changes to your product.
Individual training with your customer’s inside team can be very effective. The onboarding process never truly ends. The top tech companies realize that a happy customer is cheaper to maintain than acquiring new ones. A top CST will schedule monthly or bi-weekly meetings to review customer’s metrics and check whether the product is fully meeting their needs.
Action required to move to the next stage: Training completed
LEARN MORE: Lincoln Murphy has a few great articles on customer successand onboarding. He is an expert on customer success.
Renew / UpsellThe effectiveness of your customer success team is measured by renewal, upselling, and churn metrics. Typically, the customer success team starts the renewal conversation about 2–3 months before the annual contract is set to expire. But as we discussed earlier, if your Customer Success team communicates regularly with your customers you probably don’t have to worry about setting up a separate meeting for this. Your CST can bring up a conversation about contract renewal on one of the touch-base calls that it has.
Churn Rate — the annual percentage rate at which customers stop subscribing to a service.
LEARN MORE: Tom Tunguz wrote an interesting post on how ServicesNow tracks churn.
The sales process should be designed in a way where each stage identifies where the prospect is in the sales cycle and has specific deliverables that must be met before advancing to the next stage. By monitoring metrics of conversion on each stage, you can focus on ways to increase your sales effectiveness while building strong customer relationships, which lead to higher renewal rates.
LEARN MORE:
This sales funnel is a simplified example. I want to remind you that this framework is not meant to be used as a cookie cutter solution. I highly recommend Jacco’s book “BLUEPRINTS For a SaaS Sales Organization” for a more detailed and in-depth analysis.
Also, we need to mention “The Sales Acceleration Formula” book by Mark Roberge as the best resource to understand HOW sales processes, goals, and workflows are changing depending on the different stages of the company.

You can read the second part of this lengthy blog post here


Monday, August 1, 2016

7 Keys to Make Complex Technology Simple to Understand


Have you ever listened to a company pitch their service or product and your eyes glazed over? I have, and it happened again this morning. I am both a consultant and angel investor and have listened to hundreds of company CEOs extolling the virtues of their company and product. In many cases when I have listened to a start-up pitch I have had to ask the presenter – normally a smart, technically adept founder and CEO – what the company or product really did. Being a techie myself, I can normally “get it.” However, sometimes the explanation is so obtuse and so long that I space out and don’t pay attention. And then, of course, if it is a presentation to an angel group, the presenter has lost his or her audience as well as the ability to raise funds.

Clearly, there are several ways to explain your product. To that end, I was reading an article on cloud computing and the author explained "For geeks cloud computing has been used to mean grid computing, utility computing, Software as a Service, virtualization, Internet-based applications, autonomic computing, peer-to-peer computing and remote processing -- and various combinations of these terms. For non-geeks, cloud computing is simply a platform where individuals and companies use the Internet to access endless hardware, software and data resources for most of their computing needs and people-to-people interactions, leaving the mess to third-party suppliers."  (From: http://searchcloudcomputing.techtarget.com/feature/Why-is-cloud-computing-so-hard-to-understand by Andy Mulholland, Jon Pyke and Peter Fingar.)   

That led me to investigate further and ask the question: How does one explain complex technology and make it simple to understand? To find that out, I had the luxury of moderating a Technology Panel on Eye On Business (watch https://youtu.be/2rRa5DwnoNA ) and with four technology executives discussed how to communicate complicated technology to investors and potential customers. The discussion is equally applicable to companies introducing a new product or service as well as ones that have technologies in the market.

Based on the thoughts of the panelists and some of my own thinking, I developed a list of 7 elements that should be considered when explaining complex technology.

  1. Customer Context. The consensus of the panel was that you need to understand the customer, their frame of reference and talk to them in their terms. Put yourself in the shoes of the listener. If the listener is a VP, Engineering you can talk techie. If it is a businessperson, talk benefits and applications and solutions. I have extolled the virtues of a concept called “customer jujitsu” wherein you use terms similar to what customers say in a way and context they understand to make it easy for them to grasp what you are selling.
  2. Use visual imagery. People learn and absorb information in different ways. Most are visual and therefore visual words such as imagine, see, view, picture are used in their pitches. If the listener is more aural, then use words reflecting sounds.
  3.  Animate. As a corollary to using visual imagery, if you have the right marketing material on your website, develop the visual imagery into a story or animation to show what the product is or does. In the video from the technology panel, note the animation by ICS Software to explain one of their cyber products.
  4. Naming/subbrand. Tying a new concept to a current concept or brand may make it easier to understand. People normally get the concept of better, faster and cheaper. Additionally, the words used to describe a concept hints at the benefit or application. For example, my colleague Vince Ferraro was GM for one of the HP laser printing groups and his team came up with the name Vivera ink to reflect the new technology of ink they developed. Without understanding the technology behind the ink or how the printer uses the cartridges, the name itself connotes brightness and vibrancy. It gets the point across very well. The biotech/pharma market in the way they name their products has been a master at explaining their products in this way.
  5. Competitive Comparison. There is always a danger in raising a competitive name as the listener may question why you are better. But that also gives you the opportunity to discuss the virtues of your product or offering. The way to explain your product or service uses the following structure. “We developed a unique thermometer using technology x. This enables the thermometer to do a, b and c. Unlike competitors such as Thermometer Giant, Inc, our product does it better by x, y and z.” By using this system you show what you do, how you do it with an underlying technology while at the same time putting it in a competitive category by reference.
  6. Analogy/metaphor. Metaphors and similes are used to explain the analogy. Sometimes this works and sometimes it doesn’t. I have heard many pitches for cloud and Internet of Things companies that say they are the “Uber of x.” I get the gig economy but sometimes that reference is overblown. The concept though, is to make a complex product simple by the analogy. I was working for a company, Narus, which used a complex technology to manage cyber security risks. To explain it we developed the analogy that Narus’s software monitored the digital DNA of the network by looking at the bits and bytes running across the network. Even the least technical reporter understood the concept.
  7. Application/benefit. This is commonly used, in conjunction with functional descriptors to make it easy for the listener to understand the input and the output of the product. In explaining a product or service, the presenter uses concepts the audience knows or is interested in and presents the product, service or company in terms of the problems it solves or the benefits granted. Think about explaining a piece of hardware called a firewall – also uses a nice descriptor in the name to give an indication what it does. The benefit of using a firewall is to prevent things you don’t want from accessing your computer. Simple and easy to understand.


We trust that some of these ideas can help you. And we would be glad to discuss how you can explain complex technologies and products to generate top line revenue growth.