We didn't set out to build a customer success function.
It happened by accident when we started asking one extra question at the end of every resolved support ticket:
"Is there anything else about the product you've been meaning to ask or figure out?"
We expected most customers to say no.
About 40% said yes.
And the things they mentioned weren't support issues. They were:
→ Features they didn't know existed
→ Workflows they were doing the hard way
→ Integrations they assumed we didn't have but we did
→ Use cases they wanted to try but didn't know how to start
These weren't problems. They were untapped value.
Customers who discovered more of the product through these conversations:
All from one extra sentence at the end of a support resolution.
The insight: support conversations don't have to end when the ticket is resolved. The moment right after a problem is solved is actually the highest-trust moment in the customer relationship.
The customer just got help. They're grateful. They're engaged.
That's the moment to ask what else they need.
We now call this "support-led success" internally. It's not a separate team or a separate process. It's just one extra question, asked consistently.
Has anyone else built customer success habits into their support workflow? What's worked?
That “highest-trust moment right after resolution” point is sharp — most teams completely miss that window.
What stood out to me is this:
You didn’t add a feature or flow — you changed one sentence and it unlocked expansion + retention.
That’s basically positioning at the interaction level.
Feels like there’s something deeper here:
If support is actually the highest-leverage moment,
then most products are underutilizing their strongest conversion point.
Small thought — the way you’re describing it (“support-led success”) makes sense internally,
but externally this could probably be framed more directly around outcome:
→ “turn support into revenue moments”
→ or “convert resolved tickets into expansion”
That might land faster for founders thinking in growth terms.
Curious — have you tried making this visible as a metric (like % of tickets that lead to expansion), or is it still more qualitative?
Thanks Aryan — this is excellent feedback.
You’re right. The moment right after a problem is solved is pure gold — the customer is grateful and their guard is down. That’s when the highest-leverage question lands.
We’ve started treating those “anything else on your mind?” replies as expansion signals. Some of the best upsells and feature requests have come exactly there.
On the metric side: right now it’s still mostly qualitative for us (we track how many of these conversations lead to renewed/expanded plans), but I haven’t made it a formal % yet. Your suggestion to track “% of resolved tickets that lead to expansion” is really sharp — I’m going to start measuring that this week.
Appreciate you pushing the thinking here. This thread has genuinely helped me see the opportunity more clearly.
That’s a strong signal.
If you start measuring it, this probably becomes less “support insight” and more a clear growth lever.
Right now though, it still sounds like an internal concept.
If this was framed externally as something like:
→ “post-resolution expansion engine”
→ or “turn support tickets into revenue”
it becomes instantly legible + sellable.
Feels like there’s a real product/feature hiding here — not just a tactic.
Curious — are you thinking of this as a system you could expose, or just keeping it internal for now?