The Account Tiering Reboot — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
Tier accounts by data, not by feeling. Score every account on three signed numbers — current ARR, strategic fit, and expansion ceiling — then assign Tier 1 / Tier 2 / Tier 3 with locked service levels per tier, re-tier on a quarterly cadence, and run the downgrade conversation as a CSM rotation, not a punishment.
Lincoln Murphy, Nick Mehta (Gainsight), and Lisa Magnuson all converge on the same finding: most B2B SaaS books over-serve the bottom 60% and starve the top 10% of accounts that drive 70%+ of net revenue retention. This 60-minute training rebuilds the rubric from scratch, in the room, with your real account list.
This is a runnable, do-it-live training for sales managers, CSMs, and RevOps owners in B2B SaaS shops with $25K–$500K ACV. Bring laptops, your top-50 account list exported from the CRM, and one whiteboard. The room leaves with a finalized tier rubric, a re-tier calendar, and a script for the conversation nobody wants to have.
Section 1 — Why Tiering Breaks (5 min)
Open cold. Ask three questions and write the answers on the board:
- "Who is your top account, and why?" — count how many answers contain a feeling ("they love us," "great relationship") versus a number.
- "What does a Tier 1 customer get that a Tier 3 customer does not?" — most rooms cannot answer cleanly.
- "When did you last re-tier?" — silence is the data point.
Lincoln Murphy's foundational point in *Customer Success* (2016, co-authored with Nick Mehta and Dan Steinman) is that tiering without differentiated service levels is just labeling. Bain's client tiering research finds the median B2B firm gives roughly the same hours of attention to a $40K account and a $400K account — a 10x revenue gap met with 1x effort.
That is the bug this training fixes.
Section 2 — The Three-Signal Rubric (15 min)
Hand out the rubric. Score every top-50 account in the room, live, on a 0–5 scale for each of three signals. Sum to a 0–15 score.
The Verbatim Tier Rubric
Signal 1 — Current ARR (weight: most objective):
- 5 — Top decile ARR. Account sits in the top 10% of your book by signed ARR today.
- 4 — Top quartile. Top 25% but not top 10%.
- 3 — Median ±20%. A typical, healthy account.
- 2 — Below median. Pays, but under the cost-to-serve line on full-touch service.
- 1 — Floor. At or near minimum contract size.
- 0 — Negative margin after support load.
Signal 2 — Strategic Fit (weight: kills false positives):
- 5 — Lighthouse logo + ICP bullseye. Named in pitches, referenceable, in the exact segment you are building for.
- 4 — Strong ICP, willing reference.
- 3 — Adjacent ICP, neutral reference posture.
- 2 — Off-ICP but paying. No referenceability.
- 1 — Wrong-fit drag. Custom asks, off-roadmap requests.
- 0 — Strategic liability. Threatens churn risk to other accounts via shared boards or press.
Signal 3 — Expansion Ceiling (weight: the future):
- 5 — Multi-BU, multi-geo, $500K+ ceiling within 24 months.
- 4 — Clear path to 2–3x current ARR.
- 3 — Modest seat or module expansion possible.
- 2 — Mostly maxed out at current spend.
- 1 — Declining usage trend.
- 0 — Sunset account. Sponsor gone, no path forward.
Tier Assignment
- Tier 1 (Gold): Total score 12–15. Cap the count at ~10% of book. No exceptions for "but they love us."
- Tier 2 (Silver): Total score 8–11. Roughly 20–30% of book.
- Tier 3 (Bronze): Total score 0–7. The remaining 60–70%.
Lisa Magnuson's *The Top Sales Leader Playbook* and her work on large-account selling reinforces the discipline: the rubric outranks the relationship. If your gut disagrees with the score, the gut loses for 90 days and you re-score next quarter.
Section 3 — Differentiated Service Levels (10 min)
Tiering only works if Tier 1 visibly receives more than Tier 3. Build the service grid on the whiteboard. McKinsey's segmentation work on B2B coverage models (2022 *Future of B2B Sales* research) confirms that named coverage with formal QBR cadence drives the largest NRR delta versus pooled coverage.
- Tier 1 — Named CSM + named TAM. Monthly exec sync, quarterly on-site QBR, executive sponsor pairing, 4-hour P1 SLA, roadmap influence seat, NPS check at 30/90/180.
- Tier 2 — Named CSM, pooled TAM. Quarterly QBR (virtual), 8-hour P1 SLA, twice-yearly executive touch, success-plan review on renewal -120 days.
- Tier 3 — Pooled CSM (1:many). Self-serve playbooks, in-product onboarding, 1-business-day SLA, automated health-score nudges, renewal -60 days outreach only.
The hard rule: if a Tier 3 account starts demanding Tier 1 service, the answer is "upgrade your contract or accept Tier 3 service." Both are fine. Free upgrades are not.
