Customer
The Revenue That Already Exists
Every business has two growth levers. The first is acquiring new customers — the one that gets the most attention, the most budget, the most strategy. The second is keeping and growing the customers already won — the one that is consistently underinvested in until the churn rate becomes impossible to ignore.
The economics of these two levers are not equivalent. Acquiring a new customer costs five to seven times more than retaining an existing one. Expanding an existing customer requires a fraction of the sales motion of a new logo acquisition. A customer who stays and grows is a compounding asset. A customer who churns is a sunk cost that must be replaced before the business can grow at all.
The businesses that understand this structure their customer function accordingly — not as a support cost center that catches complaints, but as a revenue function that protects and grows the installed base with the same discipline applied to new customer acquisition. The businesses that do not understand it find themselves running on a treadmill, acquiring customers at the front of the funnel as fast as they are losing them out the back, wondering why growth is harder than the revenue numbers suggest it should be.
This skill is about building the second kind of business.
Who the Customer Actually Is
The customer who signed the contract is not always the customer who uses the product. The executive who approved the purchase may never log in. The team that uses it daily may not have been in the buying conversation. The champion who advocated for the purchase internally may have left the company six months after the deal closed.
Understanding who the customer actually is — the full map of stakeholders, their individual relationships with the product, their individual definitions of success, and the web of internal dynamics that determines whether the renewal happens — is the foundation of everything that follows. A customer success motion built on a relationship with a single contact is fragile. A customer success motion built on multiple relationships across multiple levels of the organization is resilient to the attrition, reorganization, and priority shifts that happen in every customer account over a multi-year relationship.
The skill builds this map for every significant customer. The economic buyer who controls the budget and signs the renewal. The champion who advocated internally and whose reputation is tied to the product's success. The day-to-day users whose experience determines whether the product delivers value in practice. The internal skeptics whose concerns were not fully addressed in the sales process and who may resurface at renewal time. The executives who do not use the product but whose strategic priorities the product either serves or does not.
Each of these stakeholders needs a different relationship, a different communication, and a different definition of success. The skill manages all of them.
Onboarding as the Foundation of Everything
The first ninety days of a customer relationship determine more about the eventual outcome than any subsequent period. The customer who successfully onboards — who integrates the product into their workflow, achieves their first significant outcome, and builds the internal habits that make continued use the path of least resistance — retains at dramatically higher rates than the customer who struggles through onboarding and never achieves the value they were promised.
Most onboarding failures are not technical. They are expectation failures, priority failures, and handoff failures. The customer was promised outcomes in the sales process that the onboarding does not systematically deliver. The urgency that drove the purchase decision dissipates as the customer returns to their normal workload and the implementation becomes one of many competing priorities. The knowledge that lived in the salesperson who built the relationship does not transfer to the customer success manager who inherits it.
The skill builds onboarding programs that prevent these failures. The kickoff that establishes concrete success criteria rather than vague intentions. The early milestone structure that creates momentum and demonstrates progress in the first thirty days. The executive check-in at sixty days that maintains senior sponsorship through the period when implementation effort is highest. The success review at ninety days that confirms value has been achieved and sets the foundation for the expansion conversation that should follow.
It also builds the internal onboarding — the process of ensuring that the people inside the customer organization who need to use the product actually adopt it, which is a change management challenge that lives inside the customer's organization and requires active partnership rather than passive availability.
The Health Score That Predicts the Future
A customer who is about to churn almost always shows signals before the renewal conversation. They log in less frequently. Their support ticket volume changes — either increasing, as frustration compounds, or decreasing, as they stop trying to resolve problems with a product they have mentally already left. Their champion stops responding to outreach. Their usage of core features declines. Their NPS scores drift downward. They miss scheduled check-in calls.
These signals, tracked systematically, are predictive. The customer whose health score drops in the third month of a twelve-month contract is a different renewal risk than the customer whose health score is stable or improving. The intervention that saves a churning customer is most effective when it happens at the third month, when there is time to course-correct, and least effective when it happens at the eleventh month, when the decision has already been made and the renewal conversation is a formality.
