Inbound Marketing Alone Isn’t Sufficient for SaaS Customer Success
Image created by Yasmine Sedky (?@yazsedky).

Inbound Marketing Alone Isn’t Sufficient for SaaS Customer Success

If you ask an inbound marketer, inbound marketing is not only the best thing since sliced bread – it’s the saving grace of marketing in general. Now, I will admit to having some bias towards Inbound. I think it works a helluva lot better for today’s customers who are becoming increasingly resistant to the “hard sell” tactics of outbound marketing.

But, it’s not the be-all and end-all, everything-you-need, one-stop-shop for SaaS success.

Not even if you do it really, really well.

Inbound’s strengths are in supporting the Awareness, Consideration, and Decision-making stages of the buyer’s journey. At its best, it reaches out to ideal customers, reels them in with genuinely helpful content, warms them up, and gently nudges them towards clicking the “Buy” button.

“What else is there?” you might well ask.

All of the stages inbound marketing typically addresses are about acquisition, which is great. You need to acquire customers or you won’t have a business.

But you also need to retain customers – or you won’t grow your business.

Ah, yes. Retention.

Inbound Marketing doesn’t do much, if anything, for retention – but your content strategy, together with your onboarding process, should.

Because your goal isn’t just to attract and convert customers. You have to keep them too.

Life after the Buy button

Inbound marketing – to date – has been about making that initial sale. But with more and more SaaS companies coming online with subscription-based models, SaaS content has to include retention strategies.

Let’s strip the jargon for a second. What I mean by “retention strategies” is:

  • Building relationships with your customers based on trust
  • Earning that trust with a solid track-record of supporting customer goals from the beginning
  • Managing expectations, so you don’t over-sell and under-deliver
  • And setting customers up for success in the real-world

It sounds good, right? But in most companies, this outline would likely find some pushback. Management, in most cases, is very fond of evaluating their sales teams, and gauging the success of their companies, based off of revenue – not Lifetime Value.

What’s the difference?

Revenue is the amount of money you make in a month, a quarter, or a year.

Lifetime value is the dollars-and-cents number you can attribute to each of your customers, both in terms of what they pay in recurring subscription dues, and in terms of the business they bring to the table over the entire time they are your customer. Think cross-sells, up-sells and referrals.

It’s too easy to see the $20K you make from a new customer, and miss the slow and steady $5K that drips in from your existing customers – but if you only focus on those shiny new customers…

  • You’ll pay more to acquire that short-term sale (it costs far more to acquire a new customer than it does to keep an existing one)
  • You’ll make less revenue in the long-term
  • And, you’ll grow more slowly – unless you are able to retain the customers you make

When all of your customer acquisition effort and budget is spent just trying to replace existing customers who’ve left, growth is sluggish – if it happens at all.

Lincoln Murphy sums it up in this equation:

Anti-Growth Math: 1-1+1=1

Focusing efforts (and budget) on Lifetime Value (LTV) requires a substantial shift in mindset. But, when you nail retention, you’ll find that acquisition rates rise, and revenue?

It. Blows. Up.

Let’s look at the numbers.

Here’s some stats from a Drift article on The Power Of Marketing To Your Existing Customers:

  • According to Bain and Co., a 5% increase in customer retention can increase a company’s profitability by 25% to 95%.
  • In a study of over 500 SaaS companies, Patrick Campbell, CEO and Founder of ProfitWell, found that increasing retention had a 6.71% impact on a company’s bottom line – compared with acquisition, which only had a 3.32% impact.
  • Gartner Group found that, on average, 80% of a company’s future profits come from 20% of their existing customers.

The Customer Success Equation: 1+153162562939000+Their_Friends=A Lot

How do you retain a customer?

Let me put it to you this way:

  • If your goal is to have more people find your website and buy your products through Facebook adsAnd there’s a company that sells Facebook ads… (Note: This is where most companies stop – once they’ve found product/customer fit)
  • And that company not only sells you Facebook ads but also teaches you how to create highly-effective Facebook ads…
  • Then, you actually succeed in having more people find your website and buy your products via Facebook.

Are you likely to leave that company? No!

That, at least, is the theory driving AdEspresso’s customer retention efforts. Since success for their customers isn’t actually the act of placing an ad on Facebook – they’ve gone one extra step to ensure that customers learn how to get the very best results from their ads by launching the AdEspresso Academy. Their academy doesn’t fit into the Awareness, Consideration, and Decision-making stages of Inbound Marketing – that is, it isn’t focused on bringing in new customers, instead it’s focused on keeping the ones they have. By investing in the real-world successes their clients care about most, their retention rates soar, as do their referrals.

And, by producing so much genuinely helpful content, they attract new clients who want to learn how to improve their Facebook ads – who then find the AdEspresso product that helps them do just that.

Hubspot has the same model, offering Inbound Marketing certifications for free and introducing marketers to their impressive platform at the same time.

Hubspot also builds in success markers into their onboarding process, so that new clients can easily keep track of how they’re doing – and get help if they’re not meeting their own benchmarks.

This is customer success in action. This is retention in the making.

This is why SaaS content marketing is different than SaaS inbound marketing.

When every user has an entire World-Wide Web of choices, you have to compete based on the one factor that really counts: Do you have what it takes to help that user achieve his or her desired outcome?



I'm available for a limited number of SaaS consulting retainerswriting engagements, and I offer Twitter curation + growth (500 - 1,000 or more followers / mo.) with an authentic approach so that your feed doesn't look like everyone else's.


Abrar Shahriar

Business Development Manager at Bipzy Limited

8 年

Well written Nichole. You dig out the most of Saas customer thinking and find out the other factors besides inbound marketing. Thanks.

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Joe Robison

Founder, Consultant at Green Flag Digital. Data-Driven Digital PR & SEO Consulting.

8 年

This is very true. Of the SaaS subscriptions I have, I value the companies the most that A) Continuously show me new tactics using their tool and B) Are consistently making product updates and announcing it as well as doing a tutorial on how to use those new features. Both of those items make the tool more valuable to me and increase my loyalty towards it long term. Also I agree on the inbound marketing side - the amount of visitors/TOFU leads produced is only one part of the equation, if there's not something for everyone at every stage of the purchase process, something's missing!

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