The concept of customer centricity is having a moment in the spotlight, but the idea isn’t new. For decades, consumer companies have treated current customers as their most efficient source of additional revenue. B2B companies are starting to understand that the same concept makes sense even when “buying more things” looks like a contract renewal rather than a quick purchase of, say, shoelaces.
Of course, buying software is more complicated than buying shoelaces. “Customer” doesn’t mean only one person. You have committees. You have an economic buyer and at least one end user. They have different goals and needs. They use your product differently, and the buyer may not even use it at all. For example, the Falkon economic buyer is typically a Chief Revenue Officer, but the CRO doesn’t usually log into the product. Our end users are various leaders in the sales organization.
Both economic buyers and end users are important, but the only way to drive high net dollar retention is to build a product users love. If your product feels necessary to them, they create the momentum for purchase and renewal. They explain exactly why they need it and what their company would lose without it.
Revenue leaders need a deep understanding of users, their pain, and the real value your product delivers (not only what it was built to do). That understanding translates to revenue protection. To get it, explore both qualitative and quantitative feedback: what users say and what they do.
Avoid the temptation to over-bias on quantitative analysis. Data can’t tell you everything you need to know about product value. You need to talk with users, even though they may say things you don’t want to hear. In fact, you need to talk with them because they may give you difficult feedback. Remember they’re a proxy for thousands of other users with similar experiences.
When you talk with users, they’re going to want to please you. It’s human nature. If you ask them open-ended questions, they’ll give pleasant responses. These tactics help you go deeper to ensure your product offers necessary solutions that drive renewals and increase revenue protection.
This level of qualitative research is how to get meaningful insights from the only people who can truly validate or invalidate your product value, and use it to drive revenue predictability and protection. You gain efficiency toward new business, minimize lost revenue, and reduce wasted spend.
Do people use your product how you think they do? Do they use the features you expect them to? Have they developed surprising habits? These are questions that a quantitative assessment can answer.
Watching your product usage data roll in through a tool like Amplitude is easy, but it’s only meaningful if you know what you’re looking for. Which actions mean a user is getting value? Here’s how to find out.
Value metrics are likely to change as your product evolves, so expect to revisit your hypotheses. The brilliant thing about these metrics is that they’re useful throughout the entire revenue lifecycle. They are the earliest predictors of cross-sell and upsell readiness, and the first signals of revenue risk. Drive more expansion dollars with alerts around your value metrics that tell the sales team which accounts and contacts to prioritize. Increase revenue retention by catching meaningful decreases well ahead of loss.
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