How do you coach a CSM to spot expansion opportunities?
Direct Answer
Coach a CSM to spot expansion by teaching them to read outcome and usage signals as buying signals — and giving them a clean handoff path so spotting one doesn't feel like "selling." The core move: install a simple expansion-signal checklist the CSM reviews on every account (seat saturation, a new team adopting, a stated goal that needs your higher tier, a champion getting promoted, a renewal with momentum) and a rule that any green signal triggers a logged "expansion opportunity" — even if sales runs the deal.
Most CSMs miss expansion not because they can't see signals, but because they think their job is *adoption and retention only*, and they fear that a commercial conversation will damage trust. As the manager, diagnose whether the gap is skill (can't connect a signal to a play), will (sees CS and sales as opposed), knowledge (doesn't know what unlocks the higher tier), or process (no clean way to pass or run the deal).
Run a GROW 1:1, reframe expansion as *helping the customer reach the outcome they already want*, and install a signal cadence. In 2027, Gainsight/Vitally health scores and product analytics surface signals automatically — the coaching is teaching the CSM to act on them with credibility.
Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
CSMs sit on the richest expansion data in the company and frequently do nothing with it. Four causes:
- Skill gap — they can run an onboarding and a QBR but can't translate a usage signal into an expansion conversation or a warm handoff. They see the data; they don't see the play.
- Will gap — they believe being commercial breaks the "trusted advisor" relationship, so they avoid it. They've internalized CS and sales as opposed, not as the same value chain.
- Knowledge gap — they don't know the product portfolio or what specifically unlocks the next tier, so they can't recognize an account that has outgrown its plan.
- Process gap — there's no defined motion. Even when they spot a signal, there's no clean way to log it, hand it to an AE, or get comp credit, so it dies as an unspoken observation.
Diagnose by pulling three healthy accounts and asking the CSM, "what's the next expansion here?" If they default to "they're happy, nothing needed," you've found the will or knowledge gap.
The Coaching Conversation
Run a 25-minute 1:1 with the GROW model, with one healthy account's health score and usage data open.
Goal — reframe expansion as service.
"Your job isn't to sell — it's to make sure this customer gets every bit of the outcome they signed up for. Sometimes that outcome needs more than they currently have, and *not* telling them about it is the real disservice. Today I want us to find the next outcome we can help this account reach.
If they fully succeeded with us, what would they be using that they aren't today?"
Reality — read the signals.
"Let's look at the data. They're at 92% seat utilization, a new team just started logging in, and they told you last QBR they want to expand to EMEA. Walk me through what each of those tells us. Which is an expansion signal — and what would it unlock for them?"
When they hesitate to act ("I don't want to seem salesy"):
"Here's the reframe: you're not pitching, you're connecting a goal they *told you* to a capability that gets them there. If a friend wanted to get to a place and you knew the road, would staying quiet be helping them?"
Options — generate the play and the path.
"Three ways to move this: you tee it up and hand the AE a warm intro, you and the AE co-run a value conversation, or you raise it yourself in the next QBR. Which fits this relationship, and what's the business case we'd lead with?"
Will — commit and route it cleanly.
"I want this logged as an expansion opportunity in the CRM today, with the signal and the play, and a next step in the next two weeks. Who needs to be involved — you, the AE, an SE — and what gets in the way of teeing it up?"
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
Run a monthly signal review with weekly action check-ins.
- Month start — Signal Sweep. The CSM reviews every account against the expansion-signal checklist (seat saturation, new-team adoption, stated goals, champion promotion, support volume in adjacent areas, renewal momentum). Every green signal becomes a logged opportunity. You review the sweep.
- Weeks 1–2 — Tee up the warm ones. CSM either hands the strongest signals to the AE with a warm intro and context, or books a value conversation. You role-play the handoff or the QBR ask.
- Weeks 3–4 — Co-sell and learn. CSM joins the AE on the expansion conversation, owning the *outcome* narrative while the AE owns the commercials. Debrief each one.
- Ongoing — QBR as signal harvest. Coach the CSM to end every QBR by surfacing the next outcome, which naturally exposes expansion. Reframe the QBR from "usage report" to "value and next-outcome conversation."
Drills & Role-Play
- Signal-to-Play Drill. You name a signal ("they hit 100% of licenses," "their champion got promoted to VP," "they asked about a feature that's only in Enterprise"). The CSM has 30 seconds to state the expansion play and the buyer. Builds the reflex of seeing usage as buying intent.
- The Warm-Handoff Script. Role-play the CSM introducing an AE into an account they own: "I want this to feel like a gift, not a pitch." Coach the language that keeps the CSM's trusted-advisor role intact while opening the commercial door.
