How to Harness Your Employees to Collect Valuable Customer Data

man on phone using computer

Imagine one of your customers is nearing the end of their contract. You check your PSA and decide they鈥檙e a good fit for an upsell鈥攄ecent turnover, growing headcount, stable industry.

Three months out from their renewal date, you call them up and give them your best sales pitch.

And then it all falls apart.

It turns out your customer has been complaining about dropped tickets and slow service for months. They don鈥檛 want to talk about a new contract until you鈥檝e fixed all their current problems.

You hang up the phone and click back to your PSA. What just happened? There鈥檚 nothing there to even suggest there was a problem with this account to begin with.

The likely cause is that your employees aren鈥檛 documenting their work properly. If I鈥檓 being honest, I don鈥檛 even blame them. PSAs are clunky and everyone develops quick workarounds and shortcuts to speed up their work, especially when business owners haven鈥檛 implemented Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs).

But as we鈥檝e just seen, poor documentation wreaks havoc on subsequent resells. Let鈥檚 talk about fixing MSP data practices and harnessing your employees to collect valuable customer data.

The problem with data

Before we dive into fixes, let鈥檚 hammer out the two distinct challenges MSPs face with customer data: data access and data reliability.

First, data access.

In most cases, day-to-day customer data lives in a PSA like Connectwise, Autotask, and ServiceNow. That鈥檚 where you see things like contract details, documentation, projects, and calendars. It鈥檚 also where techs鈥 notes should live. When a tech fixes a ticket or goes on-site, they should document what they did.

While PSAs are great for customer data, they鈥檙e woeful for sales. Even so, account managers have to use them because that鈥檚 where the customer data is.

In order to sell more effectively, MSPs need to manage data in a way that allows visibility across both PSA and tools that are designed for sales like CRMs. You can integrate the two tools, but it鈥檚 often expensive unless there鈥檚 a one-click integration. The alternative is to work between the two systems. It鈥檚 not ideal, but it鈥檚 immediately accessible.

But behind the data access challenge is a more fundamental problem: data reliability. This comes from employees not properly documenting their work. When your data is unreliable, it鈥檚 unusable. Say your PSA doesn鈥檛 have any ticket notes. Does that mean everything is going well, or that your techs didn鈥檛 remember to document their work? You don鈥檛 know.

It鈥檚 this second problem we鈥檙e going to focus on. Because unless your data is reliable, it doesn鈥檛 matter whether or not it鈥檚 accessible.

Set behavior benchmarks

The goal here is simple: techs should take proper notes when they go on-site. While simple in theory, it鈥檚 a problem that all MSPs have to deal with. Techs are busy. They prioritize metrics like time to resolution or average ticket completion time. If they鈥檙e rushing from one ticket to the next, proper documentation is one of the first things they鈥檒l cut.听

The reason they prioritize speed is that they鈥檙e (usually) appraised on speed. If you set an SLA for ticket acknowledgment at 30 minutes, resolution plan at two hours, and resolution at eight hours, they鈥檒l move to hit those targets. Since ticket resolution isn鈥檛 contingent on record-keeping, it makes sense to skip over their notes.

Once you know what behavior you want to encourage鈥攔ecord-keeping鈥攜ou have to work it into your incentivization structure. Companies have adopted strategic platforms like the Entrepreneurial Operating System (EOS) to benchmark the behavior they want and incentivize against it.

Drive consistency

As with all change management, the moment an owner takes their hand off the wheel, progress and standards slip. This is no different. Once you have your revised incentive plan in place, you need to stick to it, come hell or high water.

If you鈥檙e fortunate enough to have a superstar tech who consistently closes tickets in one call, you likely will give them a lot of slack鈥攐utcome is important. Process is also important, so what do you do when they鈥檙e skipping or putting off completing their documentation? It鈥檚 tempting to let it slide. After all, they鈥檙e your superstar.

When you let their behavior slip, the people around them think, 鈥淥h, it's okay not to take notes.鈥 Then their behavior begins slipping, too. They鈥檙e now also skipping taking notes and closing tickets without proper documentation, and they feel justified in doing so. It slowly ripples through your business, and it begins to undo all of the processes you鈥檝e spent years building.

As you see the change unwinding, you might come down hard on your B- and C-players. Ultimately, this just builds resentment across your entire team. Why is the superstar getting away with the things they鈥檙e being disciplined for?听

Now, you鈥檙e back to solving the same problems you experienced early on in your managed services business鈥攁nd you鈥檙e going to have to start over. Retraining people is challenging when they know they can let standards slip. Disciplinary action is not advised when you鈥檝e enforced an uneven or unfair policy. A consistent policy鈥攄ocumented, trained, and acknowledged in writing by your team鈥攊s mandatory if you want to provide corrective counselling or build a performance improvement plan.

Identify the behaviors you want to promote. Find a way to incentivize them. Then drive unrelenting consistency.听

Find the problem and work backward

Creating reliable data might seem like a thankless task鈥攂ut it can drive improved sales performance. To understand why, start at the problem and work backward.

Your MSP business isn鈥檛 growing? Ask why: you鈥檙e not bringing in more revenue.

Why isn鈥檛 your revenue growing? You鈥檙e not adding enough new opportunities. Dig deeper for an answer: 听one reason might be you don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 going on with your current customers.听

Why don鈥檛 you know what鈥檚 going on with your current customers? Your employees aren鈥檛 keeping accurate records.

When you鈥檙e in the weeds, it鈥檚 tough to see the link between accurate record-keeping and increased revenue鈥攂ut it鈥檚 there.

When all of your employees document their work in a standardized format and single platform, you gain a much deeper understanding of both your prospects and your customers. You鈥檒l know what you should offer for upsells and when to push for renewals. You can increase your sales performance without adding sales headcount. With clear visibility into the entire lifecycle of your customers, and clearly defined standard operating procedures enforced consistently across your organization, it won鈥檛 be long until your business begins experiencing the best-in-class margins and year over year growth you desire.