Allison Pickens carries the customer success torch as the VP of Customer Success & Business Operations at the category leaders, Gainsight. Allison’s organization @ Gainsight includes all post-sales functions: CSMs, Support, Onboarding, Services, and Operations. Prior to Gainsight, she started her career in management consulting for Fortune 500 companies while at Boston Consulting Group and later worked in private equity investing at Bain Capital. Allison decided that she couldn’t pass up the opportunity to work at Gainsight when Bain Capital led the Series B.
In Today’s Episode With Allison You Will Learn:
1.) So let’s start with managing customer churn and I think the first and most important thing is assessing what is regrettable vs non-regrettable. How do you approach this?
- What is the internal post mortem?
- How do you identify why they churned?
- Is there a blame game that follows? How do you instill ramifications but not fear?
- How do you then look to fix the original problem that caused the churn?
2.) To do the above we need to have a great customer success team so iw ant to talk about the process of building this out and with CS being a new category this is an aspect a lot of founders are addressing at this time. So starting with the obvious?
- When do you need a customer success team?
- Where in the organization should the team sit?
- What's the playbook for rolling it out?
- How big does the team need to be? Does this vary on sector or funding availability?
- What are the levels of seniority within the team?
- What's your budget? How do you account for the costs of your team?
- What teams sit within the customer success umbrella?
60 Second Saastr produced by Nick Mehta:
What surprises you most about customer success now vs a year ago?
Importance of fast iterating team?
Fave SaaS material, book, blog, podcast?
What element of the journey have you found most challenging?
Carrying the CS torch? What is it like do you feel the pressure?
3.) Now I want to finish today by discussing the segmentation of your customer base, so at what point in the company's life do you begin segmenting the customers?
- Why is it important to segment customers?
- How do you decide the best way to segment them?
- Should these segments align with the sales team?
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