The skill builds a health scoring framework calibrated to your specific product and customer base. The metrics that actually predict renewal in your context — which are not the same for every product and should not be assumed from generic benchmarks. The thresholds that trigger intervention at each stage of the customer lifecycle. The intervention playbooks that match the specific risk signal — a usage drop requires a different response than an executive sponsor departure, which requires a different response than a competitive evaluation.
It also builds the discipline of reviewing health scores consistently rather than reactively — not just when a renewal is ninety days out, but throughout the customer lifetime when intervention is still possible.
The Renewal That Is Never a Surprise
A renewal that is uncertain at sixty days out is a renewal where something went wrong in the preceding eleven months. The customer success motion that produces reliable renewals does not begin the renewal conversation at ninety days. It maintains a continuous conversation about value throughout the contract period, so that the renewal is a confirmation of a relationship that is working rather than a negotiation of a relationship that may not continue.
The renewal conversation, when it arrives, should be a conversation about expansion — about what more the product can do for the customer given what has been learned about their needs in the first year — not a conversation about whether the product is delivering value. If the latter conversation is necessary, the renewal is already at risk.
The skill builds the renewal motion from the beginning of the relationship. The success review cadence that demonstrates value explicitly rather than assuming the customer notices it. The business review format that connects product usage to business outcomes in the language the executive buyer cares about. The expansion discovery that surfaces new use cases and new stakeholders before the renewal conversation, so that the renewal is bundled with an expansion rather than treated as a separate negotiation.
It also handles the renewals that are at risk — the playbook for the customer who is unhappy, the conversation that surfaces the real objection rather than the stated one, the escalation path that brings executive relationships to bear when the customer success relationship is not sufficient to hold the account.
Expansion as the Natural Next Chapter
The customer who has achieved value with your product in one use case is the most receptive audience for the conversation about a second use case. They have already validated the core value proposition. They have already built the internal credibility from the first implementation. They already have a relationship with your team. The friction of the expansion sale is a fraction of the friction of the new logo sale for every one of these reasons.
Most expansion revenue is left on the table not because customers would not have bought more, but because no one asked at the right time in the right way. The ask that comes before the customer has achieved value in the first use case is premature and damages trust. The ask that comes after the value is clear and the customer is in a moment of success is a natural extension of a conversation already underway.
The skill identifies the expansion signals that indicate a customer is ready for the conversation — increased usage approaching the limits of the current plan, a new team or department with an analogous problem, an organizational change that creates a new use case, a strategic initiative that the product can support in a way not yet explored. It builds the expansion conversation that feels like customer advocacy rather than upselling — because when it is done correctly, it is.
The Customer Who Becomes the Advocate
The most valuable customer is not the largest customer. It is the customer who tells others. The reference call that turns a skeptical prospect into a committed buyer. The case study that demonstrates the outcome your product produces with specificity that generic marketing cannot match. The G2 review that appears when a competitor's prospect searches for alternatives. The word of mouth referral that arrives with a level of trust no marketing campaign can manufacture.
Advocates are not created by asking customers to be advocates. They are created by giving customers an experience worth talking about and then making it easy for them to talk about it. The skill builds the advocate development program that identifies customers with the enthusiasm and the story to be effective references, cultivates the relationship that makes the ask natural rather than transactional, and creates the mechanisms — reference programs, case study processes, community participation — that channel that enthusiasm into assets that drive new business.
When Customers Leave
Some customers will churn. The product is not right for them, or the fit was wrong from the beginning, or a competitor built something better for their specific situation, or their business changed in ways that eliminated the problem your product solves. Churn is not always preventable and the attempt to prevent all of it produces its own problems — customers who should not renew kept in relationships that cost more to maintain than the revenue justifies.
What matters is understanding why customers leave with enough specificity to distinguish the preventable churn from the unpreventable, and to fix the system failures that produce the preventable kind. The exit conversation that surfaces the real reason rather than the polite reason. The churn analysis that aggregates individual exits into patterns — a specific customer profile that churns at high rates, a specific stage in the lifecycle where churn concentrates, a specific competitor that wins a disproportionate share of the lost accounts. The product insight that emerges from churn patterns and belongs in the roadmap conversation.
The customer who leaves well — who was treated with respect through a difficult conversation, whose concerns were heard, whose transition was supported — sometimes comes back. The customer who leaves poorly does not, and tells others why.
