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While being a customer advocate is important, the post-sales organization's fundamental purpose is to help their own company win in the market by delivering profitable revenue. Viewing advocacy through this lens clarifies priorities and aligns actions, preventing friction that arises from misinterpreting the core objective.
When different departments push their own projects onto the sales team, reps get overloaded. To solve this, enablement leaders must shift the focus of every initiative away from departmental priorities and toward a shared customer outcome. This unified goal minimizes internal friction and clarifies what's truly important.
A key "aha moment" was realizing the goal is to be seen not as an outside seller, but as a contributing member of the client's own team. This mindset shifts the relationship from transactional to a collaborative partnership focused on shared success, fundamentally changing the sales dynamic.
The disconnect where executives prioritize retention and directors focus on acquisition is a symptom of misaligned pressures. To resolve this, leadership must establish unified metrics that hold teams accountable for both short-term acquisition and long-term customer value, bridging the gap.
Salespeople often disengage after a deal closes. However, since they built the initial trust, they must stay involved during onboarding. This maintains customer momentum and ensures the relationship transitions smoothly, which directly impacts renewals, referrals, and future sales.
Delivering your core service flawlessly is the minimum requirement, not a differentiator. True advocacy is earned by going above and beyond on the surrounding details, like a roofer meticulously sweeping for nails post-job. This ancillary care is what customers remember and share.
The debate between being product-led vs. sales-led is a false dichotomy that creates friction. Instead, frame all functions as fundamentally 'customer-driven.' This reframing encourages product teams to view sales requests not as distractions, but as valuable, direct insights into customer needs.
The term 'retention team' inherently creates a silo separate from acquisition. A more effective approach is reframing all marketing functions as part of one 'customer team.' This mindset shift focuses everyone on the entire journey, from 'entering the door' to 'staying in the house.'
Simply "servicing" an account by fulfilling orders makes you a replaceable commodity. To become indispensable, you must proactively bring insights and create new growth opportunities for your client. This shifts your role from a reactive vendor to a strategic partner, making you "sticky" and invaluable to their business.
When sales teams hit quotas but customer churn rises, the root cause is a disconnect between sales promises and operational reality. The fix requires aligning sales, marketing, and customer service around a single, unified strategy for the entire customer journey.
As multi-year deals become less common, focus is shifting heavily to post-sales. Companies are investing in strengthening these teams' skills and rethinking their entire post-sales strategy, recognizing that retention and human relationships are more critical than ever.