A long, drawn-out SaaS onboarding process is a momentum killer, and puts your customer (and you) at risk for low product engagement. And low product engagement is, unfortunately, a churn indicator.
Many things come together in a melting pot to impact SaaS customer churn, but onboarding is certainly a big component.
In an ideal world, there is very little for the customer to do to get onboarded. The product steps the new user through set up in a simple, wizard-like format. And just like that, the customer is done with half their onboarding in a few minutes. From there, all that’s left is to get oriented with the new tool and start to work.
Ok, now back to the real world. Lots of SaaS platforms don’t have this type of automated setup. For these SaaS companies when a customer signs up the first thing that happens is customer success reaches out to set up a call to help facilitate onboarding and get the customer up and running quickly.
If you talk to ten SaaS companies, they will tell you a customer can be onboarded and trained in just a day or so. And it’s true.
But, if you ask how long their average onboarding period is, they might tell you 3-4 weeks. Also true.
And if you ask 10 customers, they may tell you that their onboarding actually took 8-10+ weeks. That’s the only truth that matters.
Why the disconnect between what’s possible and what’s reality?
Reality is messier than we’d like it to be. You do a kickoff call with a new customer, you walk them through the onboarding steps and ask them to send a few things so you can start to get them set up (or you give them a bunch of things to go do in your software so they can set up themselves). They leave the call excited and optimistic that they can gather up things quickly and get going in short order.
But then they jump back into all their other meetings, responsibilities, and action items. Suddenly you’ve dropped down their priority list. A few days go by, and you’re farther down the list. And suddenly a week or 10 days have gone by and they haven’t even touched the list of things they need to do to get onboarded.
And now there’s a bit of a negative feeling when they think about your product because they know they are behind. You are 10 or 15 days into a subscription and you already have to battle and unspoken, “Ugh, I have to get to that this week” feeling. This is just the way it is.
What slows down SaaS onboarding?
What can slow down customer onboarding? Let me count the ways…
* Your product is harder than they expected it to be.* Your product is harder than sales made it seem like it would be.* Your product is harder than your marketing & messaging promised it would be.* Your product doesn’t deliver the value or business impact they thought it would, in a short enough time frame to keep their attention and interest.* Your customers are busy and have competing priorities.* Your customers de-prioritize initiatives, even after they have purchased and paid, just because that’s how business works sometimes.