While acquiring new customers will always be a priority, smart business leaders know that investing in customer success renewals is critical for long-term business growth.
In fact, roughly 73% of B2B revenue comes from existing customers, and as little as a 5% increase in customer retention can lead to a 25-95% increase in profits. So, prioritizing the retention (and expansion) of existing customers is well worth the effort.
Many companies today still operate with fragmented renewal processes and uncertainty about renewal ownership, leading to unpredictable renewal outcomes. Customer success leaders looking to prevent churn, better predict renewals, and increase net revenue retention need to implement practical customer renewal strategies.
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What are customer success renewals?
Customer success renewals are the processes of getting existing customers to continue their subscription or renew their contract when their current terms end, enabling companies to retain recurring revenue. Customer renewals focus on contract continuation and may include changes to purchased features or the number of included seats within the current contract.
Contract renewals are driven by customer success teams that consistently demonstrate value, build strong relationships, and proactively engage customers to secure recurring revenue and reduce churn. Customer success renewals require ample time to complete, as they often involve pricing and plan reviews, usage and value analyses, and negotiations with multiple stakeholders.
When it comes to running successful renewals, a recent Customer Success study showed that having the right tools in place directly impacts a company’s renewal rates: companies using a CRM saw an 8.5% higher NRR than those without one. A great CRM, like Hubspot’s CRMmakes launching a customer success renewal strategy easier by enabling Customer Success Managers to keep track of customer data so they can better assess their health and likelihood of churn.
When should you start planning for customer success renewals?
Renewal planning actually begins as soon as the relationship with a customer starts. By defining a customer’s success criteria and desired outcomes early in the onboarding stage, customer success managers can ensure they foster adoption and track the right health signals throughout the customer relationship, proactively avoiding risk and delivering value.
When customer success managers focus on driving tangible value throughout the relationship, proactively track key account health data, and correlate customer outcomes with value drivers, they ensure there are no surprises during renewal conversations.
For companies with annual contracts, multi-year contracts, or those in the Enterprise B2B software space, customer success teams should be planning for renewal at least 90-120 days in advance. This includes reviewing account health, predicting renewal, and planning next steps.
Companies with less complex processes or more transactional sales models might be able to plan closer to 60 days out. The exact timing of renewal planning will vary based on factors such as contract complexity, the typical renewal sales cycle, and the level of stakeholder complexity.
The bottom line is that customer success leaders need to allow enough time to ensure ROI is clearly communicated to all stakeholders, address objections or competitive pressures, and proactively mitigate any identified risks before the renewal conversation.
Pro Tip: In my role as a CSM, when my customers were 6 months out from renewal, I would do a “renewal pulse check” during our QBR. I’d ask them something like, “If your contract were up for renewal today, would we earn your business again?” By asking this early on, customer success managers can uncover any hesitations or areas that may need addressing and work to implement solutions before the upcoming renewal conversation.
How to Build a Customer Success Renewal Strategy
Customer success leaders looking to reduce churn and improve the renewal process can follow the steps below to implement a customer success renewal strategy. This holistic customer success renewal strategy streamlines the renewal process, establishes accountability across the organization, and improves renewal rates.
Define renewal ownership & align cross-functionally.
Before creating playbooks or processes, customer success leaders need to first identify who will be responsible for each part of the renewal process. Decide if sales, account management, or customer success will own the renewal. If it’s a combination of all three teams, clearly outline which part of the process each team is responsible for.
For example, customer success managers may own the 120-day renewal forecast and be responsible for inviting the sales team to the QBR happening 90 days prior to the renewal date.
CS leaders should set measurable goals for each contributing party so that every team knows what they’re directly responsible for. Consider which cross-functional teams also care about metrics such as gross revenue retention, net revenue retention, renewal rate, churn rate, and renewal forecast, and align with those teams to create visibility and partnership in the renewal process.
I asked Phoebe Sturges Magane, senior renewals manager at Saleslofthow she views successful collaboration between sales and customer success in renewals. She told me, “The smoothest renewals happen when Customer Success and Sales operate as one team: CS builds the trust and day-to-day relationship, and Sales brings the structure and experience to lead negotiations. When both are aligned, renewals feel like a natural next step, not a restart.”