客户
已经存在的收入
每家企业都有两个增长杠杆。第一个是获取新客户——这是最受关注、预算最多、策略最密集的杠杆。第二个是留住并发展已赢得的客户——这个杠杆一直被投入不足,直到客户流失率高到无法忽视。
这两个杠杆的经济效益并不对等。获取一个新客户的成本是留住一个现有客户的五到七倍。拓展现有客户所需的销售动作,远少于获取一个新客户。一个留下并增长的客户是复利资产。一个流失的客户是沉没成本,企业必须先填补这个缺口才能实现增长。
理解这一点的企业会相应构建其客户职能——不是作为处理投诉的支持成本中心,而是作为保护和发展现有客户群的收入职能,以与新客户获取相同的纪律来执行。不理解这一点的企业会发现自己在跑步机上奔跑,在漏斗前端获取客户的速度与后端流失客户的速度一样快,并困惑为什么增长比收入数字所暗示的要困难得多。
这项技能关乎构建第二种企业。
客户究竟是谁
签署合同的客户并不总是使用产品的客户。批准采购的高管可能从未登录过系统。日常使用产品的团队可能并未参与购买对话。内部倡导购买的支持者可能在交易完成六个月后就离开了公司。
了解客户究竟是谁——完整的利益相关者地图、他们各自与产品的关系、他们各自对成功的定义,以及决定续约是否发生的内部动态网络——是后续一切工作的基础。建立在单一联系人关系上的客户成功行动是脆弱的。建立在组织多个层级、多重关系上的客户成功行动,能够抵御多年客户关系中必然发生的人员流失、组织重组和优先级变化。
这项技能为每个重要客户构建这张地图。控制预算并签署续约的经济买家。内部倡导、其声誉与产品成功挂钩的支持者。日常使用产品、其体验决定产品是否在实践中交付价值的用户。内部持怀疑态度、其担忧在销售过程中未得到充分解决、可能在续约时重新浮现的人。不使用产品但其战略优先级与产品是否匹配的高管。
这些利益相关者中的每一位都需要不同的关系、不同的沟通方式以及不同的成功定义。这项技能管理所有这些人。
入职引导是一切的基础
客户关系的前九十天对最终结果的影响超过任何后续时期。成功完成入职引导的客户——将产品融入工作流程、实现首个重要成果、并建立使持续使用成为阻力最小路径的内部习惯——其留存率远高于在入职引导中挣扎、从未实现所承诺价值的客户。
大多数入职引导失败并非技术问题。它们是期望失败、优先级失败和交接失败。客户在销售过程中被承诺的结果,入职引导并未系统性地交付。推动购买决策的紧迫感随着客户回归正常工作负荷而消散,实施成为众多竞争优先级之一。建立关系的销售人员所掌握的知识,并未转移给接手工作的客户成功经理。
这项技能构建防止这些失败的入职引导计划。确立具体成功标准而非模糊意图的启动会议。在前三十天创造动力并展示进展的早期里程碑结构。在实施工作量最大的时期维持高层支持的六十天高管检查。确认价值已实现并为后续扩展对话奠定基础的九十天成功回顾。
它还构建内部入职引导——确保客户组织内需要使用产品的人真正采用产品的过程,这是一个存在于客户组织内部的变革管理挑战,需要主动合作而非被动可用性。
预测未来的健康评分
即将流失的客户几乎总是在续约对话之前就发出信号。他们登录频率降低。他们的支持工单量发生变化——要么因挫败感累积而增加,要么因他们已放弃解决他们认为已放弃的产品问题而减少。他们的支持者停止回应外联。他们对核心功能的使用下降。他们的NPS评分逐渐下滑。他们错过预定的检查电话。
这些信号如果被系统化追踪,就具有预测性。在十二个月合同的第三个月健康评分下降的客户,与健康评分稳定或改善的客户,是不同级别的续约风险。挽救流失客户的最佳干预时机是在第三个月,那时还有时间纠正方向;最无效的干预是在第十一个月,那时决定已经做出,续约对话只是走过场。
