SaaS KPIs: The Complete Guide for CEOs Building Toward an Exit

SaaS KPIs: The Complete Guide for CEOs Building Toward an Exit - hero image

Most SaaS CEOs track too many KPIs and act on too few. A typ­i­cal $10M ARR com­pa­ny has a dash­board with 30–40 met­rics, a finance team that updates them month­ly, and a lead­er­ship team that uses three of them to make deci­sions. That gap — between what’s tracked and what dri­ves action — is where SaaS KPIs go to die.

The right SaaS KPIs do four jobs at once. They tell you whether the busi­ness is healthy. They pre­dict where it’s going. They tell you which lever to pull next. And they let an out­side par­ty — an investor, a board, or an acquir­er — val­ue your com­pa­ny with­out trust­ing your judg­ment.

This guide cov­ers the KPIs that actu­al­ly mat­ter for a B2B SaaS com­pa­ny between $2M and $25M ARR, in the order you should fix them, with the bench­marks acquir­ers use. Skip the ones that look impres­sive on a slide and con­tribute noth­ing to the deci­sion in front of you.

What Counts as a SaaS KPI?

A KPI — Key Per­for­mance Indi­ca­tor — is a num­ber that meets three tests:

  1. It changes the deci­sion. If two dif­fer­ent val­ues would lead to the same next action, it’s not a KPI. It’s a num­ber you hap­pen to track.
  2. It’s direct­ly tied to busi­ness out­comes. Growth rate, prof­itabil­i­ty, reten­tion, val­u­a­tion. Not van­i­ty (page views, social fol­low­ers, NPS in iso­la­tion).
  3. It can be act­ed on with­in 90 days. Strate­gic indi­ca­tors that take 18 months to move are use­ful for plan­ning but should not appear on the week­ly lead­er­ship score­card.

Every SaaS com­pa­ny tracks dozens of oper­a­tional met­rics — serv­er uptime, tick­et close rate, lead-to-meet­ing con­ver­sion. Those are use­ful for the team that owns them. The CEO score­card is short­er. It con­tains the eight to twelve num­bers that, tak­en togeth­er, deter­mine whether the com­pa­ny will hit its growth and exit goals.

The Six Categories of SaaS KPIs

Every SaaS KPI falls into one of six cat­e­gories. Each cat­e­go­ry answers a dif­fer­ent ques­tion.

CategoryQuestion it AnswersExample KPIs
GrowthAre we getting bigger?MRR, ARR, Net New ARR, Logo Growth
RetentionAre we keeping what we win?Gross Revenue Retention, Net Revenue Retention, Customer Churn, Logo Churn
Unit EconomicsIs each customer profitable?LTV, CAC, LTV/CAC, CAC Payback Period
EfficiencyAre we converting capital into growth?Burn Multiple, Rule of 40, Magic Number
ProfitabilityAre we building a real business?Gross Margin, EBITDA Margin, Free Cash Flow
EngagementAre customers using the product?DAU/MAU, Feature Adoption, Time to Value

Most founders over-index on Growth and Engage­ment met­rics and under-index on Reten­tion and Unit Eco­nom­ics. That is exact­ly back­wards from how acquir­ers and sophis­ti­cat­ed investors look at SaaS com­pa­nies. They start with reten­tion and unit eco­nom­ics. Every­thing else is a func­tion of those two.

SaaS KPI categories — Six interconnected translucent geometric shapes arranged in a hexagonal pattern

Growth KPIs — Measuring the Top of the Funnel

Growth KPIs mea­sure the veloc­i­ty at which rev­enue is expand­ing. They are the most-tracked and most-mis­un­der­stood cat­e­go­ry in SaaS.

1. Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR)

For­mu­la:

MRR = Sum of all month­ly sub­scrip­tion rev­enue at month-end

MRR is the foun­da­tion­al SaaS met­ric. It strips out one-time fees, pro­fes­sion­al ser­vices, and any rev­enue that isn’t con­trac­tu­al­ly recur­ring. If a cus­tomer pays $1,200/year, their MRR con­tri­bu­tion is $100/month — not $1,200 in the month they paid.

Why it mat­ters: MRR is the clean­est mea­sure of busi­ness momen­tum. A SaaS com­pa­ny can grow book­ings 30% in a quar­ter and have flat MRR — typ­i­cal­ly because a large mul­ti-year deal was front-loaded. MRR cuts through that noise.

Com­mon mis­take: Count­ing annu­al con­tracts as ARR but report­ing growth in “book­ings.” Book­ings are what got signed; MRR is what’s actu­al­ly recur­ring. Acquir­ers care about MRR.

2. Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR)

For­mu­la:

ARR = MRR × 12

ARR is the same num­ber expressed annu­al­ly. It’s the stan­dard way to com­mu­ni­cate com­pa­ny size to investors and acquir­ers — “we’re at $8M ARR” is more mean­ing­ful than “we’re at $666K MRR.”

Use ARR for exter­nal com­mu­ni­ca­tion. Use MRR for inter­nal man­age­ment. Month­ly changes are eas­i­er to spot in MRR; annu­al run-rate fram­ing is eas­i­er for out­siders to eval­u­ate.

3. Net New MRR

For­mu­la:

Net New MRR = New MRR + Expan­sion MRR − Churned MRR − Con­trac­tion MRR

This is the sin­gle most use­ful growth met­ric you can put on a week­ly dash­board. It decom­pos­es growth into its four com­po­nents and shows which one is dri­ving — or killing — the result.

Con­sid­er two com­pa­nies, both at $1M ARR, both grow­ing 4% per month:

ComponentCompany ACompany B
New MRR$80K$50K
Expansion MRR$10K$30K
Churned MRR-$45K-$15K
Contraction MRR-$5K-$5K
Net New MRR$40K$60K

Com­pa­ny A is win­ning more new logos but bleed­ing them out the back. Com­pa­ny B is win­ning less but keep­ing more and expand­ing. Com­pa­ny B is the more valu­able busi­ness — every dol­lar of new MRR com­pounds because the base is sticky.

You can­not see this dif­fer­ence from top-line growth rate alone. Net New MRR makes it vis­i­ble.

4. Growth Rate (Year-over-Year)

For­mu­la:

YoY Growth Rate = (ARR this year − ARR last year) / ARR last year

The sin­gle num­ber every investor and acquir­er asks first. The bench­mark depends heav­i­ly on com­pa­ny size:

ARR StageMedian YoY Growth (2026)Top Quartile
<$1M100%+200%+
$1M–$5M60-80%120%+
$5M–$10M40-60%80%+
$10M–$25M30-50%60%+
$25M–$50M25-40%50%+
$50M+20-30%40%+

The 2026 medi­ans are notice­ably low­er than 2022 medi­ans. Cap­i­tal effi­cien­cy has dis­placed “grow at all costs” as the dom­i­nant frame, and pric­ing pres­sure has com­pressed top-line growth across the board. A 35% YoY growth rate at $10M ARR was mid­dling in 2022; today it is solid­ly above medi­an.

Retention KPIs — The Most Predictive Numbers in SaaS

If you can only track one cat­e­go­ry of SaaS KPIs, track this one. Reten­tion deter­mines your LTV, your CAC pay­back, your growth ceil­ing, and your val­u­a­tion mul­ti­ple. Every­thing com­pounds off it.

SaaS retention compounding — Two flowing ribbons curling across a deep dark navy field as a metaphor for compounding divergence

5. Gross Revenue Retention (GRR)

For­mu­la:

GRR = (Start­ing ARR − Churned ARR − Con­trac­tion ARR) / Start­ing ARR

GRR mea­sures how much of your start­ing rev­enue base sur­vives over a peri­od, ignor­ing any expan­sion. It is bound­ed at 100% — you can­not have GRR above 100% by def­i­n­i­tion.

Bench­marks for B2B SaaS:

GRRHealth
95%+Excellent — enterprise-grade stickiness
90-95%Healthy — typical for mid-market SaaS
85-90%Acceptable — common for SMB-focused SaaS
<85%Concerning — investigate root causes

GRR is the clean­est mea­sure of prod­uct-cus­tomer fit at the dol­lar lev­el. Net Rev­enue Reten­tion can mask churn by stack­ing expan­sion on top; GRR can­not.

6. Net Revenue Retention (NRR)

For­mu­la:

NRR = (Start­ing ARR + Expan­sion ARR − Churned ARR − Con­trac­tion ARR) / Start­ing ARR

NRR is the sin­gle best pre­dic­tor of long-term busi­ness val­ue. If your NRR is above 100%, the exist­ing cus­tomer base grows on its own — even with zero new logos. If it’s below 100%, the base decays.

The math is dra­mat­ic. Con­sid­er a SaaS com­pa­ny with $10M ARR and zero new cus­tomers:

NRRARR in Year 5ARR in Year 10
80%$3.3M$1.1M
95%$7.7M$6.0M
100%$10.0M$10.0M
110%$16.1M$25.9M
130%$37.1M$137.9M

The spread between 95% NRR and 130% NRR is rough­ly 23x over 10 years on the same start­ing base. That is why acquir­ers pay 8x ARR for a 130% NRR busi­ness and 3x ARR for a 90% NRR busi­ness of the same size.