Check out HubSpot’s Customer Success Best Practices Playbook
Pro Tip: When there is misalignment between sales and CS, no one is set up for success. Customer Success Managers feel responsible for protecting the customer relationship, but if sales is purely goal-driven to find more dollars per contract, this can create tension between internal teams.
I’ve seen cases where companies lost a renewal altogether for a happy and healthy customer simply because the sales team wouldn’t budge on price. While those conversations are tricky and company growth is important, at the end of the day some recurring revenue is better than none.
The bottom line? SaaS operations teams should find a way to measure each team in a way that works together towards joint success instead of assigning metrics that pit teams against each other.
Align customers to outcomes and value early on.
Aligning customer goals to value realization early on is critical to securing contract renewal. Customer success leaders should standardize the process of identifying success criteria as customers enter onboarding. Once goals are clearly outlined, success managers should align with their customers to identify which KPIs they will use to track and measure progress.
Alignment conversation should happen early on in the customer’s journey with a company, ideally with both the onboarding manager and the customer success manager. From there, CSMs can bring targeted recommendations that help customers get more out of their purchase. The result is higher value realization and stronger customer outcomes.
Industry leaders predict that customer teams will double down on outcomes and value moving forward, with customers likely to demand that CS teams actively contribute to helping achieve measurable outcomes, thus shifting value realization to be front and center in the relationship.
Pro Tip: I asked Sara Rhude, Senior Manager of Customer Success at Cantowhat success strategies she thinks most impact renewals. She told me that enabling her CSMs to really speak to value has been one of the most impactful things they’ve ever done for retention.
Rhude said, “We created a set of business objectives that resonate across most of our client base, and tied them to success criteria that our product can directly influence.”
She went on to say that since retention always comes down to the value customers perceive, enabling her team to frame conversations around outcomes that matter to them “positions us as part of their process, not just another vendor.”
I love the approach of tying clearly defined business objectives to a customer’s individual success criteria, and it’s important to start having those conversations very early on.
Track customer health and identify risk.
Tracking customer health and identifying account risk early is critical to managing customer success renewals. A recent study asked CS leaders to identify their top priority for driving retention, and the result was mitigating churn with earlier risk detection.
CS leaders should build a customer health framework and a risk framework, and create dashboards for their customer success teams that reflect these key metrics. When viewed together, these metrics tell a holistic story about the customer’s experience with a product. Customer health score inputs include:
- Product usage or adoption.
- Customer outcomes or milestone achievements.
- Support ticket volume.
- Customer sentiment (via NPS or CSAT).
- Customer touchpoints.
- And stakeholder involvement.
By tracking (and flagging) key risk indicators, customer success teams can proactively mitigate risk to try and reduce customer churn.
Pro Tip: I highly suggest setting up automated alerts to be sent to CSMs when risk is identified in an account. When I was managing a larger book of business, it felt impossible to regularly review all of my customers’ health metrics. Receiving automated notifications when a risk was identified in an account helped me mitigate it much more quickly.
Create segmented renewal strategies.
Customer success leaders may need to differentiate renewal and retention strategies based on customer segmentation. High-risk or higher-ARR customers likely require earlier intervention or additional high-touch tactics, such as CS leaders pulling internal executives into the conversation or being offered a “make good” to offset a poor experience.
Enterprise customers may warrant more hands-on strategies than small- and midsize-business (SMB) customers, and scale or pooled-CSM customers will likely need a scaled renewal strategy that differs from that of customers with a dedicated CSM. It’s a good idea to standardize these segmented renewal strategies so that customers in these segments automatically follow the differentiated processes for each segment.
Pro Tip: If you have a scale segment or a pooled success model, chances are you’re going to need a differentiated renewal strategy. Since pooled customers aren’t getting the same level of one-on-one interaction as high-touch accounts, they’re not having value realization conversations with your team regularly. I suggest leveraging automation to highlight the ROI and outcomes they’re seeing.
Operationalize a renewal timeline.
CS leaders should standardize when and how renewal work occurs. When this process is standardized, all involved parties know what they are accountable for, and things are less likely to slip through the cracks. Since B2B buyers can take up to six months to make a purchase decision, CS leaders should build a renewal timeline that accurately reflects the complexity of their process and allows ample time to secure the renewal.
