Introduction

Almost one-year ago I wrote another post about attaching service contracts to new product sales.  However, that post came at the subject from a different perspective. Reading both posts together will provide a more complete picture of the challenges of reaching your service contract attachment target.

No matter what type of capital equipment your company sells, service contract attachment is a key driver of business revenue.  Here is an example.

In early April 2018, GE reported a new order received by its Aviation business.  They said:

“American Airlines, which helped launch GE into commercial aviation 45 years ago, said it would power 47 additional new Boeing 787 with GE Aviation’s GEnx-1B engines.  The $6.5 billion deal includes a 20-year service agreement.  This order follows a previous order for 42 such planes placed several years ago.”

As I showed in a recent post about GE Innovation, orders like this are one reason that GE Aviation closed out 2017 with an equipment backlog of $32.8 billion and a service backlog of $137.7 billion.  In other words, 81% of the Aviation business’ backlog is attributable to services. Deals like these are very unique and not likely to be landed by the typical OEM.

What is a good service contract attachment rate?

Although there are many variables that impact individual business’ contract attachment, we have two very good sources of data, based on numerous samples, to help us figure out how good or bad we are performing.

TSIA (Technology Services Industry Association)

In a February 2018 report, TSIA said that:

  • The contract attachment rate for hardware companies in 2017 was 67%
  • The contract attachment rate for software companies in 2017 was 81%
  • The contract attachment rate for the best hardware companies in 2017 was 90%
  • The contract attachment rate for the best software companies in 2017 was 100%

Blumberg Advisory Group and Giuntini and Company

In a late- 2017 report, this team wrote that:

  • 30% of hardware companies had an attachment rate greater than 50%
  • 16.7% of hardware companies have an attachment rate greater than 70%

What is the right target?

It depends.  TSIA members are the largest suppliers in the business and may well be heavily biased towards software companies so an average attachment rate of 67% is not crazy. They sell to the largest companies who are typically more risk adverse than smaller businesses. The Blumberg/Giuntini team surveyed large OEMs and their distributors so their idea that a 50% contract attachment rate should be the target is probably appropriate for equipment manufacturers and their channels.

No matter how big or small your company is, a target contract attachment rate of ≥50% seems to me to be a realistic starting point.  If you are exceeding 50%, well done but don’t slow down.  If you are significantly below 50%, you have lots of work to do.

It takes a team or the 30,000-foot view of selling service contracts at the time of sale

Service contract Process

Step 1 Service does what it usually does when creating any service produce.  In this case, they create and price the contract.  The time of sale price should be less than the price charged when the warranty is about to expire for two reasons:

  1. Some of the contract attributes are already included in the warranty
  2. People are paying early for any additional years and this discount is an incentive to include the contract with the product order.

Step 2 Marketing does what it always does when bring a new product to Market.  For new services, Marketing must include the service team in any and all sales training because service understands best the value proposition of each type of contract.

At a 2015 SiriusDecisions conference, they had a session specifically devoted to the Marketing efforts used to support recurring revenue generation.  They identified four types of models that generate recurring revenue and were probably focused on software or software intensiove products.:

  • Subscription/SaaS – A contract for use / service over a set period of time, (typically annually)
  • Consumable -Revenue made from consumable products needed to operate main product
  • Fee Per Transaction – Revenue from a small fee is levied against each transaction
  • Maintenance – Revenue from service contract or a set period of time (typically annually).  (Note: This post is all about Maintenance)

These following two figures look at the marketing investment for each model in two ways:

Spending marketing money for contract attachment

Subscriptions and maintenance require significant Marketing investment.

Contract attachment requires field marketing

Subscriptions and maintenance require the lowest communications cost and the highest Field Marketing costs.

Step 3 Sales must make sure that their sales teams are fully compensated for all orders they book.  In some cases, the sales people have specific product and service targets.  In extreme cases, both targets have to be met before the sales people begin to collect an overachiever bonus.  Service people should actively lobby individual sales people to invite a service representative along on important sales meetings.  This extra effort does not detract from the sales person’s commission, etc.

What to do to ensure hitting your contract attachment target

The most important thing to remember is that nobody will buy a contract, or anything else, unless they will receive benefits that when monetized exceeds the cost.  Middlesex Consulting has a proven methodology to identify contract attributes that are valuable to specific customer segments. If you are not hitting your contract attachment target, please contact us.

The sales team must believe that the contract is indeed valuable.  This is critical because if the sellers do not believe they will never sell.  Also, the sellers must believe that talking about a contract will not convince the buyer that the product is unreliable.  Buyers know that products fail and/or need periodic calibration.  They want to know how the seller will behave with any significant problem and the contract addresses that.

Marketing has to make sure that websites, proposals, price lists, and sales documents have all appropriate contract information.  For example, contracts may need product numbers.  Also, new seller training must include service contract sales.

At the end of the day, service has the most important responsibility.  Service must make sure they consistently meet the specific conditions of any contract offered.  Failure to do this will turn off both the buyers and sellers and defeat the whole effort.