26 - Customer Success Metrics That Actually Matter
Most Customer Success teams are drowning in data while starving for insight. They track login frequency, NPS scores, support ticket volume, and dozens of other metrics that look impressive in dashboards but don't actually predict whether customers will renew, expand, or advocate. In Episode 26 of ClearPath Conversations, Mark Bernardin cuts through the noise to reveal which metrics actually matter and how to build a measurement system that drives real outcomes.
He opens with a lesson from Cofense, where one of his healthiest-looking accounts churned despite green health scores, strong NPS, and consistent usage. The customer's explanation was simple: their threat landscape had changed, and the product no longer solved their problem. Mark was tracking engagement, not value. He was measuring activity, not outcomes. That conversation fundamentally changed how he approaches metrics. The episode introduces Mark's Three Questions Framework. Every metric should answer: Is this customer going to renew? Is this customer going to grow? Is this customer going to advocate? If a metric doesn't answer one of these questions, it's not worth tracking. Mark breaks down specific leading and lagging indicators for each category, explaining why executive engagement predicts churn better than health scores, why adoption depth matters more than breadth, and why behavioral advocacy metrics trump sentiment scores.
Mark shares two detailed portfolio examples. At Palo Alto Networks, he managed an account where every activity metric looked perfect, but the executive sponsor hadn't attended a QBR in six months. Mark flagged it as at-risk despite manager pushback. Six weeks later, the customer announced they were evaluating alternatives. Without an executive champion when Finance cut budgets, the account contracted from $425K to $280K - a $145K ARR loss.
The second example comes from Deepwatch, where Mark identified a pattern: customers who stopped attending monthly operational reviews - even with strong usage - were planning their exit. They'd shifted from proactive partners to reactive users. Mark added "strategic engagement" as a core metric and built a re-engagement playbook. That single metric change reduced churn by four percentage points, retaining approximately $1.8 million in ARR.
Mark didn't keep that insight to himself. He brought the framework to Deepwatch's VP, partnered with RevOps to build it into Gainsight with automated alerts, created a standardized playbook, and trained newer CSMs. Within six months, strategic engagement became a core metric company-wide.
He also shares a mentoring story from Palo Alto Networks, where he led seven CSMs. One CSM had an account that wasn't converting expansion. Mark had her check power user percentage - only 18% of licensed users were engaging. After focusing on adoption, it reached 52% and expansion happened naturally.
The episode provides a complete implementation roadmap. Mark explains how to define metrics based on business model - consumption-based pricing requires different indicators than seat-based licensing. He details setting data-driven thresholds by analyzing churned accounts. He walks through automation approaches, including building custom Gainsight dashboards, configuring automated CTAs, and setting up Slack alerts.
Mark emphasizes that metrics are only useful if they drive action. Every metric needs a playbook with clear owners and escalation paths. He stresses reporting the right metrics to the right audience: operational detail for internal teams, retention risk and expansion pipeline for CS leadership, gross and net retention for the C-suite.
Episode 26 delivers the frameworks, thresholds, and real-world examples CSMs need to stop tracking vanity metrics and start measuring what actually predicts customer outcomes. The companion download includes the CS Metrics Framework with audit worksheets, threshold-setting tools, playbook builders, and a 30-day implementation plan.