Section 4 — Quarterly Re-Tier Cadence (10 min)
Calendar the re-tier *now*. Open the shared calendar in the room and put four blocks on it for the next year.
- Q-end + 10 business days. RevOps drops fresh ARR and usage data. Every account in the book gets re-scored on all three signals.
- 2-hour cross-functional review. Sales leader, CS leader, and RevOps. No ICs in this meeting — it stays decisive.
- Movement memo by EOW. Every account that crossed a tier line gets a one-line "why moved" note in the CRM.
- Owner reassignments propagate. Comp plans recalibrate the following month, not the next year.
Nick Mehta's repeated guidance to Gainsight customers: re-tiering quarterly beats re-tiering annually by a wide margin, because relationships, sponsors, and ceilings shift within two quarters, not four. Annual tiering preserves stale ranks and starves rising accounts.
Section 5 — The Downgrade Conversation (15 min)
This is the section managers skip. Do not skip it. Role-play in pairs, twice, swapping roles. Use the script verbatim the first run.
The Downgrade Conversation Script (CSM-to-account-team handoff)
Opener (to the rep who owns the account): *"I want to walk you through a tiering change before it shows up in your queue. Account [X] moved from Tier 1 to Tier 2 this quarter. This is not a comment on the work you've done — it is a comment on the numbers. Here is what changed."*
The three-signal walkback: *"On current ARR, they scored a [N]. On strategic fit, [N]. On expansion ceiling, [N]. Total of [N], which lands in Tier 2. The line is 12."*
The service-level reset: *"What this means in practice: instead of monthly exec syncs and a named TAM, they move to quarterly QBRs and pooled TAM. Your time on this account drops by roughly [X] hours per month. That time gets reinvested in [named Tier 1 account]."*
The relationship preservation: *"I am not asking you to step back from the relationship. I am asking you to step back from the *cadence*. The relationship continues. The calendar load does not."*
The re-elevation path: *"If they hit [specific expansion trigger or ARR threshold] in the next two quarters, they re-enter Tier 1 at the next re-tier. This is not a permanent downgrade. It is a quarterly snapshot."*
Section 6 — Commitments (5 min)
Close with three commitments written on the board. Every attendee signs.
- Rubric is law for 90 days. No tier overrides without a written exception approved by the sales leader and CS leader together.
- Re-tier date is on the calendar. Owner: RevOps. Status: confirmed in the room.
- First downgrade conversation happens this week. Names go on the board now.
FAQ
Q: What if a sales rep refuses to accept a downgrade? A: The rubric is the authority, not the rep. Walk the three signals one more time, then move on. If a rep cannot accept data-driven re-tiering, that is a comp-plan and management conversation, not a tiering conversation.
Q: Should new logos start as Tier 2 or Tier 3 by default? A: Tier 3 until they have two quarters of usage data. Strategic fit can be scored at deal close, but ARR and expansion ceiling need real telemetry. Premature Tier 1 stamping creates the over-service trap.
Q: How does this interact with our coverage model and named-account lists? A: Tiering drives coverage; coverage does not drive tiering. Named-account lists rebuild from the Tier 1 cohort each quarter, not the other way around.
Q: What about a long-tail Tier 3 that suddenly explodes in usage? A: That is what the quarterly re-tier catches. If you need faster reaction, add a "hot-account flag" that triggers an interim re-score, but do not bypass the rubric.
Q: Does this work for PLG-heavy or self-serve businesses? A: Yes, with one modification — replace current ARR with product-qualified usage signal for the bottom 70% of the book. The three-signal structure holds.
Q: How do comp plans need to change? A: Pay accelerators on Tier 1 expansion, base on Tier 2 retention, and pool Tier 3 economics. Mismatched comp plans are the single biggest reason tiering reverts within two quarters.
Sources
- Mehta, Nick; Steinman, Dan; Murphy, Lincoln. *Customer Success: How Innovative Companies Are Reducing Churn and Growing Recurring Revenue*. Wiley, 2016.
- Murphy, Lincoln. "The Ideal Customer Profile and Account Tiering Framework." Sixteen Ventures, ongoing publication.
- Magnuson, Lisa. *The Top Sales Leader Playbook: How to Win 5X Deals Repeatedly*. Top Line Sales, 2020.
- McKinsey & Company. "The Multiplier Effect: How B2B Winners Grow." *The Future of B2B Sales* research series, 2022.
- Bain & Company. "Customer Strategy & Marketing: Account Tiering and Coverage Models." Bain Insights, ongoing.
- Gainsight. "The Essential Guide to Customer Segmentation and Tiering." Gainsight Resource Library.
- Forrester Research. "B2B Customer Segmentation: From Revenue to Lifetime Value." 2023.
- SiriusDecisions (now Forrester). "Account Tiering Best Practices for Strategic Account Management."