qbr-deck

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Build a structured Quarterly Business Review deck for a customer account. Use when user says "QBR", "quarterly business review", "prep my QBR", "build the deck", "renewal prep", "executive check-in", "90-day review", or "customer business review" - even if they don't use the acronym. Applies to CSMs preparing for executive-level customer meetings focused on value delivered, health, and next quarter alignment.

qa-aman By qa-aman schedule Updated 3/3/2026

name: qbr-deck description: > Build a structured Quarterly Business Review deck for a customer account. Use when user says "QBR", "quarterly business review", "prep my QBR", "build the deck", "renewal prep", "executive check-in", "90-day review", or "customer business review" - even if they don't use the acronym. Applies to CSMs preparing for executive-level customer meetings focused on value delivered, health, and next quarter alignment.

Overview

A QBR is a structured executive conversation, not a product demo or status update. Based on "Customer Success" by Mehta, Steinman & Murphy, the QBR's purpose is to demonstrate realized value, align on goals, and earn continued investment. The meeting fails when it looks backward without a forward commitment.

The core insight: every slide must answer "so what?" from the customer's perspective. Data without context is noise. Health scores without recommended actions are incomplete.

Workflow

Step 1: Gather inputs before building anything

Collect the following before touching the deck:

  • Goals from last QBR: What did [customer name] say they wanted to achieve this quarter?
  • Usage data: Logins, feature adoption rate, active users vs. licensed seats
  • Health score: Current score and 90-day trend (improving, stable, declining)
  • Support tickets: Volume, average resolution time, any unresolved critical issues
  • Outcomes achieved: Measurable business results tied to your product
  • Renewal timeline: Months until renewal, ARR at stake
  • Expansion signals: New use cases, headcount growth, adjacent teams not yet using product

If you don't have all inputs, note explicitly what is estimated vs. confirmed.

Step 2: Structure the deck in this sequence

Slide 1 - Partnership Summary One-line: "[Your company] x [Customer name] - Q[X] [Year] Review" Include: CSM name, executive sponsor (customer side), renewal date, ARR.

Slide 2 - Goals We Agreed On Last Quarter List 2-4 goals verbatim from prior QBR or success plan. Use the customer's language, not yours. Mark each: Achieved / Partially Achieved / Missed.

Slide 3 - Value Delivered Lead with business outcomes, not product features.

Outcome Metric Last Quarter This Quarter Change
[business result] [measure] [value] [value] [delta]

Example row: "Reduced onboarding time | Hours per new hire | 8h | 3h | -63%"

Slide 4 - Usage and Adoption Health

Metric Target Actual Status
MAU / licensed seats >80% [X]% Green/Yellow/Red
Feature adoption (core) >70% [X]%
Support ticket volume <[N]/mo [X]

Include a 90-day trend if available.

Slide 5 - Health Score Summary Show composite health score and breakdown by dimension (usage, engagement, NPS, support, financial). Flag any dimension scoring Yellow or Red with the specific risk named.

Do not hide Red scores. Customers respect transparency. Hiding problems erodes trust before renewal.

Slide 6 - Goals for Next 90 Days List 2-4 specific, measurable goals for next quarter:

  • Goal: [specific outcome]
  • Owner: [customer name / your CSM team]
  • Measure: [how you will know it is done]
  • Target date: [month]

Slide 7 - Open Items and Asks Outstanding product requests, blockers, and anything you need from the customer. Name owner and due date for each item.

Slide 8 - Roadmap Preview (optional, only if directly tied to customer goals) Show 1-2 upcoming features that address goals the customer stated in their own words. Padding with irrelevant features weakens credibility.

Step 3: Apply the "so what?" test to every slide

After drafting, ask for each slide: "Why does this matter to [customer name]'s business?" If you cannot answer in one sentence, rewrite or cut the slide.

Step 4: Prepare for likely objections

Anticipate the three most common concerns before the meeting:

  1. "We're not seeing the ROI we expected" - have outcome data and a remediation plan ready
  2. "Adoption is lower than we'd like" - have a specific activation plan, not just acknowledgment
  3. "We're evaluating alternatives at renewal" - have a retention offer or executive escalation path

Anti-Patterns

1. Activity report masquerading as a QBR Bad: "This quarter we ran 4 training sessions, resolved 12 tickets, and shipped 3 updates." Good: "Onboarding time dropped 60% this quarter. Here's what drove it and what we're targeting next."

2. Hiding health problems Bad: Only showing green metrics. Glossing over low adoption. Good: "Active users are at 52% of licenses - below our 80% target. Here's the remediation plan."

3. No forward commitment Bad: Deck ends at "here's what happened." No goals, no owners, no dates. Good: Every QBR closes with 2-4 signed-off goals for next quarter with named owners.

4. Generic roadmap slides Bad: Showing the full product roadmap as a feature list. Good: Selecting 1-2 items that directly address goals the customer stated in their own words.

5. Vendor language instead of customer language Bad: "We improved platform engagement scores by 14 points." Good: "Your goal was to reduce rep ramp time. We cut it from 8 weeks to 5."

Quality Checklist

  • Every metric is tied to a goal stated in a prior QBR or success plan
  • No metric appears without context (target, trend, or "so what")
  • Health score shows dimension breakdown - no composite-only slides
  • Red and Yellow items named explicitly with a remediation plan
  • Next 90-day goals are specific, measurable, and have named owners
  • Customer's own language used for goals and outcomes
  • Deck is 8 slides or fewer - no padding
  • Renewal date and ARR visible on slide 1
  • Open items have owners and due dates
  • No personal names, internal tool names, or company-specific references in template
Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/qa-aman/claude-skills --skill qbr-deck
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