Jeff Kushmerek’s Post

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2023 Pavilion 50 CCOs to watch, Top 100 CS Strategist| I fix broken Customer Success and Implementation teams

"Just so you know, if this site breaks because of your software, it means we are losing 1MM a day" (this site now generates $12.9 billion a year) I remember some of my team members being offended and upset by this threat. However, we needed to show some empathy. When you are a startup and someone selects your product over a much larger, more popular and SAFE choice, you have to remember that someone went out on a limb to make this decision. The old "no one got fired for choosing IBM" line... What did we do to make sure that our customers felt good about their decision during the implementation? - Onsite kickoff and requirements validation. When the ___ goes down, it's much easier to have hard conversations with people whom you have spent time in person with. Not the easiest to do these days, but I highly recommend this if you can swing it. - Constant updates. We didn't send a status report 5 minutes before the status meeting. 24 hours before our meetings we would send a report that gave them the time to absorb what we would go over in the meeting - Touch base calls in between regularly scheduled meetings. The more communication the better, even if it's not all good news. Bad news was delivered early to allow for planning and adjustment - A baseline plan to follow, but one that allows for flexibility. There is no need to PM a customer to death when you are implementing your software for them. There was a lot more that went into it, but these were the core tenants that led to many successful software launches, which eventually made our company so valuable that Oracle paid 1B in 2012. I would love to hear any similar war stories below!

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Jud Sparks

Full service operational leader from product creation to end of life and in between

3d

Similar to yours but it is not my story, just one the guys told me when I started. It was around 2002 at a major storage company servicing an even more major finance company. The storage went down 1 time, fluke thing based on a corner case however it went down for 11 minutes. The patch went in and there were no further issues but as part of the RCA process, a large cross functional team went onsite to further mend the relationship. Near the end of the visit the leader from the financial company brought the team to the trading floor. “Can I have you attention please. The people from storage company are here discussing the outage. Can everyone please show them what we were doing for those 11 minutes while we lost $11 million dollars.” The entire trading floor then stood up, pushed in their keyboards, stepped back 1 step, folded their arms and just stared at the storage team,,,, for 11 minutes. No one moved or said a word. Needless to say, everyone got the message and that issue never happened again.

Tim Henrion

Director - Presales Solution Architecture // Technology Sales Leader // I Simplify IT Technology for Business

3d

What was it that Capt. Kirk said? "Lieutenant, at any moment, the survival of this vessel could depend on the performance of a single crewman." That can be a difficult concept for those unfamiliar with working at startups, especially when you've landed your first large conservative customer(s). The most successful startups I've worked for planned these things like military operations: Assume SOMETHING will go wrong beyond your control and pre-plan for EVERY contingency. Always proactively keep your customer (who's effectively bet their job/career on your stuff) in the loop. Most importantly, Keep your people emotionally invested. Long before you give them the "don't fuck it up," be sure they know how much it's going to mean to the customer and the company WHEN (not if) they're successful.

Kristine Kukich

Customer Education + Customer Marketing = Mixology with a dash of AI

3d

And don't forget to be consistent with the change management and keep an eye on how the client is managing change within their organization.

Mitchell Palsson

Amplify your knowledge of SaaS professional services

3d

Great suggestion to provide the status date 24 hours prior. Often, if it is first presented during the meeting people don’t have time to digest and understand the meanings of it. Also, crazy to see Mr. Darcy jumping on someone like that!

MD MURAD HASAN

--Digital Marketer YouTube Growth Expert | SEO Specialist | YouTube Manager | YouTube Ads | Google ads | YouTube View & Subscriber | YouTube Monetization Expert| Social media Manager|

3d

Thought-provoking

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