Customer references have always been key ingredient in successful selling and marketing. Nothing differentiates you from the competition as effectively as strong customer references, and nothing but first-hand experience provides better evidence of your claims about what your company delivers.

As today's markets consolidate and become increasingly competitive, and as buyers become more sophisticated and demanding, customer evidence gains even greater importance. But many customer reference programs (CRPs) are stuck in outmoded thinking, and that could be significantly holding your company back.

So how can CRPs evolve to meet today's challenges? This article will take a look back at how customer reference programs arrived and where they are today, then give insight into how you can help them to evolve into strategic assets.

Early Evolution in Perspective

Reference programs were born out of frustration. Sales reps found they were spending too much time looking for customer references—emailing colleagues, scrambling for information and good matches—and that the last-minute mad dash ate into their productivity. Marketing departments were only too happy to take on this valuable role, and reference programs as we know them were born.

Once marketing departments had established these programs, they realized they were on to something good. Logically, the same CRPs that were already gathering information for sales could also create case studies and videos, and provide customers for PR and analyst relations needs too. So CRPs expanded their charters, and some even specialized to focus more exclusively on marketing deliverables.

These were good times for customer reference programs, and many grew by leaps and bounds, fueled by an intuitive sense of the value CRPs offered. As more headcount and marketing dollars were committed to CRPs, traditional marketing functions claimed greater influence over the programs' outputs.

For many CRPs, the pendulum swung toward the creation of marketing assets, and many let go of their historic connection to sales. Today three of ten programs infrequently or never meet with the sales forces they serve—a clear indicator of missing alignment.

Yet budget and headcount don't increase for long without something to show for the investment, and sales and marketing leaders began to increase their scrutiny of reference programs. Looking to showcase strategic value, CRPs took on additional functions, such as protecting customers from overuse. They also defined their value in terms of owning and executing as many reference functions as possible, including qualifying and recruiting reference customers, maintaining "reference relationships" with key customers, personally fulfilling requests from sales reps, and creating as many reference deliverables—mainly success stories—as possible.

CRPs attempted to measure their value in two ways: quantifying reference outputs (number of case studies) and qualifying their "soft" benefits like improved customer relationships and protecting valuable customer reference resources.

Neither of these measurements truly demonstrates value in an executive-friendly way, because they don't draw direct connections to business impact. Having 300 of the wrong customer success stories is worse than having none, if for no other reason than the expense of developing them.

So as smart executives began to question the impact of success stories and other traditional deliverables, and CRPs failed to find credible, defensible ways to demonstrate their impact on the business, budgets and headcount flattened, and even decreased for some programs.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Whitney Wood is director at The Phelon Group (www.phelongroup.com).