Budding customer success leaders (and those newly promoted) have an intense task ahead of them. Whether it’s building from scratch or inheriting a team, the demands placed on CS are intense and growing. It’s a system Rachel Provan knows well—with 12+ years in CS leadership, Rachel is now an independent consultant and coach (a “coach-sultant”) helping new CS leaders grow. In this CHATalyst interview, Rachel shared more about the three pillars every CS leader needs to cultivate.
Can you share more about your background and how you got into coaching CS leaders?
I worked in customer success well before it was called that—back then it was just “post-sales,” “account management,” or “delivery.” I’ve been in the space for over 16 years, with 14 of those being in leadership at various organizations.
In 2022, I started my own coaching firm because I realized no one is teaching CS leaders how to do their jobs. I had to learn on my own, the hard way, and now want to help build the next generation of CS leaders.
I like to call myself a “coach-sultant” because I try to include the best of both—a consultant brings expertise to the table and tells you what to do. A coach, on the other hand, points you in the right direction and teaches you how to think for yourself. I do a little bit of both as a coach who has expertise in the space and has seen multiple trends unfold.
What are the key things all new CS leaders need to build or understand?
Whenever I work with a new CS leader, regardless of their experience to date, I find we go back over three things to ensure they are rock solid before continuing: Strategy, Team Leadership, and Mindset.
For strategy, the focus for new CS leaders—especially at startups—tends to be on the following:
Strategy
A new CS leader must take a big step back to understand what customers are trying to achieve. From there, leaders need to know how customers do that with your product.
If you don’t have this simple knowledge, everything you do later is a guess.
Customer goals
It’s easy to think that everyone has the same goal with your product—but how your customers perceive that goal will depend on their industry and role. Sometimes small tweaks can make a huge difference depending on what exactly they are trying to achieve with your product.
Knowing this information will help you create systems down the line that help customers achieve their goals in a way that helps the business achieve its goals.
Playbooks
Playbooks are the foundation of scale in CS. To build them, you need to know the customer journey (and see if there are different journeys for different use cases). Then think about additional context such as industries or niches to understand if they need a unique element in a playbook.
From there, building a playbook helps your CSMs guide customers on their journey to achieving their goals with your product.
The other pillars I work on are Team leadership - how to build and lead a high-performing CS team (and have fun doing it), and Mindset, as EVERY CS leader struggles with imposter syndrome. Hint - just because you don’t know how to do everything yet doesn’t mean you shouldn’t be there!
What’s the most frustrating part of being a new CS leader? How can you overcome it?
Customer success is a long game with lagging indicators that won’t be clear after six months. And unfortunately, too many executives think CS is a “just add water” problem—you hire a CS leader and, boom—churn should vanish and they should have positive NRR. But that’s not how this works.
In reality, most teams take two years to move from reactive to proactive. It’s almost like building a house—you can’t focus on the shape of the roof until you’ve built the foundations. That part is not sexy, but it’s essential. This isn’t to say CS isn’t immediately valuable. There is typically an initial bump in retention and you will continue to see movement, but real results take time.
The other part of that equation is that new CS leaders don’t know what to prioritize, so they try to do everything at the same time, which can feel like they’re being productive, but nothing is getting done to move the needle.