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Customer-centric digital transformation

by Deepak Sharma, Jagjeet Gill, Anne Kwan
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10 minute read 05 September 2019

Customer-centric digital transformation Making customer success integral to the new organization

10 minute read 06 September 2019
  • Deepak Sharma
  • Jagjeet Gill United States
  • Anne Kwan United States
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  • The customer success function and mindset
  • From churn reduction to value generation
  • Approach to customer-centric transformation
  • Successful CS transformation journeys
  • Next steps: Function to enterprise muscle to mindset

How can an organization keep customers—rather than technology—at the center of a transformation effort? This article, fifth in a series, explores the benefits of developing a proactive customer success capability. 

The customer success function and mindset

Yes, technological advances are driving fundamental market shifts and a new wave of digital-driven disruption.1 But customers—increasingly seeking always-on, performance-based, and integrated solutions—may be an even greater catalyst.2

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Indeed, customer expectations and demands are creating critical challenges—as well as opportunities—for employees across sales, services, support, and product functions. To successfully ride this wave of change, companies need to continuously evaluate how digital disruption is changing customer behavior, rethink their customer engagement model to leverage disruptive technologies, and redesign employees’ roles to form customer success (CS) capability that maximizes value for customers and enables an enhanced experience for them.

Customer success

Customer success is the proactive orchestration of a customer’s journey that maximizes the value for the end customer across the life cycle.

In short, we believe that organizations must make customers central to digital transformation and activate the virtuous cycle. Figure 2 illustrates how building a customer-centric organization ties into our overall digital transformation framework. 

Building a customer-centric organization

From churn reduction to value generation

The ever-changing technology landscape—currently shaped by technologies such as cloud computing, anything-as-a-service (XaaS), and the Internet of Things (including industrial IoT)—has solidified the need for businesses to adopt a customer-in mindset, shifting focus from selling a product to nourishing a customer relationship: understanding expectations and maximizing customer value from offerings.3

B2B companies that invest in a CS function are looking for a range of gains, including lower cost to serve, higher willingness to spend, increased loyalty, and brand advocacy. Unsurprisingly, good customer success capability execution brings tangible benefits:

  • Spend. Sixty-two percent of B2B customers have purchased more from a company after a good customer service experience.4
  • Tenure. After building a relationship, customer spend grows alongside trust. Eventually, loyal customers spend 67 percent more than new ones.5 Over the course of a year, experience-driven businesses grew revenue 1.4 times faster and increased customer lifetime value 1.6 times more than other companies.6
  • Cost of service. Maximizing satisfaction with customer journeys has the potential of lowering the cost of serving B2B customers by as much as 20 percent.7
  • Referrals. After a positive experience, 83 percent of customers would be happy to provide a referral if asked.8 Questions such as, “How likely are you to refer a friend or colleague?” can help customer service managers identify which customers to ask for referrals.

Beyond selling

In the cloud era, the CS function has evolved alongside B2B business models (figure 3), originating with the industry’s movement from businesses dependent on reducing churn to XaaS companies with delivery and monetization models that focus on customer retention and value creation.9

Evolution of the customer success functionThe market now demands an always-on mindset that customer success helps deliver

The proliferation of enterprise IoT, XaaS solutions, and data-generating connected devices makes outcome-focused CS management a realistic opportunity for B2B companies—especially those pursuing a customer-centric digital transformation to help increase “stickiness” and customer loyalty.

Going forward, B2B customers will increasingly expect companies to deliver a seamless experience with both human and digital touchpoints. While human interactions largely drive current touchpoints, future touchpoints will increasingly skew toward digital and provide a real-time customer experience that is contextualized, personalized, and data- and usage-driven. Human interactions, meanwhile, will likely focus on orchestrating the ecosystem, co-creating value with the customer, and helping the customer versus selling.10

To create a truly differentiated CS function, therefore, B2B companies should look to develop a human-plus-digital engagement model that focuses on helping customers recognize and maximize the value of their purchased products and services.

Approach to customer-centric transformation

As per our analysis, the companies leading in customer success11 have common elements in their approach. Their leaders usually design an end-to-end CS capability and discipline that drives toward customer-centricity.

