Discovery. Professional skills
Building Next-Level Discovery Skills That Drive Retention and Growth
As a Customer Success professional, it’s your job to master the art
and science of discovery to create meaningful customer experiences.
Your discovery skills can mean the difference between significant
growth and significant churn.
In this article, we share our effective discovery framework to help you
take your discovery skills to the next level. We covered this in our
recent online workshop
Next-Level Skills That Drive Retention &
Growth
featuring our Director of Customer Success Siobhan
Alexander, and have included the key topics below, including:
Importance of discovery
Active listening strategies
An effective discovery framework
Leveraging the 5 Whys
Why is discovery important to CS?
Discovery involves examining things from different perspectives and
uncovering something new along the way.
This concept is important to CS because it allows us to dig deeper into
the customer's experience
— drawing out ideas, challenges, and
opportunities that we can’t otherwise see at surface-level.
Good discovery also allows us to:
identify potential risks
avoid misalignments, missed opportunities, and churn
come up with creative solutions to challenges
build relationships with our customers
advocate for opportunities
build trust
What’s great about discovery is that it doesn’t just benefit the customer
— it also opens channels for personal learning and growth for CS
teams. Sure, it might involve asking difficult questions or navigating
tricky conversations, but at the end of the day, a strong set of
discovery skills can help you gain confidence in your ability as a CS
professional.
So, how do you do discovery the right way?
It All Starts With Active Listening
If you’ve been in CS for a while, you’ve probably heard the phrase
―active listening‖ a bunch of times. The concept behind this term is
deceptively simple: listen first, then
speak. But there’s more to it than
meets the eye.
Active listening is the core of our discovery framework, and we can
break it down into the following parts:
1. Being observant
Being alert and mentally present for the conversation allows you to
focus on what the customer is saying
— or, in most cases, what
they’re
not
saying. By closely observing your customer, you can take
note of verbal and non-
verbal cues, as well as the client’s overall mood
and behavior.
2. Open-ended dialogue
Asking open-ended questions helps the client expound on certain
points and ideas. It lets you uncover important information like their
values, goals, pain points, challenges, and preferences.
When done right, creating open-ended dialogue can also be a great
opportunity for constructive feedback.
3. Curiosity
Coming from a place of genuine curiosity creates a lot of opportunities
during discovery. In many cases, curiosity can help you discover
surprising details about your customer.
Be empathetic. Try to see things from their point of view and ask
questions rooted in genuine interest.
4. Breaking it down
This aspect of active listening involves breaking big concepts into
smaller pieces so you can understand them better. This works well
when trying to solve problems or getting to the bottom of pain points
and hesitations.
The trick to breaking it down is in asking specific questions and
encouraging the customer to cite concrete examples.
5. Watching subtle cues
Actions speak louder than words. As mentioned earlier, communication
is more than what a person is saying
— feelings and ideas can also be
conveyed through word choice, tone of voice, and body language.
Active listening involves watching out for these subtle cues.
6. Checking in and rephrasing
This element of active listening helps you align with the client. By
checking in and rephrasing what they’re saying, you’re establishing
that you understand their concerns. This tells your customer that
you’re on the same page and are eager to come up with creative
solutions together.
App
lying Active Listening Through Catalyst’s Discovery Framework
Now that we’ve established what active listening is, we’re going to
apply that to our discovery framework. This framework serves as our
guide in navigating discovery conversations.
Our discovery framework is made up of four major pillars:
1. Who are you speaking to?
We can’t stress this enough: you won’t be able to ask relevant
discovery questions if you don’t know who you’re speaking to in the
first place. To truly connect with your customer and have a meaningful
discovery conversation, it’s vital that you determine your customer
personas first.
For example, here at Catalyst, we’ve got three personas:
Executives and VPs of Customer Success
CS Managers and Directors
CSMs
.
Exploration
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dostları ilə paylaş: |