Ask HN: Prove the Impact of Your Work
I work at a B2B software company (~1500 R&D, and few thousands of people doing sales, support etc). We have one main product (accounts for the majority of sales) - a hardware appliance with two bundles of licenses - basic and premium. When the product is sold it comes with the premiumm for some time and then it depends on the customer decision whether to renew the premium bundle, pay for the basic one, or somewhere in between (pay for some of the premium features). The problem arises when I want to decide/suggest features to add to the product. I'm being asked how will it affect the sales of the product - and this question is terribly difficult.. sure I can measure the usage of the feature I'd like to add - but it might not affect the bottom line $$$ at all. I can also find examples of features that nobody uses but did improve sales because of their effect on the positioning of the product.
How do you measure effect of a feature which is part of a much larger product? How can I measure if it was significant in the customer decision to buy / renew? any examples?
6 comments
[ 0.24 ms ] story [ 26.5 ms ] threadThose high level solutions should be articulated in a feature roadmap. If appropriate product research has been conducted you will have explored the problem and potential features in depth with customer interviews, focus groups and broader survey customer research to gauge impact on customer retention, license upgrades and then extended that research to understand impact on acquiring new customers.
As an engineer with a feature idea find a way to get it on the radar of that product research team so they can see about validating it with customers.
Having been a professional researcher doing exactly that kind of validation at one point, and now doing a fair amount of development, I have come to believe that building a sandboxed prototype is better than just trying to describe the conceptualized feature. But be careful not to invest too much, time, money or emotional commitment in the prototype. Get it in front of customers for reaction as soon as possible.
If you want more examples and stories feel free to reach out.
You should assume that most businesses already have some kind of solution in place, either from a competitor or an internally developed a set of processes and supporting software. When you look for sales bumps you need to consider the length of the sales cycle - you might not see any switching for 2 or 3 quarters after it becomes generally known that the feature is available.
I think your surest sign is in customer retention statistics. If normally you experience 10% non-renewals of license every quarter. I would look in the quarters right after it is introduced to see whether renewal rates improve.
And, still your critics might say well it wasn't the new feature that your department created and introduced, it was the new marketing campaign and we revamped our process for renewing customers. And, you know they might be right. Or, the improvement is a subtle combination of all those factors. Unlike science, businesses, particularly B2B, rarely do controlled experiments.
You can track inputs and outcomes over time and point to correlations but that is about the best you can do.