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Monday’s Musings: 5 Steps to Restoring Trust in the Vendor – Customer Relationship
Posted By R "Ray" Wang On October 12, 2008 @ 23:01 In credibility,economic downturn,economic recession,Monday's Musings,relationship managmeent,relationships,trust,vendor strategy | 15 Comments
[1] Software vendors face significant decisions in the next 6 to 12 months on how to respond to the economic downturn. Anxious shareholders and slipping quarterly forecasts may lead vendors to ignore their implied vendor customer contracts. This “implied contract” is the inherent trust a customer has with their vendor to do the right thing. It’s a trust that the customer placed with the vendor when they moved from custom apps to packaged software. This is important for two main reasons:
Software Vendors Can Take Proactive Measures To Improve Trust During Economic Uncertainty
So the real question – Will software vendors take a longer term view to find ways to both reduce expenses and improve how they treat their customers while delivering new innovation. At first, this may sound like a paradox, but unlike industries such as financial services and retail, high tech companies have not run out of cash. In fact, lessons learned from previous boom and bust cycles have taught them to hoard cash for rainy days or acquisitions. Most software vendors who survived the last economic rout socked away healthy levels of cash on hand. The real issue – convincing nervous shareholders that they need to reinvest a greater percentage of revenue back into areas such as service and R&D during the downturn so that they are able to capitalize during the next economic boom cycle.
5 Stakeholder Focused Strategies Can Be Funded Through Maintenance and Support Fees
Where would the money come from? Maintenance and support fees represent the most logical source. Recent conversations with insiders estimate the profitability of maintenance and support fees at up to 85% of the fees for products in the third year or greater in maturity. Further, most support organizations privately admit that not enough of the fees actually go back into the support organization, let alone new product development. Vendors could quickly earn customer trust by providing transparency as to where those monies are being allocated. Five steps that would improve ownership experiences and improve trust include:
The bottom line.
The most valuable commodity in this economy and in business relationships is trust. The current downturn in the economy has been exacerbated by a deterioration in trust and a lack of any one party to improve trust and accountability. Software vendors have this opportunity to take their position of strength and demonstrate how they can provide customers value during a down turn. In doing so, they will help their customers succeed and earn customer loyalty and good will when the economy picks up.
Your POV.
If you’re a vendor, what’s missing? Will you be able to convince your board and management? For customers, what else are you looking for from your vendor? What will breed greater trust? Post a comment or drop me a line at rwang0@gmail.com.
Copyright © 2008 R Wang. All rights reserved.
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URL to article: http://blog.softwareinsider.org/2008/10/12/mondays-musings-5-steps-to-restoring-trust-in-the-vendor-customer-relationship/
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[1] Image: http://blog.softwareinsider.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/r_wang_small3.jpg
[2] BBB/Gallup Trust in Business Index Survey: http://us.bbb.org/WWWRoot/SitePage.aspx?site=113&id=f36f50cc-8cb7-4507-9cfc-2f2d7aa2c3fc
[3] increasing: http://blog.softwareinsider.org/2008/10/06/mondays-musings-adoption-of-saas-models-may-accelerate-with-economic-downturn/
[4] regulatory compliance and operational efficiency business drivers: http://www.forrester.com/Research/Document/0,7211,45372,00.html
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