The transformation begins with defining the north star or the organization’s CS vision.12 Based on this vision, leaders define the capabilities and operating model required to deliver the CS targets envisioned.13 These capabilities are usually defined at three levels: core (foundational capabilities owned and managed solely by the CS function), shared (capabilities shared between CS team and internal business functions), and enterprise (capabilities owned and managed at an enterprise level, prerequisites for the CS team to function successfully). Additionally, leaders often aim to design the organization’s governance operating model to enable collaboration between CS and internal functions such as product engineering, sales, marketing, and support.

Following the capability and operating model establishment, the organization employs strong KPIs, metrics, and systems to ensure successful transformation. A key step is driving a CS mindset across the enterprise, often requiring a definitive change in culture in alignment with the enterprise’s specific situational factors. This can be the most difficult—and most rewarding—part of the journey. Companies able to focus and execute on this can move to having customer-centric C-suite conversations, making it part of the organizational DNA.

The conversation can shift from, “What are our profit and revenue this quarter?” to, “How are we providing value to customers? What experiences are they enjoying with us? Are they getting value from our products/offerings?”

Figure 5 illustrates the perspective a company can take to measure the value generated (qualitative and quantitative) by CS transformation in real time—and to understand the expected outcomes. Creating and delivering business value starts by clearly articulating performance measures that reflect the customer’s outside-in view of value and the company’s inside-out product view of value and bridging the gap between product performance and usage experience. Measures of customer value (business value, experience value, and performance value) combined with traditional business outcomes-focused metrics (for example, increasing revenue, increasing tenure, lowering costs, and increasing advocacy) can help B2B companies produce a comprehensive value scorecard that identifies both customer and company benefits.

Measuring the value created

An account health scorecard (based on the measurement framework in figure 5) can offer visibility to enterprise-level performance and alert the respective business function before a customer identifies a problem. This scorecard should:

  • Accurately capture the customer’s target objectives, target outcomes, and progress along the value realization plan
  • Provide advanced visualization dashboards for users to understand product performance based on usage and business value created
  • Track potential/emerging areas of concern and red-flag issues as they emerge

For most organizations that have undergone transformational CS journeys, leaders have carried out a program across three key levels (figure 6). At level one, a strong CS function is established that owns and maintains ongoing customer value realization and is accountable for driving adoption, retention, and expansion.

At level two, a cross-functional engagement model is built in which customer success delivers insights upon which other functions act, aligning their CS outlook with the company’s overall vision.

Finally, at level three, a customer-first mindset is inculcated, making CS a part of the organizational DNA. At this level, CS is considered imperative enough to be given a C-suite seat and be a part of the regular board agenda. The value generated during CS transformation is for not only the customer (value creation) but the company (value capture).

Typically, organizations expend maximum effort to achieve level one maturity but lose focus while driving toward level two. Follow-through is key, since the end goal is a strong customer-centric transformation, and that demands commitment to realize level three maturity. In a recent customer success survey,14 just one-third of respondents said their CS function is led by a C-suite executive, a mere 30 percent report that customer success is considered a strategic priority by the board of directors, and only 26 percent say that official business communications regularly mention customer success.

CS maturity map

Successful CS transformation journeys

The following examples showcase successful customer-centric digital transformation and the level of CS maturity attained by multiple companies.

A leading software company—a long-term client—faced challenges with customer services and found multiple red flags and isolated efforts, leading to a low net promoter score (NPS).15 Also, with business models shifting to as-a-service, competitors were strengthening their market position and building scale.16

To regain lost ground, company leaders began a transformation journey by defining a vision around proactiveness, distinctive experience, and maximizing value realization. The company developed capabilities such as investment in product feedback loop, health monitoring, and defined new roles such as CS manager and solution adviser. To ensure lasting impact, managers designed customer health scorecards and deployed a CS platform. The company has now included customer success as part of the C-suite agenda and has established the function under the chief customer officer, reporting to the president.

