By Kate Mueller on Company culture from October 19, 2023
One of the big shifts that's happened this year at KnowledgeOwl is that we have quietly removed our professional services (pro services) function.
This seemingly small change actually represents a much bigger change behind the scenes, so I wanted to talk a bit more about it.
KnowledgeOwl has existed in some form or another since 2014, when we started life as HelpGizmo (HG). HG was originally a passion project at SurveyGizmo (now Alchemer), starting as a knowledge base but it was supposed to grow into a full-fledged help ticketing system. Instead, SurveyGizmo decided to pull the plug on the project and offered it for sale to Marybeth and Pete, our beloved cofounders. They bought it, rebranded it to KnowledgeOwl (KO), and decided to go all-in on being a standalone knowledge base software.
Both Pete and Marybeth came to KO having done software support, and so support has always been baked into KO's DNA.
Much of KnowledgeOwl was built to be highly customizable. We used that customizability ourselves to add small features and functionality where they didn't exist. Many of our early customers got a lot of one-off bespoke customizations this way.
Over time, those one-off customizations started to consume a lot of our work and time, and we realized that we couldn't keep doing them for free. So our official Professional Services (pro services) function was born. Any customer could contract with us for one-off customizations, and we even included complimentary pro services in our original enterprise level plan.
Having a proper pro services function helped us in many ways: it cleared out our "normal" support queue of these complicated setups, it allowed us to have dedicated owls to manage and build those pro services, and it gave us an additional revenue stream (and what small company doesn't like that?).
But almost from the moment it was born, pro services caused us troubles.
Simple theme builds turned into wildly complicated Frankensteins over time; customers sometimes had us build things that made built-in KnowledgeOwl functionality not work, or their customizations prevented them from using new features as they came out. Maintaining pro services as we updated KnowledgeOwl also became a chore.
We quickly realized that complimentary pro services for our enterprise customers was creating an ever-expanding backlog of work, so our first iteration on this was to adjust our enterprise plan to be discounted pro services rather than complimentary. That relieved a little of the pressure, but not enough.
We also noticed trends where several customers requested the same kind of service repeatedly. On the one hand, this helped us somewhat "standardize" those offerings, but on the other, these were potential feature candidates that we basically never added to KnowledgeOwl itself because we kept getting extra money to add them in customized ways.
The pro services work was also relegated to only a few owls, and we had some serious knowledge transfer problems after we had some turnover.
It was clear that we couldn't keep doing pro services as a separate silo, but the turnover also required us to ask ourselves: do we still want to offer pro services at all?
At first, we said yes, we did still want to offer it, because it felt bad to say no when people asked us for help.
But over time, it became clear that this old model no longer worked for us.
And after much internal discussion and debate, we came to the conclusion: pro services needed to go.
There are a variety of reasons why we decided to make the change. I believe most of them stem from a fairly simple realization:
We had to embrace what it meant to be a bootstrapped SaaS company with a single product and to make that product the best it possibly could be.
We had to stop bandaiding the product's weaknesses. It needed to succeed on its own merits, and we needed to surface all of the ways that pro services had been hiding some of its flaws from us.
We also needed to stop dividing our time. We had to stop being both a service and a product company, commit to one, and move forward.
So we chose: we're a product company.
We build one thing: knowledge base software called KnowledgeOwl.
We don't want to build a small secondary parliament of additional owls building customizations; we want to build KnowledgeOwl.
The only customers who really saw changes to things were some of our enterprise folks who joined us when complimentary pro services was part of the package. We've handled these conversations both informally directly with these customers and formally as their subscriptions come up for renewal.
For our enterprise customers, we've opted to replace pro services with what, for lack of a better word, we might call "success services". We've hired two lead success owls and a big part of their role will be regularly scheduled check-ins and account management with these enterprise customers, and we're exploring offering additional training or other services that still give this tier of customer a higher service experience, but as a pure service rather than a service that supplants the product.
For our non-enterprise customers--particularly those who never knew pro services never existed--this change probably means very little.
Except behind the scenes, it does. 😊
Here's how:
As I think about these changes, there's really two ideas I keep returning to, again and again.
The first is an idea I owe to Herb Caudill, founder and CEO of DevResults (and my former boss), in a talk he gave about international development at MERL Tech 2015 (the diagram I'm thinking of is around the 5:30 mark):
In order to make the world a better place, imagine a Venn diagram. One circle holds all the world's problems. The second holds what you're good at. The tiny sliver where those two things overlap is where you should focus your efforts.
We were okay at doing pro services, but people could just as easily hire outside developers to do a lot of what we did there. What we are uniquely good at is creating and building knowledge base software that is purpose-built, intuitive, and doesn't require developers to use. We want to focus our efforts on that.
The second is just the idea of focus: it's hard to choose to focus your time when you're torn between conflicting priorities or goals. By dropping pro services and pursuing partnerships to help fill that void, our team can focus 100% of our energies on creating, maintaining, improving, and supporting KnowledgeOwl. By bringing all of this functionality fully within KnowledgeOwl, we can guarantee its reliability and evolution over time. And by keeping our focus, we can work on more complex features or getting smaller features delivered faster.
That should mean:
Pro services is dead; long live KnowledgeOwl!
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