- QBR Next-Outcome Drill. Run a mock QBR where the CSM must end with "here's the next outcome we can drive" instead of "great quarter, see you next time." Trains the habit of always advancing the account.
- Trusted-Advisor Reframe Role-Play. You play a CSM worried about being salesy; the manager (the rep practicing) must talk them into it using the "service, not sales" frame. Reverses roles to internalize the mindset.
- Health-Score Audit. Hand the CSM their book sorted by health score and have them flag the green-but-not-expanding accounts — the happiest accounts are the most likely expansion misses.
What to Measure
Don't measure CSMs only on retention or CSAT — that quietly tells them expansion isn't their job. Coach to:
- Expansion pipeline sourced by CS — dollar value of opportunities the CSM flagged or warm-handed, whether or not they close the deal. The cleanest proof they're spotting signals.
- Signal-flagging rate — number of logged expansion opportunities per account per quarter. Leading indicator of whether the signal sweep is happening.
- Net Revenue Retention (NRR) — the shared CS+sales outcome the whole motion exists to lift.
- QBR-to-opportunity conversion — % of QBRs that surfaced a next outcome and generated a logged opportunity (Gong/Chorus can flag whether the QBR went commercial).
- Time-to-action on a signal — how fast a green signal becomes a logged opportunity. Stale signals are missed expansion.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Comping CSMs only on retention. If renewal and CSAT are the only metrics, you've told the CSM that expansion isn't theirs, and no reframe survives the comp plan. Add an expansion-sourced or NRR component.
- Forcing CSMs to be AEs. Overcorrecting into "CSMs must close deals" usually breaks the trusted-advisor relationship the expansion depends on. The right motion is often *spot and warm-hand*, with a clean comp credit.
- No handoff process. A CSM who spots a signal but has no clean way to route it to sales (and get credit) learns to stop spotting. Build the path before you coach the skill.
- Coaching the deal, not the signal-reading. Helping close one expansion teaches one outcome. Coaching the CSM to *read signals* compounds across the whole book.
- Ignoring the trust fear. Dismissing the CSM's worry about seeming salesy breeds quiet resistance. Address it head-on with the "service, not sales" reframe and proof from their own accounts.
- Letting happy accounts coast. The healthiest accounts are the easiest expansion misses. If the cadence only chases at-risk accounts, expansion never gets coached.
FAQ
Should CSMs sell directly or just hand off to AEs?
It depends on your model. Many teams use a CSM-sources, AE-closes motion to protect the advisor relationship, with comp credit shared. Some mature orgs let CSMs run simple expansions (seat adds, tier bumps) and hand complex deals to AEs. Pick one, make the comp credit explicit, and coach to it — ambiguity is why signals die.
How do I get a CSM past the "I don't want to be salesy" block?
Reframe expansion as helping the customer reach an outcome they already stated, build the business case with them so they trust the value, and start with low-risk plays (seat adds tied to obvious need). Confidence comes from seeing a customer thank them for the suggestion, not from a pep talk.
What are the strongest expansion signals to coach CSMs to watch in 2027?
Seat or usage saturation, a new team or department adopting, a stated business goal that needs your higher tier, a champion getting promoted, rising support volume in an adjacent feature area, and renewal momentum. Gainsight, Vitally, and product analytics surface these automatically — coach the CSM to act, not just observe.
How is coaching a CSM on expansion different from coaching an AE?
The CSM leads with *outcome and trust*, not the commercial close. You coach signal-reading and the value narrative, and you protect the advisor relationship by pairing them with an AE for the commercials. An AE coaching is about closing; a CSM coaching is about spotting and framing.
When is this not a coaching problem?
If the CSM carries 60+ accounts, "do a signal sweep on every account" is unrealistic — that's a coverage problem. If there's genuinely no expansion path in the portfolio, or no comp credit for sourcing, those are structural problems you fix, not skills you coach.
Bottom Line
Coach the CSM to treat usage and outcome signals as buying signals, and remove the trust fear by reframing expansion as service. Install a monthly signal sweep with a clean handoff path and comp credit, then measure expansion pipeline sourced and NRR — not just retention. The one move that matters: every green signal becomes a logged expansion opportunity, so the richest data in the company stops dying as a silent observation.
Sources
- Gainsight: How CSMs Drive Expansion
- Winning by Design: The Customer Success Expansion Motion
- HBR: Why Customer Success Should Own Expansion
- Vitally: Spotting Upsell and Expansion Signals
- Clari: Net Revenue Retention and CS
- Sales Hacker: CS-Led Expansion Playbooks
- Gong Labs: Expansion Conversation Signals
*Sales coaching for CSM expansion — how to coach a CSM to spot expansion opportunities, customer success coaching guide, expansion-signal framework, and a CS expansion coaching playbook for 2027.*
