Sunday, November 29, 2009

Of CRM Golden Calves and Ten Commandments of SaaS Landlordship.




I have a pet peeve concerning two things I’ve been meaning to write about lately, namely CRM and multi-tenancy. I recently read an excellent article referencing both concepts and thought it might be a good stepping stone to a quick blog post.

In his article Don’t Get Conned – The many disguises worn by software-as-a-service, Matt Wallach discusses CRM software and the concept of SaaS multi-tenancy.  Matt’s business is life sciences, and he discusses the state of CRM software for his industry.  His argument is along the lines of “be wary of on-premise wolves in SaaS sheep clothing”. The wolves, in this case, are on-premise CRM vendors who simply throw servers over a wall and call it a SaaS day.  The sheep (aka the good guys) are those genuine SaaS vendors riding a multi-tenant architecture. He then proceeds to define what multi-tenancy means using the well-known “neighborhood versus apartment” analogy.  Sounds innocuous enough (and the piece is well-written) but here’s the problem I have.

I am going to get a lot of heat for this statement, but truth be told, CRM is a hoax. There is no such thing as CRM.  It’s all smoke and mirrors, and you cannot nurture customer relationships (or any other form of relationship) using a bunch of bits. It’s a cop-out. I know of CRM market segments and sizes. I am well aware of CRM dissemination and popularity in corporate America. I don’t question its omnipresence in virtually all businesses in one form or another. My claim, however, is that it does not and cannot work as billed.  In numerous cases, it is simply a waste of “feel-good” money. Here’s why.

The companies and industries making the most use of CRM packages are those with the worst customer service. This in itself should be eye-opening. Airlines are perfect examples. Can anyone think of an industry with worse customer service? I can’t. Yet they spend gazillions on CRM and boast about it frequently. How about retail? When’s the last time these guys used CRM to do anything besides manage their “rewards programs” (who are they rewarding please tell me?) or push advertizing gimmicks? How about Telecoms? How many people are happy with their cell carriers in the US? When was the last time your interaction with a carrier’s customer service department was either useful, efficient, or pleasant? How about the automobile industry or even car rental outfits? When was the last time you were wowed by one of those big corporate CRM consumers?

Now, I’m not saying all companies who use CRM manage customers poorly. Some do get lucky. And others use it as a tool, not a means to an end, which is perfectly fine.  What I am pointing out is that customer service quality seems inversely proportional to the resources spent on CRM at the corporate level. And that’s ironic. The problem is in the C-suite. These folks see CRM as a panacea but inherently, deep down, these people do not have customer service “genes”.  They have Board of Directors genes, profit margin genes, or MBA ones, but they don’t know the first thing about worshipping customers – It’s a form of autism on their part.

Because in my experience, customer service is not something you can learn on the fly (although I suspect it is taught in business schools).  And it’s not something you can acquire via software. Companies, like people, are either born with it or not. It’s a nature not a nurture trait. And no amount of software or resources will change the behavior of a company whose culture isn’t obsessively centered on the customer. It sounds obvious, and everyone talks about it, but most of the time, it’s nothing more than lip service.  It’s a sham I tell you.

Luckily, the solution is simple: throw the software out the window. Really, honestly, you don’t need it. You can’t even prove you need it anyway. Most of the time, you don’t know how to interpret or filter the results. And worse yet, you have too much information.  You get overloaded with it in a drunken stupor and it ends up clouding your judgment.  And shortly thereafter, you throw common sense out the window.  Malcom Gladwell makes excellent anecdotal arguments against information overload in Blink, one of his classics.  It’s a fascinating read (specifically I refer to section 4 of chapter 4).  CRM and software overload have the same effect on corporate management as those described by Gladwell affecting ER doctors’ decision making. Too much information leads to disastrous results.

I’m not suggesting the demise of customer or performance management software as a whole obviously.  Keep the databases, the warehouses and the BI in-house (because analysis and insight are still obviously crucial) but take your big honking CRM software and pull the plug. You will likely learn more (and spend a whole lot less) by talking to your five top customers. If you want to stay in control and get 360 customer views, sign up for something like TeamSupport – it’s all you need. Most importantly, do something truly revolutionary: get out of the building and walk a mile in your customers’ shoes.

Order your own product, fly your own airline (in coach), rent your own cars, dial your customer service numbers repeatedly – from a roaming zone, for example – visit your retail stores (incognito) and talk to your customers. Order your own food, visit your own bathrooms, wear your own clothes. Engage customers one on one, on the streets, in the stores, at their home, face to face, and listen like you mean it. Listen like your life (and job) depended on it – because it does.  You cannot manage customer relationships from a spreadsheet or a SQL query any more than you can steer a marriage successfully via the web (yes I know, there’s probably an iPhone app for that). It’s that simple.  Your fancy CRM system is the blue pill. Take the red one!