It’s typical for CS teams to do a health review, risk identification, and stakeholder confirmation between 90-120 days out (for enterprise B2B software, it could be closer to 180 days). CSMs may do this on their own or in partnership with an account executive or renewal manager, and then will often forecast the renewal likelihood.
Customer success leaders should formalize the renewal timeline and specify which activities should take place at 120 days out, 90 days out, 60 days out, 30 days out, etc.
Pro Tip: Any CSM will tell you that being caught off guard by a churned account is not a good feeling. By implementing quarterly forecast meetings and monthly risk-review calls, customer success leaders can better predict potential churn and support their CSMs in proactively turning around at-risk accounts.
In my experience, leaders from cross-functional teams often join these calls to better understand the forecast and help drive resolution where needed. I suggest standardizing these types of meetings as part of the renewal planning process so they become second nature for the CSM team.
Embed value realization into customer touchpoints.
Embedding value realization into customer touchpoints improves renewal rates by helping customers connect product usage to measurable outcomes. When customers clearly understand the value that they’re getting from a product or service, they’re more likely to renew their contract.
Customer success managers should lean into value storytelling, ensuring that each time they meet with a customer, they highlight how that customer is progressing toward the established goals and outcomes. CSMs should come to each customer conversation with an update on those goals as well as recommendations for how their customers can see even more value from the product or service.
This part of the strategy involves thoroughly training the customer success team on how to properly tell the value realization story, including how to map KPIs to each customer’s unique business outcomes.
Leveraging resources such as quarterly business reviews, shared success plans, and ROI summaries helps CSMs demonstrate value realization in tangible, measurable ways. Customer success leaders can also “share ROI upwards” by sending one-page impact reports to executive buyers and C-suite stakeholders.
Pro Tip: Don’t be afraid to ask your customers if the data you’re presenting is meaningful to them. I’ve had some customers tell me they didn’t know which data they should care about and wanted me to guide them.
I’ve had other customers tell me that the data I was presenting to them was fine, but they didn’t really know what to do with it. It’s worth asking your customers up front which metrics they care about and how you can bring value to the conversations that you’re having with them.
Establish playbooks for renewal and risk mitigation.
When customer success leaders create clearly defined renewal plays, they remove the guesswork for all teams involved in the renewal process and ensure efficient, consistent execution across the organization. When CS leaders standardize how risks are identified, escalated, and addressed, they also improve renewal predictability and provide an actionable framework for CSMs to reduce churn.
Commonly leveraged customer success renewal playbooks include healthy renewals, at-risk renewals, loss-of-champion, low-adoption, price sensitivity, and competitor influence. Each playbook should include the trigger criteria for the play, recommended actions (and who owns each action), escalation path, and success indicators. Where relevant, CS leaders should include templates and easy-to-access resources in these playbooks in order to make them scalable.
Pro Tip: Don’t forget to review customer feedback as you build your risk mitigation plans and renewal playbooks. While you may already know the top few churn reasons, reviewing customer feedback can give you a more holistic view of some of the “micro-triggers” that eventually lead customers to churn. Talk to your VoC team about which data they recommend looking at, but I suggest starting with customer feedback entries, churn analysis, and NPS feedback.
Gather more customer feedback with HubSpot’s customer feedback software. Customer experience teams can survey customers to identify areas of improvement for the product or experience.
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Align the CS team around renewals.
Customer success leaders need to create a culture of renewal readiness within their teams and teach CSMs to view each account through a renewal lens at all times. This mindset helps renewals feel like a natural continuation of the customer relationship rather than a last-minute scramble, which ultimately leads to more predictable retention outcomes.
Pro Tip: If you have CSMs who are especially adept at risk mitigation and saving at-risk renewals, I’ve seen some organizations create “risk tiger teams” that include a dedicated CSM to help with at-risk renewals. That CSM often acts as an SME and is brought into a renewal conversation early on to partner with the account team to save the account.
How to Use AI to Automate Renewals
When implementing a CSM renewal strategy, customer success leaders can leverage AI to automate and scale renewals in several ways, including streamlining routine tasks, monitoring account health, and surfacing actionable insights. AI can help identify at-risk accounts, track product adoption, and even assist with proactive customer engagement, allowing success teams to focus on strategic renewal conversations.
