The Enterprise Land-and-Expand Reboot — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
Section 1 — Open & Frame the Play (5 min)
Land-and-expand is the most-misused phrase in enterprise SaaS. Teams hear "sell small, upsell later." Wrong. The land is the engineered first cut of a multi-year expansion thesis you mapped before the order form went out. Mark Roberge (*The Sales Acceleration Formula*) frames every $40K land as a *qualification event*, not a transaction.
If the buyer can't name which team gets value next, you sold a pilot that will churn.
Open with this verbatim frame:
- "We close the same logo three times — land, second-team expand, multi-year renewal."
- "Every land is graded on NRR 12 months out, not booking today. A $50K land that becomes $200K beats a $120K land that flat-renews."
- "CSM owns the 90-day Land-Success Contract. AE owns the expansion trigger taxonomy. Shared number: dollar-NRR on the cohort."
Section 2 — Small-Land Sizing & The 90-Day Success Contract (15 min)
The #1 failure mode is over-building the first deal. Jason Lemkin on SaaStr: AEs comped on TCV push every land toward "platform deal" — five teams, six workflows, custom security review. Deal closes 90 days late, buyer wakes 60 days post-signature to a $250K bill they cannot operationalize, renewal becomes a knife-fight.
NRR craters before you expand.
The small-land rubric — say to every AE in deal review:
- One team, one workflow, one measurable outcome. "Who are the 8-25 people logging in Monday? What *one thing* could they not do before? What number moves?"
- 60-90 day time-to-value, not 180. Q3 go-live for a Q1 deal means you over-sold. Push scope into the expansion roadmap.
- 20-40% of eventual account potential. Mapped a $500K, 4-team thesis? Land is $100K-$200K — matters to sponsor, deploys clean.
- Procurement-friendly, not Procurement-defining. Don't trigger Vendor Security Review for a 25-seat land. Save heavy paper for the expansion.
The 90-Day Land-Success Contract — signed at the same meeting as the order form:
- Three quantified outcomes — "Cut handle-time by 20%," "Lead-to-MQL latency 48h → 4h." Outcomes the *sponsor* picked, not your CSM template.
- A named exec sponsor with calendar holds at week-2 kickoff, day-30 health, day-60 outcome review, day-90 QBR + expansion conversation.
- A green/yellow/red gate at day 60. Green triggers the expansion call, yellow a save-the-land intervention, red escalates to both CROs.
Nick Mehta (Gainsight) calls this the "Customer Outcome Engine" — the CSM's job is not adoption, it is *engineered first-value.*
Section 3 — The Expansion Trigger Taxonomy (10 min)
Most expansion pipeline is built reactively off renewal calendars. That is the worst possible trigger. 90 days out from anniversary, the buyer's next-year budget is locked and you're negotiating against sunk cost. Better teams run a five-trigger taxonomy in the CRM and route every fired trigger to a joint AE+CSM call within 5 business days.
The five triggers, with verbatim scripts:
- Usage trigger — 80%+ seat utilization or a power-user emerging. CSM: *"Sarah, your team is at 84% active — top-decile. Who else in [department] would benefit, and can we get 20 minutes next week to scope?"*
- Team-growth trigger — sponsor names an adjacent team in a 1:1 or QBR. AE email: *"You mentioned [adjacent team] is running into [problem] — we solved that for [reference] in 6 weeks. Worth 30 minutes before your Q[X] planning locks?"*
- Exec-change trigger — new VP/CRO/CIO joins LinkedIn within 7 days. AE: *"Welcome to [Co]. Your predecessor sponsored our deployment in [team] — current results: [metric]. I'd love 20 minutes to show you where we could go next."*
- Anniversary trigger — fires at day 270, not day 60-from-renewal. Buyer still has budget flexibility.
- Integration trigger — buyer adopts an adjacent tool in your stack. Lincoln Murphy (*Customer Success*) calls this "appropriate adjacency."
Section 4 — Multi-Year vs Annual: Trading Discount For Predictability (10 min)
The multi-year debate is religious. The rule: never sign multi-year before month 9, and never give more than 10% for year-2, 15% for year-3. Before month 9 you don't yet know if the land is real or a churning pilot. After month 9, if the 90-day contract hit green and at least one expansion trigger has fired, multi-year is appropriate.
The decision matrix:
- Annual — default for any land. Forces both sides to re-engage; clean expansion conversation each year.