So now, having sufficiently ticked off everyone in the CRM industry, let me tackle the SaaS “badge of honor” also known as multi-tenancy. Here’s a reality check: no one really knows what multi-tenancy means. How do I know this? Because if you ask three people what it means you will get five different answers.  And when you search for it online, you get multiple descriptions, some more convincing than others. So unless I missed something, there is no official definition, only qualified opinions.

To me, the gist of it involves partitioning software application space very quickly and cheaply to accommodate exponential mass market adoption cycles (there’s a mouthful).  Exactly how you achieve this, from a technical perspective, is open to interpretation. Some people partition inside the database and share schemas (like Salesforce.com, where every tenant shares database tables), others partition on the application layer where processes may serve multiple requests, some consider virtualization to be a form of multi-tenancy, and yet others implement a hybrid approach.

At the end of the day, multi-tenancy is a design methodology. Multi-tenancy (however you implement it) allows faithful cloud landlords to follow basic rules. If Moses had come down from “The Cloud” instead of Mount Sinai, he might have brought these back instead:

(1) You shall provision tenants quickly without affecting other parts of the system.
(2) You shall be able to provide deterministic system metrics on a 24/7 basis.
(3) You shall let non-technical staff (or software) handle provisioning.
(4) You shall monitor your platform’s health day and night.
(5) You shall implement and frequently simulate doomsday scenarios.
(6) You shall make it as easy to provision one tenant as it is for one hundred.
(7) You shall segregate and protect thy tenant’s data at all cost.
(8) You shall upgrade transparently and automatically for all tenants.
(9) You shall allow tenants some degree of customization but not more.
(10) You shall have a simple, clear and consistent pricing model.

In my opinion, what goes on behind the scenes to support this is irrelevant because it’s irrelevant to the user. The user just wants to be “on-boarded” and provisioned pronto and safely without hassle. If you happen to be able to pull this off technically and cost-effectively, then you’re multi-tenant! If not, you have some pain coming your way.

Whether or not you can support thousands of tenants per instance (however you define “instance”) is, for all intents and purposes, really your problem, not the user’s.  And I have yet to meet a prospect who’s first and foremost concern involves “multi-tenancy”.

This might suggest we cease using the term as a marketing asset because I don’t think it resonates clearly. In my experience, the only things that matter to a cloud user are simplicity, service levels, trust, and cost. So let’s give users exactly what matters to them, explain it simply, and keep it real.

Yours in BI.

BRBR45DDTK3B

Friday, November 27, 2009

S&M: Where the SaaS rubber doesn’t meet the BI road.








I was lucky enough to be at Dreamforce 2009 last week and wanted to pen down a few thoughts while the event is still fresh in my mind. I don’t think there was any earth-shattering news there, and I got the feeling (both onsite and online) that a lot of people didn’t really grasp the value of Benioff’s announcement (or strategy) about “socializing” the platform with Chatter.  I, for one, certainly couldn’t make sense of Colin Powell’s presence at one of the keynotes (not sure what he can possibly offer the world of SaaS but maybe I missed something).  But overall it was an enlightening conference and here are some of my impressions (and they pertain mostly to the SaaS BI realm).

First, the sheer number of bodies at the event was impressive. I understand 18,000 people took part and that is quite a large crowd given how undersold (to put it mildly) other conferences have been this year. Businesses have been reluctant to invest in conferences in 2009 as evidenced by abysmal attendance numbers and the rising popularity of “ virtual conferencing”.  So if one conference was preferred over all others, it must have been Dreamforce 2009, because it seemed like everybody and his mother sent people there.

Second, I was impressed by the level of “education” the typical attendee exhibited. I didn’t really see or hear people asking basic “big picture” questions. Rather, the inquiries were very focused, deep, and to the point, revealing mature customers (buyers) who had done some serious homework. Actually, most of these folks have had meaningful experience in the cloud (some good, some bad) and knew how to hit the right vendor pressure points. From my standpoint, it is always vastly better (and more enriching) to deal with well educated buyers in a no-nonsense approach. This is exactly the user profile I experienced at Dreamforce.com manning the GoodData booth.

Third, and I realize this is subjective, but to be honest, there are a lot of small clueless companies out there having nothing to do with cloud per say who clutter these shows for the publicity of slapping “cloud” onto their marketing literature. I’m not going to name names, but let’s just say when you sell gardening shoes, mailboxes, or kitchen countertops, I’m not sure you should be spending marketing dollars on Dreamforce.

Fourth, I didn’t pick up any “religious” fervor at the show from either buyer or vendor sides. I assumed this was going to be a major rah-rah for everything cloud (with Open Source type of fervor) but I found the discussions to be much more measured and rational with most people objectively comparing both approaches (when applicable) with few pre-conceived notions. I believe this is a sign of industry maturation as people are getting better at separating the wheat from the chaff. I feel for the most part that SaaS limitations are well understood by most (not all) people and expectations are becoming more reasonable for the most part.

