Our next Customer Onboarding training starts on Tuesday, April 22, 2025. Learn more about the program and sign-up here. Onboarding is arguably the most important customer lifecycle stage. In this program you'll learn how to get your new customers to do the things they need to do to get this still-fragile relationship off to a strong start, setting everyone up for long-term success (the customer... and your CS team). Specifically, we'll cover:
Learn more about the program and sign-up here. I hope to see you there. ~Lincoln BTW: A large percentage of sign-ups for our Premium courses happen at the last minute. And this program is filling up fast. Our Impact Academy programs are a combination of on-demand and live sessions via Zoom. Even though this is a "virtual" program, space is limited due to the interactive nature of our live sessions. So please, if you intend to participate, take immediate action to ensure a spot is available. Learn more and sign-up here. ... |
I help SaaS companies Maximize LTV through Customer-centric Upselling
Our next Customer Onboarding training starts tomorrow, Tuesday, April 22, 2025. Learn more about the program and sign-up here. Onboarding is arguably the most important customer lifecycle stage. In this program you'll learn how to get your new customers to do the things they need to do to get this still-fragile relationship off to a strong start, setting everyone up for long-term success (the customer... and your CS team). Specifically, we'll cover: Lifecycle stage metrics Handover management...
TL;DR: We're running "Save Customers Now!" workshops again—PLG on April 15 and Enterprise on April 17. Stop churn immediately in Q2. I just got this email from a CS leader: "Lincoln, I'm freaking out. With everything going on—economic uncertainty, customers tightening budgets, chaos everywhere—churn is gonna hit us HARD in Q2. Are you doing another 'Save Customers' workshop soon? Fingers crossed." Bad news: I've heard similar messages from several CS leaders already. Good news: "Save...
Most SaaS companies give too much, too soon. They bundle everything into the initial sale—even features the customer isn’t ready for (and can’t use yet). Why? To make the deal look “valuable.” But giving away the right feature at the wrong time? That’s value dilution—and it kills expansion before it even starts. Instead, that feature you’re giving away today in a $50/mo bundle? If you wait and offer it at the right moment, you can charge $500/mo just for it. Same product. Same feature. 10x...