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by jwr 2667 days ago
I respectfully disagree. Note that 10-15% of resources of a 5-customer organization is very different from 10-15% of resources of a 1000-customer organization, assuming your customers actually pay you money (generally recommended).

This means that even assuming you get no benefits of scale (and you should be, your software/product should improve as you learn and support load should fall), there is no reason why you can't provide the same level of support as your organization grows.

The problem is that people assume for some reason that a larger organization can't dedicate 10-15% of their resources to support. This is why whe get crappy support or no way to contact the organization at all.

1 comments

This is all about scaling. You want to do 10x the customers with 2x the employees, so that the business finally starts to make money. The service level that took 10-15% of your resources back then would take the majority of your resources now; the same % of your resources now is much less hours per customer.
There shouldn't be a linear increase in support requests with a larger customer base.

As your product scales to more customers, the percentage of support requests generated should be going down as you improve your product and support documentation based on existing customer support requests.

This ("shouldn't be a linear increase in support requests") is true some of the time, but not all of the time in all lines of business. Make a thing foolproof, and the world will go on generating greater fools, you will see a greater variety in weird requests or bizarre expectations, etc.
The number of requests may scale linearly, but the number of actual issues won’t.
But that's my point, isn't it? If you want to do 10x the customers with 2x the employees, you will be cutting into your support resources, and your customers will suffer.

This is exactly why we (as customers) all have to suffer bad or no support. And sadly, we put up with it, mostly.

There are serious overhead costs to running a company 10 times as large. If you also have to hire 10x the employees, you'll end up needing to charge more than most customers are willing to pay. (Customers who are willing to pay out the nose generally do get good customer service, even from organizations that are normally bad at it, up to and including teams of engineers deployed to the customer's office to help out.)