Well, I've most certainly read enough! And I... will finally help myself with a little inspiration from Seth's recent piece, Two kinds of loyalty.
Whenever I look at enterprise software, an always perplexing thing is how they make it excruciatingly difficult to leave you. Whatever happened to getting customers to stay because you have the best means to deliver the demands of the present--and the great promise of the future?The first kind of loyalty is the loyalty of convenience.I'm going to look around, sure, but probably won't switch. Switching is risky, it's time consuming. Switching means a new account manager or moving my software or reprinting something. Switching means I might make a mistake or lose my miles or have to defend a new decision.Corporations are getting ever better at building this sort of loyalty.
Our biggest reason for staying with software makers who obviously forgot this simple truth has, lately, become the worst kind of logic. We can't leave because we fear for business continuity. And the cause of this guilt is because, apparently, our vendor didn't think about how you'll survive without them. But hey, they did think about it. That's why it's too difficult. And I say this as bluntly as I can. They made it so to "make" you loyal.
Seth is right. The loyalty of convenience exists indeed. And a good amount of the largest software makers globally are very good at such rampant customer betrayal. Building a "wall of hassle" to make your switch harder instead of focusing on building great user experiences is just plain ridiculous. It's almost like bondage. Talk about being candid.The problem with the loyalty of convenience is that the customer is always tempted to look and look some more, and the vendor is always working to build barriers, barriers that don't necessarily increase satisfaction, but merely build a wall of hassle around the (now) trapped customer.We don't have a common marketing term for this sort of feeling, but 'stuck' comes to mind.
This second type of loyalty is where everyone ought to be. No one's interested in finding something else because the need just doesn't pop out. There's no sense in entertaining anything else because what you have meets everything you could possibly ask for.Then there's the other kind of loyalty. This is the loyalty of, "I'm not even looking."This is the loyalty of, "I'm the kind of person that sticks with people who stick with me." This is the loyalty of someone who doesn't even want to know that there's a better deal somewhere else, because, after all, he's in it for the long haul.
Everything works and everyone's happy. It keeps improving whether or not customers are asking for anything new. And best of all, leave whenever you wish without the fear of not being able to bring your data with you.
One of the things that has greatly enabled Loyalty #2 is the cloud. With it, you pay for only what you use, plus the freedom to stop any time. But not all clouds are created equal I'm afraid. Some of them are on the cloud but still do things in the same, unflinching way. It's absolutely horrid.The beauty of the second kind of loyalty, the loyalty of identity and satisfaction, is that the person who isn't even looking is committed, as committed to the relationship as the vendor is. You earn this sort of loyalty, you don't architect it.You can only focus on creating one sort of loyalty at a time, true?
So how do you know which solutions are doing this to you? I'm not going to feed you cryptic things like "you don't find it, it finds you." Instead, follow the same logic Seth started. Are you starting to find frustration in what your company is using? Are your end users starting to demand better means to do things? Are you so deeply entrenched with what you have that the very thought of transitioning out is a nightmare in itself?
Then there you go. Start planning your way out and find solutions that are open for postmortem scenarios. But let me add more than that. Something totally off my wavelength. But hey, if this means getting through everyone, what the hell--
If someone loves you for real, they'll let you go. If you stay regardless, then it's mutual love.
Damn it, my blog will never be the same!
:)