discovering the right saas customer
Post on 27-Jun-2015
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Discover the right SaaS
customer Customer development tips and discovering who to focus on?
What’s in here
• Attracting your target customer
• Identifying who to focus on during the customer development activities
Before we begin
You need to know a couple of things
Startup metrics for pirates?
If you don’t know this, Google “startup metrics for pirates” before you go through this deck.
Made by this guy! (link to original presentation)
which says …
Dave McClure – 500hats.com
How your customers are acquired
Your SaaS app’s customer acquisition consists of 5 steps
5000
250 100 50 5
Acquisition Activation Retention Referral Revenue
Your customers come to your website from
different channels
Users signup and enjoy 1st
visit
Users come back, visit site multiple times
Users like your product/service enough to refer
others
Users pay in some form
We concentrate only on
5000
250 100
Acquisition Activation Retention
Identifying and attracting the real prospects in these two steps
A little about us
Just to set the context for this deck
“muHive is a social conversations manager which lets brands discover and reach out to its customers on social, web
and email”
We are a SaaS solution looking to acquire customers on the web with digital and
content marketing techniques
Alright!
So, you have a SaaS product
You are looking:
1. To acquire customers on the web
2. Identify the right customer to develop
Define your target customer
Our ideal customers is a : Brand/relationship, Marketing or Customer service executive In a small and medium business who is interested in using social media for - Discovering his/her brand reputation - Discovering customers - Gathering feedback - Monitoring competition - Responding to customer queries Someone with a Marketing or a sales background and understands the power of the social web
… or
A small productive marketing, sales or customer service team of an enterprise interested in - Social customer data - Understanding competitive
strategy - Talking to customers about their
new product/service/event - Building long term relationships
with customers using a Social CRM
After this, acquisition is easier You need to: - Be where they hang out (online, offline) - Write content that they can consume - Share interesting strategies and product use cases - Push your product to them via campaigns - Targeted advertising to reach this audience
But how do you attract and
identify a good prospect?
Here are some of the tricks we used to help distinguish casual signups from actual prospects
On the website
Generic product pages don’t
appeal to customers
Our homepage doesn’t talk about the sectors/industries that we cater to. We decided to focus on e-commerce & travel brands as our initial target.
How do we position ourselves
for different industries?
Here’s what we did
Multiple homepages
We added 3 home pages to start (accessible via URL params)
Generic homepage Travel specific E-commerce specific
CTA from industry specific pages go to their corresponding resource pages.
The cookie trick
When a customer lands on an alternate homepages, we add a cookie on their browser indicating their landing page.
For 45 days, whenever that customer visits muHive.com they will always land on the alternate home page.
But, how do we get people on to these homepages? ->
Share it right!
We share the right URLs (including the right parameters) with the right audience via these channels. - Cold emails & newsletters - Social media updates - Relevant blog posts and content - Blog & forum comments Ensures that the folks from the right industries see only the homepage that they can relate to.
One last trick when it comes to automating entry to alternate homepages
HTTP Referrer
Every web server tells you where a customer is coming from.
Scan that URL for trigger words specific to the industry and land them right
http://shopping.indiatimes.com
http://lonelyplanet.com/blog
URL has words shopping, cart, ecommerce, retail, flipkart etc.
URL has words travel, trip, tour, adventure, OTA, flights etc.
muHive for Travel
muHive for e-commerce
Figuring out which customers
to actually work with?
We currently have 100+ signed up businesses on muHive. How do we
identify which customer to pay attention to?
Contact us form
• Nobody can deny the importance of a contact us form, especially for an early stage SaaS product. Here’s our form
• In our experience prospective customers usually tend to fill out most, if not all, fields in a contact us form.
• If there are 2 or 3 intended uses for your product, then adding that category as a choice in the form helps tremendously.
Necessary evil?
Website navigation patterns
• We wrote a fun little plugin on our website that does the following:
– Captures the user’s requesting IP address and maps it to a geographic location
– Adds a breadcrumb trail about the user’s page visits and their timestamps into a database.
– When a visitor clicks on the button, sends an email to us with these data values.
Here’s a sample
IP address
Geo-location Timestamp
Simple stuff right? Look at the results ..
Who’s a better prospect?
We found this kind of data really helpful
Somebody who spent 1 minute looking at the website before signing up
Or somebody who spent 30 minutes looking at the site and then came back the next day and took 5 minutes to sign up.
On the application
Post sign up experience on the product
Track navigation paths
• Prospects who really like the product will be more forgiving of your user experience
If you have a self configuring product with an open signup, you can identify good prospects by looking those customers that have explored a good % of your product.
Understand goal flows
in your analytics tool!
Here’s a tip Create an ideal goal flow that you believe is your “ideal path” to get onboard your product
Now see how many customers follow that path.
You will be wrong and might need to change your product usability/onboarding to get customers to follow your ideal path.
For our early customers,
we conducted personal/online
walkthroughs
Our customers found it hard to
understand and use our
application initially
We would follow this up with onboarding guides post the walkthrough.
But, - It was difficult to scale once we started public signups - Onboarding sessions packed too much information
Few customers would come back to the application even
after the session
Started educating customers about one feature a day, gradually over 5 days, using email.
Day 2 Day 1 Day 3
#WIN: one of our customers saw our day 3 mail and tried signing up again!
Now this is a serious customer
Simplifying onboarding
Customers like it when people talk to them rather than automated bot mails. We send out an email with the reply-to address of the founders welcoming people and asking them to reach out to us in case of any queries, feedback etc. #WIN: lots of customers have written to us thanking us for our email, asking
us queries about the product. Great conversation starter
Welcome mail from CEO
Trick: it’s still automated!
Track time spent on the product
Prospects that are looking to genuinely use your product will spend a considerably longer time using your product.
Google Analytics
Before you go and build something to track time, here’s a simple one line hack to get you this information using the Events feature.
• Events: Add this line and replace the username and page with values to identify your customer and the page they are accessing.
onClick="_gaq.push(['_trackEvent', ‘access', ’username‘,’page’]);"
Gives you a nice report on total pages accessed and the username
That’s it!
We hope you will use all these tips in your SaaS initiatives
Team
Sagar Vibhute
Co-founder at muHive
Technology interests:
databases, information architecture and evolving role of social tech
Twitter: @biggfoot
Ritesh M Nayak
Co-founder at muHive
Technology interests:
social software, information retrieval, distributed systems and ICT4D
Twitter: @itsmeritesh
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Credits & references
Slide 1: Photo Credit: Robert S. Donovan via Compfight cc Slide 10: Photo Credit: Victor1558 via Compfight cc Slide 11: Photo Credit: kevin dooley via Compfight cc Slide 33: Photo Credit: eflon via Compfight cc Slide 29: Photo Credit: TonyHall via Compfight cc Slide 18: Photo Credit: AMagill via Compfight cc
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