- Home
- Account & CS Management
- AM Org Design & Comp
Who owns the renewal?
Designing the AM/CS org
If no one clearly owns the renewal and expansion, churn owns them by default. This guide covers how to structure your account management and customer success org: the roles, the account ratios, and the compensation, so retention and growth both have a name attached, and revenue stops leaking through the gap between sales and support.
The ownership gap is where NRR leaks
THE PROBLEM
Sales closes the deal and moves on. Support is reactive and ticket-flavored. Expansion belongs to no one, and the renewal is a calendar event rather than an owned outcome. Most IT and SaaS companies have a sales org and a support function with a gap in between, and that gap is exactly where net revenue retention is lost.
You can't improve a number nobody owns. Designing the AM/CS org is the structural precondition for every retention and expansion play to work.
Where the gap forms
Sales
closes & leaves
THE GAP
renewal + expansion
Support
reactive tickets
no owner = churn by default
STEP ONE - DEFINE THE ROLES
Clear roles with owned outcomes - not a blurry "customer team"
Each role exists to own a specific outcome. When the outcomes are explicit, accountability follows.
Account Manager
Owns the commercial relationship – renewal, expansion, and the strategic conversation. The revenue owner of the account.
Customer Success Manager
Owns adoption and outcomes – making sure the customer realizes value. Health and usage are theirs.
Renewals (where needed)
At scale, a dedicated renewals motion ensures contracts close on time and at the right terms – so renewal isn’t an afterthought.
STEP TWO - COVERAGE MODEL & RATIOS
Match coverage to account value
How many accounts one person can own depends entirely on segment. High-value accounts need named, high-touch ownership; long-tail accounts are served more efficiently in a pool.
| MODEL | BEST FOR | TRADE-OFF |
|---|---|---|
| Named (1:few) | High-value enterprise accounts | High touch, high cost – justified by ACV |
| Pooled (1:many) | Long-tail SMB accounts | Efficient, lower touch – scales coverage |
| Hybrid | A mixed book of segments | Named for top accounts, pooled for the rest |
The ratio sets the cost of coverage. Get it wrong high and you overspend on service; wrong low and accounts go un-managed and churn. The right ratio matches touch to value.
STEP THREE - COMPENSATION
Pay for retention and expansion, or they won't happen
Comp is what turns "owned outcome" from a title into a behavior. If the plan doesn't pay on retention and expansion, neither gets owned - they get hoped for.
Base vs variable, by customer-facing role
On-target earnings: base (navy) vs variable (orange)
Variable tied to net retention and expansion makes NRR everyone’s job – not just a metric on a dashboard. More on comp design →
HOW WE BUILD IT
From current-state map to owned outcomes
Map the current state – Find where ownership of renewal and expansion actually sits today (often nowhere).
Design roles – Define AM/CSM/renewal roles with clear, owned outcomes.
Set ratios – Determine account loads per role by segment, matching touch to value.
Design comp – Build incentives that make retention and expansion someone’s paid job.
WHAT WE BUILD
An org where retention has an owner
Role Definition
Clear AM, CSM, and renewal roles with owned outcomes – not a blurry “customer team.”
Account Ratios
The right number of accounts per role by segment, so coverage matches value.
Comp Design
Incentives that pay for retention and expansion, so both get owned, not just hoped for.
Org Model
The structure – pooled, named, or hybrid – that fits your segment mix and stage.
WHY IT MATTERS
Ownership is the precondition for NRR
You can’t improve a number nobody owns. Putting clear names against renewal and expansion, and paying for them – is the structural precondition for every other retention and expansion play to work. Health scoring, QBRs, expansion playbooks: none of them fire if there’s no one accountable for the outcome they drive.
EXPLORE MORE
Related capabilities
Does anyone actually own your renewals?
Start with a Sales Audit. We'll map where retention and expansion ownership sits today, and design the roles, ratios, and comp that close the gap between sales and support.
Our Recent Blog Posts
Welcome to our blog, where we explore the latest trends and tips on building sales systems for IT and SaaS.
Finding the right Sales and Support specialists for your team is one of the most crucial responsibilities of every business
From 2020 to 2022, outbound sales (cold outreach via LinkedIn, email, and platforms like Upwork) were the primary lead generation
Stepping into a sales leadership role is an exhilarating yet demanding opportunity. The first 100 days are pivotal in shaping
Growing company revenue is challenging nowadays, so organizations constantly seek ways to improve their sales and marketing performance. One of
Alex is a newly hired Tech Sales Representative at a software development company that offers outsourcing services. He is skilled
Of course, the right sequence requires the founders or the CEO to start with a Corporate Strategy (nice if it