The company realized multiple outstanding outcomes from this multiyear transformation: Stock price more than doubled, revenues increased by 20 percent, NPS and customer satisfaction CSAT scores increased by 7–12 points, and new product development improved by 20–30 percent. The company also noticed a change in customer experience, as the number of direct customer interactions shrunk and became more focused. With information flowing faster and more accurately, customer interaction speed and friction also increased. The CS group shared educational material with customers, describing potential usages of software features, and the company assigned each customer an advocate to help them realize more business value from products. Customers saw a dramatic shift in time to value from their purchased solutions.

As the plan matured and CS function expanded, leaders recognized the need for other companywide changes to be more efficient and effective (figure 7). They aimed to inculcate a CS mindset in the teams, greatly affecting interactions with customers and partners. Core functions became more collaborative and passed on customer insights to each other, enabling the company to build a better cloud-based go-to-market program.

Companywide X-fuctional transformation

Another company in the hardware and storage space, moving into IoT space, is undergoing a transformation from a legacy hardware storage services company to an XaaS provider. Leaders here see a strong need for a CS model that better amplifies and communicates their products’ true value. The executive committee appointed a CS leadership team to identify the path forward.17

Following a similar framework, the team set its north star on establishing customer success as an organization and adopting a customer-centric mindset. The company planned its transformation into two phases, beginning with a pilot/short-term plan to test customer success manager (CSM) coverage ratios and industry vertical and product mixes, develop best practices for the company’s CSMs, and create an initial iteration of its CS platform with a subset of accounts. In the long term, leaders aim to grow customer success beyond the handful of initial accounts into a full-fledged organization responsible for driving churn rate down and renewal rates up and optimizing the business to enable customers to achieve their business goals and derive maximum value from products and services.

The CS group has been able to bring in new multimillion global orders, close new contracts, and handle problem-solving with quicker turnarounds. Some end customers and account teams are acknowledging their CSMs’ value—for instance, one account team member volunteered, “The CSM is an integral part of our team, and it would significantly hurt our professional-services revenue if we did not have him.” A recent customer success study18 suggested that other companies have seen similar results: Half of the respondents reported 10 percent higher upsell and cross-sell revenues; one-third reported greater than 20 percent uptick in annual recurring revenue after enabling their CS strategy.

Next steps: Function to enterprise muscle to mindset

Undergoing a CS transformation generally requires a B2B company to add differentiated capabilities and processes across the customer life cycle journey—all of which support the goals of maximizing product and service business value, improving satisfaction, and increasing retention. Leaders should begin by reflecting on the importance of customer success as a foundational element in an organization’s journey to customer-centric digital transformation. Three questions to consider:

  1. How do we ensure that our customers are able to achieve maximum value from the offering they have bought from us?
  2. How can we capitalize on the value realized by our customers?
  3. What can we enhance to be in line with a customer-centric digital transformation journey?

To embrace customer-centricity, B2B organizations should ensure that customer success becomes a part of the enterprise muscle. One way to achieve a CS mindset is by putting customer success at the CEO table and on the board agenda. CS teams essentially work cross-functionally, and the organizational capabilities should enable the CS function to have enterprisewide impact. By placing customers at the center of an organization’s strategy, leaders can focus and give direction to an overall digital transformation.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Anjali Tanwar for her tireless efforts to bring this article to life. The authors would also like to recognize Maximilian Schroeck, Jon Kawamura, Aftab Khanna, Aishwarya Sharan, Ashish Tiwari, Cristina Stefanita, Molly Campbell, Divya Dewan, and Ayush Sinha of Deloitte Consulting LLP for their contributions to the digital transformation practice.

Cover image by: Sonya Vasilieff

Endnotes
    1. Anne Kwan, Maximilian Schroeck, and Jon Kawamura, Architecting an operating model: A platform for accelerating digital transformation, Deloitte Insights, August 5, 2019. View in article

    2. Jeff Hood, Alan Brady, and Raj Dhanasri, Industry 4.0 engages customers: The digital manufacturing enterprise powers the customer life cycle, Deloitte University Press, December 15, 2016. View in article

    3. John Lucker, Susan K. Hogan, and Brenna Sniderman, “Fooled by the hype: Is it the next big thing or merely a shiny new object?,” Deloitte Review 23, July 30, 2018. View in article

