What happens when you put a bunch of account managers, customer success people, and experts in a room? You launch a conference. The first Key Account Management Conference (KAMCon), hosted by Kapta, took place October 9-10 in Boulder, Colorado.
The sales landscape is challenged from all sides by tech disruption, organizational restructuring, noise, churn, and more — which makes it harder to develop and strengthen customer relationships. In the opening session, I shared that 68% of revenue comes from existing customers, yet almost half (48%) of account managers don’t think their key account management (KAM) programs are effective.
But today’s innovators and thinkers are meeting the challenges head-on. Offering data, principles, and time-tested techniques, KAMCon’s experts delivered the tools and knowledge you need to truly become a strategic partner, not just a vendor, so that everyone — customers, teams, and companies — can succeed.
Let’s take a deeper dive into what we learned at KAMCon 2018.
Sales is a discipline still dominated by people and personalities. But to understand people better — what makes us tick, how we make decisions, how we can more creatively reach others and solve problems — we need to explore elsewhere.
Ed Powers, VP of client success at InteliSecure, shared that some scientists estimate the rational part of the human brain has only been around for about 30,000 years — a drop in the bucket in human evolution. This means our rational-thinking capabilities are less developed than our emotional capabilities. And making any decision involves an incredibly complex, non-linear process that takes place in multiple parts of the brain.
Fortunately you don’t have to be a neurologist to understand how it all works. You just have to know that the way customers see and think about value is almost never rational, but rather emotional. Here’s what you should seek to understand from an emotional perspective during any selling opportunity:
It’s not just human brains we need to contend with. Artificial intelligence (AI) is now making its way into key account management.
Jim Dickie, managing partner of Sales Mastery and co-founder and independent research fellow for CSO Insights, shared that 63% of sales people hit their numbers back in 2012, but only 54% did last year. This almost 10-point drop in making quota may be attributed to the fact that KAMs spend most of their time on things like research, data entry and updating, scheduling, and crafting reports rather than what they were hired to do: find ingenious ways to understand customers and enable the best outcomes.
But (so far) AI is not in the business of replacing interactions. Rather, it replaces transactions by supplementing complex human engagement with the data and information needed to develop insights, which can then be turned into action. Essentially, AI can:
When your customers also begin to harness AI, the co-collected data begins to inform product design, engineering, and usage, allowing sales people and AMs to move into a different role entirely: away from straight selling and into true partnerships.
No matter what’s happening out in the world, everyone needs real frameworks and tools to take care of real tasks right there in the office. Not only can the right tools and techniques create workflow efficiency and give you more quality time with customers, they also help drive toward your customers’ desired outcomes.
The minute a sale closes, you’ve got an account to manage. And having an account plan is paramount to a successful customer relationship. Customer growth and B2B specialist Jermaine Edwards shared an account plan that can be put together in just 90 minutes using six boxes on one sheet of paper. The boxes represent:
After a sale, there’s often a murky hand-off between sales and customer success. Steve Silver, senior research director at SiriusDecisions, used data and research to develop a tool to make this process easier, both internally for the teams and externally for the customer. Central to the tool are:
Once a buyer becomes a customer, that’s when customer engagement plays a starring role. Tom Murray, senior engagement director at Pivotal Software, offered tools and suggestions that allow customer success teams to stay aligned, customer-centered, and outcomes-oriented:
Implementations can feel touch-and-go for everyone involved — especially the customer. That’s why Megan Macaluso, VP of strategic development for ESG, proposed that Account Managers utilize basic project management tools to ensure smoother implementations, including:
Whether it’s a customer going through a major product deployment, or an account team adjusting to upheaval handed down from on high, all change is hard. Lesley Poladsky, Kapta’s customer success manager, outlined five change management principles you can use to guide yourself, your teams, and your customers:
Established accounts carry a lot of weight, so customer feedback becomes critical to understanding loyalty, renewals, and how the product or service can be improved. But the biggest problem is low participation rates. Steve Bernstein, principal at Waypoint Group, gave a framework for getting the right feedback from the right people:
Meeting expectations isn’t just about the customer. Account teams have to hit targets too, which makes coaching a big part of the equation. Michael Harnum, CEO of ESG, said there isn’t one right way to coach, but there are four principles to keep in mind when building a team and coaching to success:
What KAMCon showed is that no one is alone. Collaboration and community can be extremely effective in finding solutions to problems and sharing knowledge.
Denise Freier, president and CEO of the Strategic Account Management Association (SAMA), championed the need for a professional community like SAMA to help solidify and strengthen your own key account management program. The association brings members economic value, relationship value, and sustainability with clients. For example:
What’s clear is that key account management and customer success continue to play invaluable roles in the growth and health of companies. Finding the right community to support each other in your efforts, utilizing tools and technologies to streamline efforts, and keeping an eye on the future will not only help you stay at the forefront of your industry, but will keep you out of that dreaded “just a vendor” zone as well.
See upcoming blogs to learn more about some of the topics discussed above, and make sure to check out our recaps of KAMCon Day 1 and KAMCon Day 2. For a demo of Kapta’s solution, click here.