Let’s look at a few key areas of the renewal process that AI can help with in more detail.
Deliver personalized renewal reminders with value messaging.
Customer success leaders can leverage AI to deliver personalized, timely renewal outreach. With tools like HubSpot’s AI-powered CRMCS leaders analyze customer behavior and product usage, then send tailored content. For example, if a customer heavily uses a certain feature, AI can highlight how that feature has delivered value (with corresponding metrics) in the renewal email that gets sent to the customer.
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Alternatively, AI can analyze product usage patterns and attempt to re-engage customers who show early signs of risk. CS leaders can then launch personalized email campaigns to disengaged customers, highlighting recent improvements, offering personalized success tips, or inviting them to schedule a call with their CSM.
AI Agents like HubSpot’s Breeze Customer Agent can also help expedite the renewal process by answering customer renewal questions in real time, such as “When does my contract expire?” or “How can I add more seats to my account?”
Magane told me that she views this type of automated renewal reminder as a courtesy to customers, helping ensure they have plenty of time to have renewal conversations.
“Proactive automation, like 120-day renewal notices, shows customers we respect their time. Early, consistent communication builds trust, turns renewals from reactive to proactive, and ensures everyone is aligned early with no last-minute scrambles,” she says.
Surface customer insights and de-risk accounts.
AI helps customer success teams surface customer insights and mitigate renewal risk by continuously analyzing large volumes of customer data. Proactive outreach at key moments prevents churn, and having AI surface these types of insights enables customer success teams to detect early warning signs.
Gainsight’s 2025 CS Index showed that 77% of CS teams surveyed were exploring leveraging AI for churn or risk prediction, and 39% had already adopted churn and risk prediction as an AI use case.
With tools like Service Hub’s Customer Success Management workspace from HubSpotcustomer success teams build and monitor customer health scores, spot at-risk accounts early, and review customer interactions and sentiment. Service Hub’s AI-powered automation automatically sends account alerts to CSMs when there are changes to the account health score, drops in product usage, or upcoming contract renewal dates.
AI can also help de-risk accounts approaching renewal by detecting those with low engagement or product adoption and intervening. For example, if HubSpot’s CRM detected low product adoption in an account that was 90 days out from renewal, a workflow could be created to send the customer a nudge and notify the CSM of the low adoption.
My CX perspective: If you’re not already leveraging AI to analyze customer feedback, surface sentiment, and identify themes and trends — you’re missing out. This sort of analysis can help customer success leaders identify areas of the customer journey to improve by uncovering friction points that eventually snowball into a reason for churn.
I regularly review sentiment data in my role and use it to identify which areas of the customer journey need additional content and enablement to help customers see the value of our product. Without this type of information, we’d likely be missing out on important improvement opportunities.
Improve CRM Data with automated record management.
Accurate, up-to-date customer data is essential to running a successful renewal process. However, many customer success teams only uncover gaps or outdated information once the renewal process is already in motion.
When a CRM is built on AI, customer records can be automatically updated in real time, giving customer success teams data that is accurate and actionable. AI-driven tools like HubSpot’s CRM can not only automatically update customer records but also summarize customer interactions and log the summary and customer sentiment on the account record.
With automatic conversation summaries, AI can document the customer’s goals and outcomes, risks or pain points, and their overall sentiment. This key information gives the renewal team a broader understanding of the customer’s experience and offers insights they can use in the renewal conversation.
My CX perspective: CSMs has busyand the administrative portion of their role is never-ending. Since updating contact records is time-consuming but really important, leaning on a software tool that recognizes the need for an update and automatically processes it is a game-changer.
Additionally, when a CRM can pull in customer sentiment and interaction summaries, all teams involved in the renewal process can glean insight into the customer’s experience at any time and make more informed decisions as they run the renewal.
Enhance the customer experience and reduce churn.
The customer experience plays a central role in the renewal conversation, and customers who have a poor experience are more difficult to retain. Customer success teams can apply AI at multiple points across the customer journey to improve how customers interact with the product, thus enhancing the overall customer experience.
