What Peloton Can Teach Us About Community and Customer Success
Ignoring the haters! It’s indisputable that Peloton - and other digital fitness companies like it - have changed the way millions of human beings exercise. Sure, the latest Sex and the City reboot and stock price drop aren’t great for business. But as a Peloton rider myself, I have seen first-hand how Peloton has transformed the fitness industry. (Yes, I fit the CEO tech nerd stereotype to a tee.) Whether I choose to ride with the inspirational Robin Arzon or the hilarious Cody Rigsby, Peloton has revolutionized my personal fitness. And it’s also changed my perspective in terms of how I think about Customer Success.
Here’s why.?
Scaling Fitness
How did people work out before companies like Peloton were around? It seemed like there were only two routes. On the one hand, you had the highly self-motivated people who woke up at 5 AM and headed straight to the gym to plan their personal workouts. And the rest of us who were sleeping in thought, “how annoying!” They didn’t need a coach or any nudges - they seized the day, every day.?
On the other hand, you had the person with the flexibility and resources to hire a personal trainer. Their trainer would coach them and design a workout routine for their body, lifestyle, and goals - and motivate them to keep it up every week.?
And, as Peloton observed, there were millions of people who didn’t fit neatly into either of these categories:
In many ways, Customer Success has grown up out of the same dichotomy. In the older business model, you had two types of clients. You had your larger clients that you would do anything for, including customizing your software for them. You would be like their personal “software” trainer. And then you had your smaller clients. Whether they were motivated enough to “go to the gym” (in the form of using your software) or not, they still had paid you, so all was good.
Modern, scalable Customer Success is about using process and technology to find a new way - a better way.?
1. Peloton Uses A One-To-Many “Fitness Success” Model
Peloton has the best “CSMs” (or should I say Fitness Success Managers?) in the world. They are experts in their field. They are inspirational. They motivate you. They are entertaining. You couldn’t imagine better personal trainers. And for most of us, we could never access them one-on-one.
But Peloton figured out how to scale their personal trainers to millions of people. The hardware - the connected bike with a nice screen - is a commodity. Peloton created a software platform - with personalization, choice (90s music is my main way to select rides), scheduling, and more - to connect the right “Fitness Success Manager” to their clients.
Similarly, modern Customer Success is no longer just about “high touch” CSMs for your largest clients. Nearly every SaaS company is creating a “scaled” or “digital” Customer Success initiative, combining multiple strategies including:
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2. Peloton Creates Personalized Product Experiences
The geniuses behind Peloton realize that people don’t always do what they want - sometimes, you have to nudge and encourage them. But the instructors can’t, themselves, communicate with every rider one-on-one. So instead, Peloton uses the power of personalization to drive people to the behaviors they need to achieve their goals - like noticing when you hit “milestone” rides (my next big one is my 1,000th!) and recommending rides based upon your past interests (hence, the constant promotions I get for the Taylor Swift Artist Series). Peloton tracks all of your habits and uses this data to ensure you continue to improve and engage with the platform.
Nearly every SaaS business is adopting a similar approach through Product Experience to deliver scalable Customer Success. This includes utilizing in-app guides to onboard new customers, walkthroughs to help clients try out new features, and surveys to get feedback from customers as they work. All of this is built to improve and personalize the experience based upon the user’s behavioral data.
3. Peloton Created a Community
Most Peloton riders have had a weird experience similar to those I have daily. It’s 6:30 AM, and I’m on my bike in the living room. I’ve got my AirPods in and am cranking away to Robin Arzon’s Broadway ride. I’m singing and dancing along with the group. And every now and then, one of my kids walks by, looks at me, cringes, and then walks away.
The point is that with Peloton, you might be physically alone, but you don’t feel that way. You can join hashtag groups (we have one at Gainsight - #pelotongainsters), compete on leaderboards, give each other “high fives,” and much more. It creates this feeling like you are riding alongside so many other people. Indeed, that’s what the word “peloton” means by definition.
It is no different in Customer Success - I recently wrote a blog about the past, present, and future of Customer Success and how CS wouldn’t be where we are today without our community. Customer Success was built on community. It is part of our past, present, and will be part of the future. What started as a mere idea - cooked up in a small office in Mountain View, CA, above a bar - to bring together 300 CSMs for the first-ever Pulse event, turned into over hundreds of thousands of CS professionals getting together annually to network and learn from each other.
It’s never been more important to create a space for your clients to discuss product ideation, increase feedback loops, share resources, and become advocates. We know because our Gamechanger Community helps our clients to feel more connected. And our top clients reported that 57% currently use a community platform, and an additional 24% are planning to implement a community platform this year.?
The Future of Customer Success and Community
Peloton helped bring fitness to millions of people using a one-to-many model, personalized product experience, and immersive community. Now, it’s time for Customer Success teams to embrace these three key plays to help scale CS. Putting our money where our mouth is, this is why we acquired SaaS Community Software leader inSided. Next up, time for us to see if Cody Rigsby is interested in a career in Customer Success!
Passionate about improving efficiency, customer success and customer relations for businesses that are run by people with great hearts and minds
2 年What an insightful article, sooo much can be learned here
Gainsight & Customer Success Operations Nerd @ $AMPL | Ex-$ZI | *Maternity Leave until Fall 2025*
3 年#RobinsWolfPack
Top 100 CS Strategist (2023), Thought Leader CS Watchlist (2022), Head of Education, Coach, Advisor @ Growth Molecules | Customer Success | Client Experience
3 年Jessica (Oelrich) Huling thought you’d love this!!!!
Experienced Customer Success Leader
3 年Nick Mehta -- This article hit right at the intersection of two of my passions: Customer Success and fitness (as expressed through Peloton!). When I first interviewed for my current role, our CEO asked me what companies I admired, and without pausing, I said "Peloton! Their focus is on helping their subscribers meet their wellness goals, they make the journey easy and fun, and they reinforce your experience by using data and metrics to ensure you are engaged, can measure your progress, and most importantly, that you want to continue your partnership with them. It's exactly my vision for Success!" The parallels are there for all of us to be inspired by, and I am proud to be part of both the Success and Peloton communities! Cody is great, but Robin is my go-to when I need some inspiration. Charging towards my 900th ride this winter...ljwaldman in the Peloton Community. Have an amazing weekend, everyone!
Senior Strategic Customer Success Manager @ Amazon (All opinions are my own) | Strategic Advisor @ CSGuru | SuccessHacker's Top 100 Customer Success Strategist 2020-2022
3 年It raises a very interesting topic. How to retain customers after exponential interest caused by an unforeseen event. Most companies may not be equipped to handle it. While Peloton had a scaled approach, I wonder how many people that churned received every scaled touchpoint. In addition, we are aware that some products require prerequisite knowledge, an ICP, and proper onboarding. For those that are expecting a 90 day transformation despite being 100 lbs away from their goal, they were not properly educated on realistic transformations. I’m just as fascinated around this. There is a definite opportunity for improvement and something that many companies should consider in their scaled CS approach way before their company becomes a memestock.