name: expansion-discovery description: > Identify expansion signals and structure upsell or cross-sell conversations using land-and-expand and Net Revenue Retention principles. Use when user says "upsell", "expansion", "cross-sell", "grow the account", "increase ARR", "find expansion opportunities", "NRR improvement", "upgrade conversation", "add-on", "renewal and expand", or "land and expand" - even if they don't say "expansion discovery" explicitly. Applies to CSMs managing account growth or CS teams building expansion playbooks.
Overview
Based on "Farm Don't Hunt" by Guy Nirpaz and "The Customer Success Economy" by Mehta & Steinman, expansion is not a sales motion - it is a CS motion. Customers expand when they have achieved value in the current footprint and have a clear problem that an expanded product solves. Pushing expansion before value is established destroys trust. Waiting too long leaves revenue on the table.
The core insight: Net Revenue Retention (NRR) is the most important SaaS metric. An NRR above 110% means expansion is compounding growth - even with some churn, you're growing. A CSM who surfaces and advances expansion opportunities is directly contributing to company revenue.
Workflow
Step 1: Confirm readiness for an expansion conversation
Expansion should only be pursued when the current footprint is healthy. Check all three:
- Health score is Green or Yellow-trending-Green
- Customer has achieved at least one measurable outcome tied to their original goal
- Champion is active and engaged (not gone dark, not at risk of leaving)
If any of these are false, fix the current footprint first. An expansion push on a shaky foundation accelerates churn, it doesn't prevent it.
Step 2: Identify expansion signals from usage and conversation data
Usage signals (pull from your product analytics):
- Seats approaching the contracted limit (>80% of licensed seats active)
- Power users creating workarounds for functionality in a higher tier
- High adoption of features that have a premium-tier equivalent
- Multiple departments using the product independently without a coordinated license
Relationship signals (look for these in call notes and emails):
- Customer mentions a related problem they're solving with a different tool
- Champion asks about a feature that exists in a higher tier
- Customer references headcount growth, new teams, or org expansion
- Customer asks how other companies in their space use the product
- Executive mentions a new strategic initiative the product could support
Conversation signals (direct indicators of expansion readiness):
- "We wish we could do X" - X exists in a higher tier or add-on
- "We're using [competitor tool] for Y" - Y is something you can replace
- "Our [other team] has been asking about this" - new department opportunity
- "We're going to need more seats soon" - volume expansion signal
Document which signals are present for [customer name].
Step 3: Map signals to expansion type
| Signal | Expansion Type | Conversation Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Approaching seat limit | Volume expansion | Proactive - bring data, frame as planning ahead |
| Using competitor for adjacent use case | Cross-sell / consolidation | Problem-led - quantify the cost of fragmentation |
| New team or department interested | New use case expansion | Reference-led - show how current team's results can replicate |
| Power users hitting tier limits | Tier upgrade | Value-led - show the ROI gap between tiers |
| New strategic initiative | New use case | Executive-led - align to the initiative, not the feature |
Step 4: Prepare the expansion conversation
Do not bring a pricing sheet to an expansion conversation. Bring value data and a problem framing.
Structure for the expansion conversation:
Recap current value: "Since you started with us, [specific outcome with data]. Your team is doing [specific usage behavior]."
Bridge to the observed signal: "I noticed [specific signal]. I wanted to ask you about it directly."
Explore the problem (use open questions):
- "Tell me more about how you're handling [adjacent problem] today."
- "What does that cost you in time / money / risk?"
- "If you could solve that, what would it change for the team?"
Connect to your solution (only after the problem is articulated): "Based on what you've described, [specific feature or tier] is designed exactly for this. Customers in similar situations used it to [specific outcome]."
Next step, not a close: "I'd like to put together a proposal that shows the ROI. Can we get 30 minutes with [economic buyer] to walk through it?"
Never close expansion in the discovery call. The goal of this conversation is to earn a proposal meeting, not to get a verbal commit.
Step 5: Build the expansion brief for internal alignment
Before advancing the opportunity, align internally with sales (if separate) and your manager.
[Customer name] - Expansion Brief
Account ARR: [current ARR] Potential expansion ARR: [estimated value] Expansion type: Volume / Tier upgrade / Cross-sell / New department Signal(s) identified: [list] Customer contact: [champion name and title - no personal last names in template] Economic buyer: [who controls budget] Discovery call date: [date] Problem confirmed by customer: [1-2 sentence summary in customer's words] Proposed solution: [specific product tier, add-on, or seat increase] Comparable customer reference: [similar customer who expanded and got X outcome] Next step: [specific meeting or proposal with date]
Step 6: Calculate and present the expansion ROI
Expansion conversations stall when the customer cannot justify the incremental cost internally. Build the ROI case before the proposal meeting.
Framework:
- Current value: [quantified outcome from existing footprint]
- Expansion cost: [delta between current and proposed contract]
- Expected incremental outcome: [specific measurable result from the expansion]
- Payback period: [months to recover the incremental investment]
Example: "Your current investment is $X/year. Adding [module] is $Y/year incremental. Based on how similar customers have used it, you would expect [outcome] within [timeframe], which pays back the incremental cost in [N] months."
Anti-Patterns
1. Expansion before value established Bad: Pitching an upsell at month 2 of onboarding before the customer has hit their first milestone. Good: Wait for a measurable outcome. Expansion is earned, not scheduled.
2. Price-led conversations Bad: "We have a special pricing offer on our enterprise tier this quarter." Good: "You mentioned you're handling [problem] with a separate tool. I want to show you what it would look like to consolidate."
3. Surprise the customer with a proposal Bad: Sending a contract expansion proposal without a prior discovery conversation. Good: Discovery call first, always. The proposal follows confirmed problem understanding.
4. Expanding the wrong contact Bad: Running the expansion conversation with the champion but skipping the economic buyer. Good: Map the economic buyer early. The champion needs to be able to get budget approval. If they can't, get to the person who can before investing in the proposal.
5. Treating expansion as a sales handoff Bad: "This is a growth opportunity, I'll loop in sales." Good: CSM drives expansion discovery. Sales may assist on negotiation and legal. The relationship and the value case belong to CS.
Quality Checklist
- Current footprint health confirmed (Green or trending Green) before starting
- Specific signals documented - not "feels ready," but named indicators
- Expansion type identified (volume, tier, cross-sell, new department)
- Discovery conversation structured around problem-first, not product-first
- Economic buyer identified - not just champion
- Expansion brief prepared with ARR estimate and comparable reference customer
- ROI case built before proposal meeting
- Next step is a meeting with economic buyer, not a verbal close in discovery
- No personal names, internal tool names, or company-specific references in template