Fifth, I believe that SaaS beachheads have been claimed.  This is particularly true in the BI space. This has a lot to do with perception obviously but in my opinion, the winners and losers have already been tagged.  Most companies (if not all) are fairly new in the cloud space yet already, they have public reputations as in “these guys aren’t serious” or “these folks are the ones you want to talk to”.  Obviously first-to-market matters a great deal in any industry and cloud is no different.  Except with SaaS of course, you can be first to market with a virtual product (vaporware, in the on-premise world), and it takes longer for people to read the fine print but, eventually, they do.  When people have an interest in a particular SaaS domain, they go directly to the “top dogs” without stopping anywhere else.  I believe there is plenty of space for new companies in the cloud but for those having established an early lead (perceived or not, and with compelling technology), the future seems bright.

Sixth, everybody in the BI cloud space faces the exact same problems.  And no one has clear answers so this is still a very “trial and error” process.  The difference is between vendors who admit this, and those who don’t (mostly to themselves).  This is a sweeping statement but overwhelmingly, when you talk to other vendors, the same themes come out time and again.  Namely, how to scale fast enough (or onboard efficiently with minimal customer “touch”), and how to control sales and marketing costs which are turning out to be higher than anticipated.   Although adoption is growing, in my opinion, the technical hurdles are not remotely as high as the business ones.

Most of the BI cloud vendors have managed to get by on minimal engineering costs.  Offshore labor is cheap enough that you can afford competent engineering teams in India, Central Europe or China (to name a few) for literally dollars a day and minimal liability.  Some of these vendors are making ends meet with two-man engineering teams!  And only two I know of have engineering teams exceeding ten people. So clearly, the money pit is elsewhere.

And elsewhere is S&M (no, not the fun kind) namely Sales and Marketing. The original proposition for cloud was that the “service”, unlike traditional enterprise software, was going to kind of sell itself.  S&M budgets were going to be minimal. No more travelling field sales force, expensive face-to-face customer visits, pre or post-sales engineers.  It was all going to be “automatic” and on the web. But my limited experience contradicts this.

Because now, adoption and competition are growing.  For example nowadays in SaaS BI, you have dozens of vendors. You skim enough to get to the “serious” ones (see #5 above) and now you’re left with maybe four or five guys.  Next year, there will likely be ten serious contenders.  The more competition you have, the higher sales cycles and costs get.  Next thing you know, you’re back to boots on the ground and to a more traditional enterprise software sales models. This is the danger facing many SaaS players these days.  CEOs and investors are edgy about this emerging trend. It breaks the anticipated mold.

The other problem is what I call customer “touch-too-much”.  In a SaaS model, efficient on-boarding is crucial. This is not only about flipping the proverbial switch – because properly-engineered multi-tenant systems achieve this quite well – but more about the time it takes to get a user’s business problem solved.  Namely, the costly interaction spent on a given customer to handle specific needs and the amount of customization needed to achieve satisfaction (and final sign-off on the purchase order). POCs, sales cycles and marketing costs are growing.

This is a huge problem in the BI space because the requirements phase can be long and even there agility is not necessarily a Holy Grail.  The basic problem is simple: it is very difficult to remove the “human factor” when implementing BI.  Cookie cutter never satisfies a particular business problem entirely. The money’s in the customization and the subject matter expertise.  You must solve difficult business problems, not engineering ones.  The same challenges apply to software engineering, and history has seen a flurry of “blissful automation” endeavors fail in that space (remember 4GL?).  At the end of the day, you can’t remove what’s between the chair and the keyboard, and you can’t efficiently and consistently automate it in software – whether in the cloud or not.

Now, this is not so bad for a company like Salesforce.com because they’re a platform play.  So by definition, they provide efficient functionality (large offering surface), but it’s all fairly mediocre and “cookie cutter” – Users are free to (try and) customize their modules as they see fit.  In the analytics space, for example, Salesforce reporting and analysis is shallow. Consequently, users looking for customer data insight and trending statistics (say for pipeline analysis) will look for integrated solutions fitting their specific business needs.

But for the after-market players who “plug” into something like Salesforce, it’s a major hurdle. Unless they can very quickly and cheaply customize their offerings for a myriad of different business cases, and move through POCs quickly, the SaaS hosting and costing model won’t do them much good.  In my opinion, most existing BI SaaS vendors are currently struggling with this conundrum. Lucidera seems to have as well. Its demise was a shot across the bow.  The first SaaS BI player to move past this problem wins the game and keeps the investors happy.

I have a hard time thinking of a SaaS BI vendor currently striking a reasonable balance between zero S&M and massive S&M.  On one end of the scale, I see folks adamantly opposed to spending a dime on marketing and expecting serendipitous results. On the other end, I see vendors placing heavy bets on misguided or highly-targeted verticals.  I see both strategies as precarious and hope for more level-headedness in the coming months.

No matter which way this goes, we're in for a wild ride. No prisoners will be taken. It's a great time to be in this business.

Yours in BI.