Customer Success and Technical Support

Dec 14, 2025

Should Support Be Part of Customer Success?

Should Support Be Part of Customer Success?

Should Support Be Part of Customer Success?

My answer to this question is shaped by where my career began.

I get asked this a lot when I talk to SaaS leaders. I started out as a Technical Support Engineer, and later went on to lead global support teams at Oracle before I entered the relatively new world of CS back then. It’s where I learned how customers really behave, how products break in the real world, and how much trust is built (or lost) in moments of friction.

Because of that background, I naturally gravitate towards Support.

In many of the SaaS scale-ups I’ve worked in since, I’ve often been responsible for both Support and Customer Success -sometimes by design, sometimes by necessity.

And that’s why my answer to this question isn’t black and white.

Why this question keeps coming up in SaaS

As SaaS companies scale, leaders often ask:

  • Should Support and Customer Success sit under one function?

  • Would this improve the customer experience?

  • Or are we risking dilution of both?

The question usually arises when:

  • Customers feel passed between teams

  • CS teams are overwhelmed by reactive work

  • Support volumes increase rapidly

  • Leadership wants clearer ownership of the customer experience

On paper, combining Support and CS feels logical.

In practice, it’s more complex.

The advantages of Support sitting within Customer Success

Having come from Support myself, I can see very real benefits.

1. You get closer to real customer pain

Support is where the truth lives.

Tickets reveal:

  • Product friction

  • Product gaps

  • Misaligned expectations

When Support sits within CS, those insights surface faster and feed directly into retention and risk conversations.

2. Customers experience continuity

From a customer perspective, fewer handovers usually mean:

  • Less repetition

  • More context

  • Faster trust

This is especially valuable in complex, enterprise, or high-touch environments.

3. It works well in earlier-stage or scaling SaaS

In scale-ups, flexibility matters.

A combined model can:

  • Reduce silos

  • Improve responsiveness

  • Create a more joined-up experience

I’ve seen this work particularly well when teams are small and expectations are clearly set.

The drawbacks (where it often goes wrong)

This is where experience really matters.

1. Support and CS are fundamentally different disciplines

Support is:

  • Reactive

  • Ticket-based

  • Volume-driven

Customer Success is:

  • Proactive

  • Relationship-led

  • Outcome-focused

When these are blended without structure, both functions lose clarity.

2. CS becomes reactive by default

One of the biggest risks I see is CSMs slowly becoming support agents.

When CS spends too much time:

  • Chasing tickets

  • Managing escalations

  • Unblocking issues

Strategic conversations like value creation, renewal planning, and growth get left behind.

3. Metrics and incentives get confused

Support teams are often measured on:

  • Response times

  • Resolution times

  • Ticket backlogs

CS teams are measured on:

  • Retention

  • NRR

  • Customer outcomes

Without clear separation, priorities blur and performance suffers.

When combining Support and CS can work

In my experience, this model works only when there is clarity and leadership intent.

1. Roles and responsibilities are explicit

Customers should clearly understand:

  • When they’re interacting with Support

  • When they’re working with their CSM

Internally, boundaries must be well defined.

2. Support is closely aligned, but not overloaded with CS goals

Support should:

  • Surface risk

  • Share insights

  • Feed product feedback

But not be held accountable for retention or NRR targets.

3. CS is actively protected

This is critical.

CS teams need:

  • Space to be proactive

  • Capacity to lead renewal and value conversations

  • Leadership support to say “no” when needed

Without this, CS becomes reactive by default - regardless of the org structure.

My honest view

Because my career started in Support, I have huge respect for it.

Support is where customer trust is won or lost. Its the window of the customer experience and so important because they are contacting you when they are vulnerable and how to engage at this point shapes their whole view of the company.

But combining Support and Customer Success only works when:

  • The decision is intentional

  • The structure is clear

  • The differences between the roles are respected

Alignment is powerful. Confusion is costly.

Let’s discuss

This is one of those topics where context matters

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Lets talk it through - Contact me to discuss how I can help you with your Customer Success challenges.

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