ISPCON Keynote:
State of the Webhosting Industry
This was the business-focused keynote at ISPCON, filled
with ideas to help you increase webhosting revenue and reduce waste.
"This is a young person's business, a hot business," said Douglas J.
Erwin, chairman and CEO of Houston, Tex.-based webhost The
Planet. Erwin is not young, and this was a joke. The day of hotshot
webhosts is over and webhosting requires a hard look at the numbers, a
relentless focus on the dollars and cents.
He said that the average webhosting business is growing at 12 to 14
percent per year, and The Planet is growing at four times that rate.
Because business is good, businesses are for sale, and there are buyers,
but valuations are high. "Companies are buying to obtain economies of
scale," he said.
Maturity
The business has matured, and customers have matured too. They no longer
fear the internet, to the extent that they are now comfortable with having
a geographically dispersed workforce.
Challenges include churn, the capital intensive nature of the business,
and retaining talent in a mini-boom market.
Then there's deflating prices for services offered. "Customers expect
more for their buck and almost one-on-one support instead of the electronic
curtain," said Erwin.
The Planet's response has been to improve consistently, but to adopt
only proven technology. "We're leading edge, but not bleeding edge," Erwin
said.
You need to be able to deliver and support any service you introduce,
which is why you must use proven technology.
Metrics
"You can be the most successful bankrupt company in the business," said
Erwin, drawing laughter. "We had success but no capital. We learned that
our product strategy needed to yield cash for growth.
So he started focusing on metrics that were easy to measure and to communicate
to all employees at The Planet. Metrics included churn and data center
profit per square foot.
2.5 percent churn per month may be normal, but that translates to 30
percent churn per year, which is unacceptable. With over 40,000 servers
under management, that's 12,000 servers each year. It's too much work.
Reducing churn has to be a priority.
Evolution
As webhosting offerings become commoditized, profit margins can be found
at the premium level of services, but the definition of premium is constantly
changing. Erwin said he had an epiphany while listening to a Microsoft
executive talk about a larger market than he'd ever considered. "He was
talking about an IT Services Market worth $1.5 trillion dollars [per year]."
In order to crack this market, you have to be able to prove you're reliable.
If a customer has questions about the data center, they can view
the demo on The Planet's website. "Skip the introduction by the old
man," Erwin said, "and you can view it in about five minutes."
It's worth watching (but watch outit can loop on you).
The demo shows the data center facilities and describes how the company
can fulfill the compliance needs of the most demanding businesses. It's
something you should consider doing for your own data center.
"Customers now demand SLAs, bandwidth from multiple providers, advanced
services, and personal (not electronic) support," concluded Erwin. "We
build dedicated support pods for certain customers, instead of mass call
centers, which customers don't like."
"Customers want private racks, storage, backup, load balancing, and
firewalls," he added.
Customer segmentation, employee cooperation
To deliver this, the techies and the suits have to work together. One
techie told him, "we used to be run by James T. Kirk and now we're run
by Jack Welch." Erwin said it was intended as a put down but he took it
as a complement.
Erwin said he has segmented his customers into four groups with very
different needs: resellers, hobbyists and enthusiasts, content delivery
networks, and bricks and mortar.
In segmenting the business, he also built procedures for handling day
to day issues. "We brought process into what had been a cowboy world,"
Erwin said. "We had to think things through before we offered them for
sale. I was in a meeting and a customer had a complaint and my techie
said, 'technology breaks'. I'm glad I was across the table from him because
I wanted to kill him."
He got everyone in the parking lot and took a group photo and told everyone
they had to work together. This sort of thing doesn't always work well.
"We teamed geeks and suits and played a version of The Newlywed Game and
it was a disaster."
Focus
"IT services must be affordable and reliable 24 x 7 x 265," Erwin said.
So he sold everything that wasn't including dialup and shared hosting.
"We built a new call center, launched new reseller and affiliate programs,
and moved customers off month to month and onto annual contracts."
He had managers call existing customers to get feedback (something Dan
Hoffman calls "reference-ability"),
asking simple questions such as, "would you recommend us to a friend."
He sent out e-mail postcards asking for feedback. 29 percent replied
and of those 88 percent were happy. "The unhappy customers were usually
because of something we'd done wrong [and could learn from]."
He strives to motivate people to come to work by making work rewarding
and building career paths. He said he wanted people to come to work like
Fred Flintstone, yelling, "yabba dabba doo!"
He concluded with a chart that summarizes the speech:
|
Challenge
|
Solution
|
| |
|
| Higher Expectations |
Multiple offerings |
| New Products |
Deliver real products, not hype |
| Capex |
Managed growth |
| Data Center Expense |
Measure ARPU in $ per sqaure foot |
| Churn |
Super glue services |
| Demands for SLAs |
Deliver SLAs with teeth |
| Talent |
Yabba dabba doo |
End
|