这项技能构建一个针对你特定产品和客户群校准的健康评分框架。在你的情境中实际预测续约的指标——这些指标并非对所有产品都相同,也不应从通用基准中假设。在客户生命周期的每个阶段触发干预的阈值。与特定风险信号匹配的干预剧本——使用量下降需要与高管支持者离职不同的应对方式,而后者又需要与竞争评估不同的应对方式。
它还构建持续而非被动审查健康评分的纪律——不仅仅是在续约前九十天,而是在整个客户生命周期中,当干预仍然可能时。
从不令人意外的续约
在续约前六十天仍不确定的续约,意味着前十一个月出了问题。能够产生可靠续约的客户成功行动,并非在续约前九十天才开始续约对话。它在整个合同期内持续进行关于价值的对话,使得续约成为对有效关系的确认,而非对可能不会继续的关系的谈判。
当续约对话到来时,它应该是关于扩展的对话——关于根据第一年对客户需求的了解,产品还能为客户做些什么——而不是关于产品是否在交付价值的对话。如果后者是必要的,续约已经面临风险。
这项技能从关系建立之初就构建续约行动。明确展示价值而非假设客户会注意到的成功回顾节奏。以执行买家关心的语言将产品使用与业务成果联系起来的业务回顾形式。在续约对话之前发现新用例和新利益相关者的扩展发现,使得续约与扩展捆绑在一起,而非作为单独谈判处理。
它还处理面临风险的续约——针对不满客户的剧本、揭示真实反对意见而非表面意见的对话、当客户成功关系不足以维系账户时引入高管关系的升级路径。
扩展作为自然的下一章
在一个用例中已通过你的产品实现价值的客户,是最容易接受第二个用例对话的受众。他们已经验证了核心价值主张。他们已经从第一次实施中建立了内部信誉。他们已经与你的团队建立了关系。由于这些原因,扩展销售中的摩擦只是新客户销售摩擦的一小部分。
大多数扩展收入被留在桌上,不是因为客户不会购买更多,而是因为没有人以正确的方式在正确的时间提出要求。在客户在第一个用例中实现价值之前提出的要求为时过早,会损害信任。在价值明确且客户处于成功时刻之后提出的要求,是已经进行的对话的自然延伸。
这项技能识别表明客户已准备好进行对话的扩展信号——使用量接近当前计划上限、有类似问题的新团队或部门、创造新用例的组织变革、产品可以以尚未探索的方式支持的战略举措。它构建感觉像客户倡导而非追加销售的扩展对话——因为当正确执行时,它确实如此。
成为倡导者的客户
最有价值的客户不是最大的客户。而是会告诉别人的客户。将怀疑的潜在客户转变为坚定买家的推荐电话。以通用营销无法匹敌的具体性展示产品成果的案例研究。当竞争对手的潜在客户搜索替代方案时出现的G2评论。以任何营销活动都无法制造的信任度出现的口碑推荐。
倡导者不是通过要求客户成为倡导者而创造的。它们是通过给予客户值得谈论的体验,然后让他们轻松谈论而创造的。这项技能构建倡导者发展计划,识别具有热情和故事可成为有效推荐人的客户,培养使请求自然而非交易性的关系,并创建机制——推荐计划、案例研究流程、社区参与——将这种热情转化为推动新业务的资产。
当客户离开时
有些客户会流失。产品不适合他们,或者从一开始匹配就错了,或者竞争对手为他们的特定情况构建了更好的产品,或者他们的业务发生了变化,消除了你的产品所解决的问题。流失并非总是可以预防的,试图预防所有流失会产生自身的问题——不应续约的客户被维持在不值得收入成本的关系中。
重要的是理解客户离开的原因,其具体程度足以区分可预防的流失和不可预防的流失,并修复产生可预防流失的系统故障。揭示真实原因而非礼貌原因的退出对话。将个别退出汇总为模式的流失分析——流失率高的特定客户画像、流失集中的生命周期特定阶段、赢得不成比例流失账户的特定竞争对手。从流失模式中产生的产品洞察,应进入路线图对话。
离开得好的客户——在艰难对话中受到尊重、他们的担忧被倾听、他们的过渡得到支持——有时会回来。离开得不好的客户不会回来,并会告诉别人原因。