Bench­marks for B2B SaaS:

NRRHealth
130%+Elite — best-in-class infrastructure SaaS
110-130%Excellent — strong expansion engine
100-110%Healthy — base is at least flat
90-100%Marginal — fix retention before scaling
<90%Critical — base is decaying faster than expansion can offset

If you are below 100% NRR, every dol­lar of new ARR has to first replace the dol­lar you just lost. You’re run­ning up a down esca­la­tor. Fix reten­tion before you scale acqui­si­tion.

7. Customer Churn Rate (Logo Churn)

For­mu­la:

Month­ly Cus­tomer Churn = Cus­tomers Lost in Month / Cus­tomers at Start of Month

Cus­tomer churn (also called logo churn) mea­sures the per­cent­age of cus­tomers who can­cel in a giv­en peri­od. It is dis­tinct from rev­enue churn — los­ing one big cus­tomer and los­ing one small cus­tomer count the same.

Crit­i­cal: do not annu­al­ize month­ly churn by mul­ti­ply­ing by 12. Churn com­pounds. If month­ly churn is 2%, annu­al churn is:

Annu­al Churn = 1 − (1 − 0.02)^12 = 21.5%, not 24%

The dif­fer­ence mat­ters when you’re mod­el­ing LTV. Mis-stat­ing churn this way is the most com­mon math error in SaaS dash­boards.

8. Revenue Churn Rate

For­mu­la:

Month­ly Rev­enue Churn = MRR Lost from Can­cel­la­tions and Con­trac­tions in Month / MRR at Start of Month

Rev­enue churn weights each cus­tomer by their val­ue. A SaaS com­pa­ny can have low logo churn and high rev­enue churn if it’s los­ing its largest accounts — or the reverse.

Always report both. The gap between them tells a diag­nos­tic sto­ry:

  • Logo churn > rev­enue churn: You’re los­ing small cus­tomers (prob­a­bly SMB) but keep­ing the large ones. Often accept­able.
  • Rev­enue churn > logo churn: You’re los­ing your large accounts. This is a strate­gic emer­gency. Find out why before doing any­thing else.

Unit Economics KPIs — The Growth Ceiling

You can nev­er out­grow bad unit eco­nom­ics. These met­rics deter­mine whether the busi­ness can scale, regard­less of how much cap­i­tal you raise.

9. Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)

For­mu­la:

CAC = Total Sales and Mar­ket­ing Spend / Num­ber of New Cus­tomers Acquired

CAC is the ful­ly loaded cost to acquire one pay­ing cus­tomer. The numer­a­tor should include:

  • All sales team com­pen­sa­tion (base + vari­able + ben­e­fits + employ­er tax­es)
  • All mar­ket­ing spend (paid media, con­tent pro­duc­tion, events, tools)
  • Allo­cat­ed over­head for sales and mar­ket­ing func­tions
  • Any third-par­ty costs tied to acqui­si­tion (agen­cies, con­trac­tors, lead lists)

The denom­i­na­tor is new cus­tomers acquired in the same peri­od — not renewals, not expan­sions, not free-to-paid con­ver­sions (unless free is the acqui­si­tion chan­nel).

Always seg­ment CAC. Blend­ed CAC aver­ages enter­prise cus­tomers (high CAC, high LTV) with SMB cus­tomers (low CAC, low LTV) and pro­duces a num­ber that describes no actu­al cus­tomer. Seg­ment by sales chan­nel, ARR tier, and acqui­si­tion source at min­i­mum.

10. Customer Lifetime Value (LTV)

For­mu­la:

LTV = ARPA × Gross Mar­gin % × Aver­age Cus­tomer Lifes­pan

Where:

  • ARPA = Aver­age Rev­enue Per Account (month­ly)
  • Gross Mar­gin % = (Rev­enue − Cost of Goods Sold) / Rev­enue
  • Aver­age Cus­tomer Lifes­pan = 1 / Month­ly Churn Rate

A com­mon short­cut for­mu­la drops gross mar­gin: LTV = ARPA / Month­ly Churn Rate. This is fine for back-of-enve­lope work on com­pa­nies with 80%+ gross mar­gins, but it over­states true LTV for any­one below that thresh­old. Use the full for­mu­la.

Worked exam­ple: A B2B SaaS com­pa­ny has ARPA of $500/month, gross mar­gin of 75%, and month­ly churn of 1.5%.

  • Aver­age Cus­tomer Lifes­pan = 1 / 0.015 = 66.7 months
  • LTV = $500 × 0.75 × 66.7 = $25,000

Note that lifes­pan is the inverse of churn rate. A 1.5% month­ly churn means the aver­age cus­tomer stays 66.7 months — rough­ly 5.5 years. If that feels too long for your busi­ness, your churn cal­cu­la­tion is prob­a­bly wrong, or your cus­tomer base is dom­i­nat­ed by long-tenured accounts that won’t churn at the aver­age rate. Re-cut by cohort.