AI enables customer success teams to deliver targeted, personalized experiences at scale, such as recommending next steps based on a customer’s history or behavior. This allows teams to create coordinated, multi-channel experiences with tailored messaging across in-app, email, and chat.
For customer education, AI can generate or update help articles based on historical support tickets, ensuring that self-service resources stay up to date and help customers routinely find what they need. In customer support, AI Agents and chatbots can quickly help customers find resolutions to routine or common questions, leading to higher overall customer satisfaction.
AI Agents can help teams with renewals, too. Recent data from Gainsight shows that implementing AI Agents to help with renewals is gaining traction, with 88% of survey customers leveraging them often to reach long-tail customers that don’t have the same level of human coverage.
My CX perspective: This is an area where AI can really shine. By offering customers immediate resolution and tailored experiences, companies set the foundation for a better renewal conversation.
I’ve seen companies take it a step further by building renewal and expansion chatbots that offer personalized messaging to customers, encouraging them to try new add-ons, reminding them about their upcoming renewal, and encouraging additional feature usage. With Agentic AIcompanies can even let customers upgrade their plans, add seats, and more — all on their own.
Frequently Asked Questions About Customer Success Renewals
When should you start renewal conversations with a customer?
While the exact time will vary by customer segment and buying complexity, customer success teams should begin the renewal conversations well before the contract end date. For annual contracts, customer success managers should begin renewal discussions between 90-120 days before the contract expires. Companies with subscription-based sales models or shorter buying cycles may be able to start renewal conversations 60-90 days prior to the renewal date.
Who should own renewals, customer success, or sales?
Renewals work best when customer success and sales teams share ownership with clearly defined roles. Customer success typically owns renewal readiness and retention, while sales handles commercial negotiation and contract execution.
In some organizations, dedicated renewal managers partner with CSMs ahead of the renewal date to ensure a smooth process. Regardless of the model, clearly defined ownership and aligned incentives are key to a successful outcome.
How do you create a customer success renewal playbook quickly?
To quickly create a customer success renewal playbook, leaders should start with a simple renewal framework that clearly defines renewal ownership, when renewal activities begin, and how to assess renewal readiness. From there, they should establish a standard renewal timeline and outline the specific activities teams are expected to complete at each stage, such as confirming stakeholders or conducting an account health review.
Once the timeline is in place, customer success leaders should identify the most common renewal risk scenarios and create targeted renewal plays for each one. These plays should clearly define trigger signals, ownership at each step, required actions, escalation paths, and success criteria. With the playbook implemented, leaders can then track outcomes and iterate over time to identify gaps and continuously improve the renewal process.
Looking for playbook inspiration? Check out HubSpot’s free customer success playbooks here!
What is the best way to handle a price increase without discounting?
Pricing conversations can be challenging, but focusing on the value customers have received and communicating pricing changes early and transparently is the most effective approach. Framing renewal discussions around outcomes and ROI positions them as a continuation of achieved results rather than a one-time transaction.
Renewal teams can support this with value reviews or success summaries that highlight measurable customer outcomes. Early communication of price changes, along with clear explanations, can ease friction without resorting to offering a discount.
How do you build a basic customer health score for renewals?
A basic customer health score combines key engagement, adoption, and satisfaction metrics into a single score that reflects an account’s likelihood to renew. To build a basic customer health scorecustomer success leaders should first identify the key indicators and corresponding metrics that best reflect customer engagement, adoption, and satisfaction.
Next, leaders should assign scoring weights to each category based on its impact on renewal. Metrics can be scored on a simple scale, either numerically from 0 to 100 or using labels such as low, medium, and high. Once all categories are weighted, combine the scores to calculate a single health score for each account. Finally, use a CRM or customer success platform to automate the calculation, tracking, and updating of health scores.
Reduce Churn and Streamline Renewals With a Customer Success Renewal Strategy
When customer success leaders implement a clear renewal strategy, every team involved is accountable for their role. Driving value realization early, identifying and mitigating risk, and automating key workflows give CS teams a repeatable framework that increases NRR and reduces churn.
Tools like HubSpot’s Service Hub support this strategy by centralizing customer health tracking, automating workflows, and surfacing the insights CSMs need to focus on relationship-building and driving customer outcomes.