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Customer Success

How to Run a Customer Advisory Board

David Park · Dec 6, 2024 · 10 min read

Ask ten sales leaders about a customer advisory board and you'll get ten different answers, most of them contradictory. That's because it's usually taught as folklore rather than a process. Here we'll strip it back to first principles: what problem it actually solves, what the moving parts are, and how to set it up once so it keeps paying off.

What good looks like in practice

When a customer advisory board is working, you can feel it before you can measure it. New team members ramp faster because the process is written down. Deals stop mysteriously stalling because the next step is always visible. And leadership stops asking "what's the status?" because the answer is right there in the pipeline.

That's the real payoff. Not a prettier dashboard, but a team that spends its energy on customers instead of on remembering what to do next.

Measure a few things, not everything

Dashboards are addictive, and it's easy to end up tracking thirty metrics that no one acts on. For a customer advisory board, pick two or three numbers that would actually change a decision this week, and put them somewhere your team sees daily. A metric you don't review is just decoration.

Pair each number with a threshold and an owner. "Response time under two hours, owned by the on-call rep" beats a wall of charts every time, because it tells someone exactly what to do when the number drifts.

Common mistakes to avoid

The classic failure with a customer advisory board is over-engineering it. Teams add fields, stages, and rules to cover every edge case, and end up with a system so complex no one follows it. Complexity is a tax you pay every single day; keep the model as simple as it can be while still reflecting reality.

The second mistake is skipping the review. Any process you set up will drift as your business changes. Put a recurring reminder on the calendar — quarterly is plenty — to prune what's no longer used and tighten what's grown loose.

Design for the handoffs

Work rarely fails in the middle of a step — it fails at the seams, when one person hands off to another. For a customer advisory board, the handoffs are where context evaporates: the note that never got written, the field left blank, the "I'll follow up" that no one owned.

Make each handoff explicit. Decide what information must travel with the record, and make the CRM enforce it. A deal shouldn't be able to move to the next stage without the context the next person needs, and a closed-won account shouldn't reach onboarding without the details that make the first call go smoothly.

The bottom line

The teams that win at a customer advisory board aren't the ones with the most tools; they're the ones with the clearest habits. Start with one change from this guide, make it stick, and build from there.

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