    4. Zendesk, “Quantifying the business impact of customer service,” accessed August 12, 2019. View in article

    5. Giselle Abramovich, “15 mind-blowing stats about loyalty,” CMO.com, March 10, 2017. View in article

    6. Forrester Consulting, The business impact of investing in experience, commissioned by Adobe, April 2018. View in article

    7. Steve Offsey, “What is customer journey analytics?,” Pointillist, accessed August 12, 2019. View in article

    8. Jasmin Al-Hawi, “How to build a referral program to encourage word of mouth marketing,” Medium, July 16, 2017. View in article

    9. David Saabye, “Out of the box, into the cloud: Adobe’s transformation…,” dPrism Advisors, November 22, 2017; Matt Given, “The 1 word that saved Salesforce from certain doom,” Inc., August 15, 2017. View in article

    10. Zoovu, “Helping is the new selling—with buyers in control, the definition of selling needs an update,” November 28, 2017. View in article

    11. Saabye, “Out of the box, into the cloud.” View in article

    12. Maximilian Schroeck, Jon Kawamura, and Anne Kwan, Setting the north star: Staying focused and on track, Deloitte Insights, July 2, 2019. View in article

    13. Kwan, Schroeck, and Kawamura, Architecting an operating model. View in article

    14. Gopal Srinivasan et al., 2019 enterprise customer success (CS) study and outlook, Deloitte, accessed August 12, 2019. View in article

    15. Susan K. Hogan and Timothy Murphy, Breaking up is hard to do: How behavioral factors affect consumer decisions to stay in business relationships, Deloitte University Press, June 26, 2015. View in article

    16. Art Mazor et al., Measuring human relationships and experiences: Blurring lines and shifting sands, Deloitte Insights, June 20, 2019. View in article

    17. Schroeck, Kawamura, and Kwan, Setting the north star. View in article

    18. Srinivasan et al., 2019 enterprise customer success (CS) study and outlook. View in article

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​Deloitte Consulting LLP's digital transformation practice has advised clients in the technology sector (e.g., hardware and software) as well as those in the industrial sector (e.g., manufacturing, construction, and energy) enter and compete in new growth areas. Our work includes defining customer-first strategies, building new business and operating models, and launching the critical capabilities required to swiftly drive scale—all to achieve optimal results from limited resource pools.

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Deepak Sharma

Deepak Sharma

Deepak Sharma is Deloitte's former Customer and Marketing Strategy practice leader.

  • deepaksharma8@deloitte.com
Jagjeet Gill

Jagjeet Gill

Principal | Technology, Media & Telecommunications

Jagjeet Gill is a principal in Monitor Deloitte’s Strategy practice, with more than 22 years of global consulting experience advising TMT-technology-sector clients on large-scale tech-enabled business transformation and restructuring efforts. He has significant experience in advising clients on XaaS business model transformation, lead-to-revenue transformation, cloud IT strategy, enterprise architecture, IT spend optimization, agile transformation, AI analytics, and global complex transformation program management. He has published and been quoted on WSJ CIO, TechTarget, CIO Dive, CIO.com, NetworkWorld, InformationWeek, Information Management, and other publications. He is a technology strategy leader for our XaaS practice, CIO offering leader for TMT industry, and Technology Architecture & Platform offering leader for US firm.

  • jagjgill@deloitte.com
Anne Kwan

Anne Kwan

Principal | Strategy & Transformation Leader

Anne helps executives achieve profitable growth and competitive advantage via enterprise transformation. Over the past 20 years, she’s advised clients on how to evolve their business strategy, enterprise model design and operating capabilities in response to market and technology disruptions. She works with clients to conceptualize, design and execute enterprise change programs. Anne primarily serves technology, media and telecom (TMT) clients but works across sectors given industry convergence and the broad adoption of software business models. Within Deloitte, Anne serves as the Lead Consulting Partner (LCP) for a cluster of ten (10) semiconductor equipment clients and as the sponsor of Deloitte’s Chief Transformation Officer Program.

  • annkwan@deloitte.com
  • +1 415 783 6379

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