Net Recurring Revenue (NRR) is the clearest signal of whether our product, pricing, and customer success motions are compounding value or quietly leaking it. When I review our dashboard, NRR tells me—in one number—how well we retain, expand, and engage customers. It’s the difference between linear progress and durable, compounding growth.
At its core, NRR answers a simple question: did revenue from our existing customers grow or shrink this period? The standard way I frame it is: NRR = (Starting MRR + Expansion – Contraction – Churn) / Starting MRR. Expansion reflects upsells, cross-sells, and increased usage; contraction and churn capture downgrades and departures. Great teams don’t just watch this number—they engineer it.
The teams that consistently outperform treat NRR as an outcome of intentional design across the entire customer journey. They align product-led growth with customer success, weaving onboarding, user activation, in-app guides, and lifecycle messaging into one coherent system. They make adoption the star of the show, not an afterthought tucked beneath quarterly targets.
To scale that system efficiently, I lean on platforms that streamline in-app guidance and rich behavioral analytics. The promise is crisp and concrete: “Increase revenue, cut costs, and reduce risk with Pendo’s Software Experience Management platform. Optimize the entire software experience to drive adoption and improve engagement.” When the experience is instrumented end to end, expansion opportunities show up as patterns, not surprises.
Retention analysis is where the signal gets sharp. I segment cohorts by plan, size, and use case; map their journey; and run driver trees that connect leading indicators (activation depth, feature breadth, time-to-value) to the lagging outcome (NRR). This turns hunches into hypotheses and gives customer success managers a prioritized playbook, not a long wish list.
Onboarding is the first and most powerful NRR lever. The faster a customer experiences their first win, the more likely they are to adopt core features, invite teammates, and expand. I use in-app guides, product tours, and contextual tooltips to pave the path to value—always grounded in clear jobs-to-be-done, not generic walkthroughs. The goal is simple: remove friction, celebrate progress, and make the next best action obvious.
Operating cadence matters as much as tooling. I separate the rhythms: QBRs for strategic alignment and expansion planning; OKRs for cross-functional execution and accountability. QBRs anchor the conversation in outcomes and value realized; OKRs ensure product, marketing, and CS move in lockstep to close the gaps those QBRs reveal.
Pricing and packaging complete the loop. When the value proposition is clear and plans are aligned to outcomes customers care about, expansion feels natural—more capability for more value. Usage insights guide which features to gate, which to bundle, and where to price to maximize retention while unlocking healthy upsell paths.
None of this works without tight product–CS collaboration. My teams practice continuous discovery—customer interviews, win/loss insights, and in-product feedback—so we improve the experience where it truly matters. Journey mapping turns those insights into experiments, and experiments turn into polished features once the data speaks.
I build an NRR driver tree into our weekly reviews. Each branch (activation, adoption, multi-seat expansion, downgrade prevention, reactivation) has a clear owner, a measurable hypothesis, and a time-bound experiment. A/B testing guides what we ship broadly, and we define success upfront to avoid moving goalposts after the fact.
I’ve seen NRR climb meaningfully in a single quarter when we pair rigorous retention analysis with targeted onboarding improvements and value-based packaging. The lift rarely comes from one big bet; it’s the compounding effect of many small, well-instrumented decisions.
Here’s the 90-day play I return to: first, baseline NRR by segment and identify the top three drivers of expansion and the top three causes of contraction. Next, streamline onboarding with in-app guides and product tours that accelerate time-to-value and drive user activation. Then, craft expansion plays aligned to real outcomes (additional seats, advanced workflows, new use cases), and operationalize them via QBRs. Finally, preempt downgrades with early-warning alerts, targeted education, and a clear path from “stuck” to “successful.”
NRR is a team sport. When product, customer success, and go-to-market align around adoption and outcomes, growth compounds, risk declines, and every customer interaction becomes a chance to create more value—today and in every renewal to come.
Inspired by this post on Pendo – Perspectives.












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