When you ask a COO or CFO about capacity planning for customer success, it can get dicey. They may be completely on board with investing in a customer success team, but they really don’t want to add to their COGS dramatically. They are sold on the premise that a well-chartered and instantiated CS team can be cost neutral or even a profit center, but they need to validate the numbers. They wonder what the real cost of each Customer Success Manager (CSM) is and how to build a model that’s sustainable, delivers value to the customer, and doesn’t dilute profits.
In the trenches, VPs of customer success are trying to get a handle on the real costs and ideal CSM: Account Ratios. But, even that is not a straightforward or simple calculation. While we all wish there were a magic number of CSMs/account or ARR, Lincoln Murphy is right to say that any suggested coverage ratio is a myth.
So, how do you approach capacity planning for customer success? There are a lot of moving parts to building a profitable model, but there are some foundational considerations you should start with:
Menu of Offerings
How do your customers reap the full benefits of your solution? What prevents them from reaping the full benefits? Addressing these questions will help you begin to define a menu of services your team must provide to help your customers attain full value. Once you’ve determined your menu of offerings, determine which services you will provide within your sales (a subscription for certain services or a retainer of time) and which you will charge for above and beyond the original sale. Capacity planning (and monetizing your Customer Success) relies heavily upon the accuracy of this menu.
“Conducting an assessment of which customers will need which services and then assigning and defining roles and responsibilities is crucial.”
Define Roles Skills Inventory
Once you have determined your menu of services, you need to identify who on your team will provide them. Conducting an assessment of which customers will need which services and then assigning and defining roles and responsibilities is crucial. This involves knowing your customers, your services, and your teams’ skills. Strong leadership is extremely important in defining roles and clarifying expectations for all team members. Accurate capacity planning relies upon team members knowing and fulfilling their responsibilities.
Understanding Effort and Capacity
While menus and role definitions are key pieces in capacity management, there’s some deeper understanding of effort that will foster greater accuracy in your planning. Understanding your real efforts will produce a more realistic calculation of capacity to use in building your model.
In building an accurate capacity model for Customer Success, we rely upon clear insights into:
Designed Effort, Effective Availability, Designed Capacity, and Productive Capacity
For instance, if a CSM has 160 hours of total availability, they may actually only have 120 hours of Effective Availability because 40 hours of their allotted hours are consumed by internal meetings and/or distractions.
(Note: This value is an important one in understanding your actual capacity for a CSM. If your model ends up being difficult to defend, you may need to address Unplanned (unproductive) time spent to establish greater effective availability.)
When building a capacity model, Designed Capacity can be misleading.
The difference in Designed Capacity and Productive Capacity is a reality check.
Designed Capacity = Total Availability/Designed Effort (Total number of Accounts you think a CSM can handle)
To gain a realistic view of your CSMs capacity, you SHOULD calculate
Productive Capacity = Effective Availability/Designed Effort (Total number of Accounts a CSM can actually handle).
Now that you have a handle on Productive Capacity, you can begin to do more accurate capacity planning for your CS team. Actual costs are best determined when you can glean real data on the time that each CS spends performing their duties for each account. Using a Customer Success Management platform that tracks time is incredibly helpful in consolidating this data.
Another important note about capacity modeling is that it’s not uncommon to identify that some areas of a Customer Lifecycle require more effort and different skill sets. For instance, does core enablement require more advanced technical skillsets, while conducting QBRs best conducted by CSMs who understand the business model better? Capacity modeling and resource allocation should take into consideration the effort and scope of Customer Success tasks and assign responsibilities accordingly.
One final point about capacity planning for customer success…if you build the model right and staff it optimally, you’ll find that just when you have managed to a break-even state, your customers will begin expanding their relationships with you, (and paying you for additional services). This means your coverage costs should go down, and your model will need to be redesigned for a profitable state, rather than just a break-even state.
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