- 2-year, 10% off, year-2 ramp — month 9+ if the cohort is healthy AND the buyer uses "budget certainty" as a criterion. Year-2 ramp bakes committed expansion into the paper.
- 3-year, 15% off, ramping commits — only for accounts with a mapped $1M+ expansion thesis AND a sponsor who personally championed two expansion conversations.
Multi-year script (AE in renewal): *"Based on the 90-day outcomes and the Q3 expansion, this is no longer a vendor relationship — it's strategic. I'd propose a 2-year frame, 10% off year 2, committed expansion to [adjacent team]. Locks your budget, locks our investment, gets us out of the renewal cycle.
Worth 30 minutes with [their CFO] this week?"*
Section 5 — NRR Target Math & The Cohort Scoreboard (15 min)
This turns the play into a number. Tomasz Tunguz (Theory Ventures) pegs best-in-class SaaS NRR at 120%+ for $25K-$500K ACV books. The math:
The four numbers the team must know cold:
- GRR (Gross Revenue Retention) — target 95%+. Below 95%, fix retention first; you cannot expand off a leaky bucket.
- NRR (Net Revenue Retention) — target 120%. 100% is okay. 110% is fine. 120% earns the next round at a premium multiple.
- Trigger Conversion — target 40% of fired triggers close to expansion within 60 days. Below 25%, your AE+CSM handoff is broken.
- Time-to-First-Expansion — target 180 days from land. Beyond 270, the land is at-risk.
Live exercise: pick your three largest current lands. Whiteboard ACV, 90-day success score, fired-trigger count, projected 18-month NRR. Reps who can fill all four columns are running the play. Reps who cannot are *transacting.* Coach the gap.
Section 6 — Close, Commits & Field Drill (5 min)
Three personal commits from every AE and CSM:
- "By end of week, I rebuild the 90-day Land-Success Contract on my top two open lands."
- "By end of month, I fire at least three expansion triggers, joint AE+CSM outreach."
- "By end of quarter, my cohort NRR is at or above 115%, with a path to 120%."
Field drill: pair up, 5 minutes, one AE / one CSM, run the team-growth trigger script cold. Score on named sponsor, named outcome, calendar-hold ask. That is the rep of the play they run Monday.
FAQ
Q: Comp AEs on land ACV or on 12-month NRR? A: Both, weighted toward the second. Common split: 60% on new-logo ACV, 40% on day-365 cohort NRR. Kills "over-build the first deal" because reps see clawback risk on bloated lands.
Q: What if the buyer wants to start big — five teams, $500K, day-one? A: Take the order, but engineer phased deployment into the paper. Team 1 goes live in 90 days, team 2 in 150. Converts a risky big-bang into a sequenced expansion already paid for. Lemkin: "friendly land-in-the-clothes-of-a-platform-deal."
Q: How do we get CSM and AE to share the expansion number? A: Put it on one QBR slide and pay them on it together. Joint comp on cohort NRR — even 10% of variable — changes the dynamic immediately. Gainsight has published 8-12 point NRR lifts from this re-org.
Q: When is land-and-expand the wrong motion? A: When the buyer's problem is enterprise-wide day-one (regulatory, security, compliance) and a small land *loses* the deal to a competitor sizing platform correctly. ~15-20% of enterprise deals.
Q: Biggest leading indicator a land will expand? A: The sponsor named a specific adjacent team during the original sales cycle. If they could not, your land is at structural risk. Add to your deal-review checklist.
Sources
- Roberge, Mark. *The Sales Acceleration Formula.* Wiley. Https://www.markroberge.com/
- Lemkin, Jason. "Land and Expand: The 6 Rules." SaaStr. Https://www.saastr.com/
- Mehta, Nick. *Customer Success: How Innovative Companies Are Reducing Churn and Growing Recurring Revenue.* Gainsight. Https://www.gainsight.com/blog/
- Murphy, Lincoln. "The Appropriate Experience Framework for Customer Success." Sixteen Ventures. Https://sixteenventures.com/
- Tunguz, Tomasz. "The Best Net Dollar Retention Benchmarks for SaaS." Theory Ventures. Https://tomtunguz.com/
- KeyBanc Capital Markets. *SaaS Survey — NRR and GRR Benchmarks.* https://www.key.com/
- Bessemer Venture Partners. "State of the Cloud — NRR Benchmarks." https://www.bvp.com/atlas/
- OpenView Partners. *SaaS Benchmarks Report — Expansion Revenue.* https://openviewpartners.com/