11. LTV/CAC Ratio

For­mu­la:

LTV/CAC = Life­time Val­ue / Cus­tomer Acqui­si­tion Cost

The sin­gle best one-num­ber sum­ma­ry of unit eco­nom­ics health. It answers: for every dol­lar spent acquir­ing a cus­tomer, how many dol­lars does that cus­tomer gen­er­ate over their life­time (after cost of goods)?

LTV/CACInterpretation
<1Money-losing business at the unit level. Stop scaling acquisition until you fix this.
1–2Marginal. Likely cash-flow negative even at scale.
3Healthy — the industry-standard "you have a real business" threshold.
5+Excellent — you're under-investing in growth. Spend more on acquisition.
10+Suspicious — usually means CAC is under-counted or LTV is over-counted. Audit your inputs.

Always report LTV-to-CAC ratio, nev­er CAC-to-LTV — direc­tion mat­ters because the con­ven­tion­al read­ing is “high­er is bet­ter.”

The 3:1 bench­mark is not a goal — it’s a floor. A SaaS com­pa­ny hit­ting 5:1 is sig­nal­ing that it can pro­duc­tive­ly absorb more acqui­si­tion spend; refus­ing to spend it leaves growth on the table.

12. CAC Payback Period

For­mu­la:

CAC Pay­back (Months) = CAC / (ARPA × Gross Mar­gin %)

How many months of gross-mar­gin con­tri­bu­tion does it take to earn back the cost of acquir­ing a cus­tomer? This is the cash-flow com­pan­ion to LTV/CAC and arguably more impor­tant for cap­i­tal-con­strained com­pa­nies.

Bench­marks for B2B SaaS:

CAC PaybackHealth
<6 monthsBest-in-class — typical of product-led SMB SaaS
6–12 monthsExcellent — healthy efficient growth
12–18 monthsHealthy — typical mid-market B2B
18–24 monthsMarginal — common for enterprise sales but stretches working capital
24+ monthsConcerning — capital intensity will limit growth rate

Why CAC pay­back mat­ters more than LTV/CAC in many sit­u­a­tions: a 5:1 LTV/CAC ratio looks great on paper, but if your CAC pay­back is 30 months, you need 30 months of cap­i­tal to fund every cus­tomer you acquire. The longer the pay­back, the more cap­i­tal you need to grow.

Efficiency KPIs — Are You Converting Capital Into Growth?

These KPIs answer the ques­tion every investor will even­tu­al­ly ask: how effi­cient­ly are you turn­ing dol­lars in (cap­i­tal, S&M spend) into dol­lars out (new ARR, EBITDA)?

13. Burn Multiple

For­mu­la:

Burn Mul­ti­ple = Net Cash Burned in Peri­od / Net New ARR Added in Peri­od

Coined by David Sacks at Craft Ven­tures, burn mul­ti­ple has become the dom­i­nant effi­cien­cy met­ric of the post-2022 SaaS mar­ket. It asks the sim­plest ver­sion of the ques­tion: how many dol­lars did you burn to add one dol­lar of new ARR?

Burn MultipleInterpretation
<1xBest-in-class — every dollar burned generates more than one dollar of new ARR
1–1.5xGreat — efficient growth
1.5–2xHealthy — typical for growth-stage SaaS
2–3xMarginal — you're spending faster than you're growing
>3xCritical — fix this or run out of cash

Burn mul­ti­ple is to 2026 what growth-at-all-costs was to 2021. It is the met­ric that has reset val­u­a­tions across the SaaS mar­ket.

14. Rule of 40

For­mu­la:

Rule of 40 = Growth Rate % + EBITDA Mar­gin %

If your growth rate plus your EBITDA mar­gin equals 40% or more, you pass. This sin­gle num­ber cap­tures the trade-off between growth and prof­itabil­i­ty that every SaaS com­pa­ny nav­i­gates.

If you are above 40, lead with it when talk­ing to investors or acquir­ers. It is the sin­gle most-cit­ed num­ber in SaaS investor decks for a rea­son — it fil­ters for com­pa­nies that have fig­ured out how to grow with­out burn­ing unsus­tain­ably.

Rule of 40 ScoreValuation Implication
40–60Trading at category-average multiples
60–80Premium to peers — typically 1.5–2x category median
80+Elite — 2x+ category median, often 3x+ on EV/ARR

A 50% growth, ‑10% mar­gin com­pa­ny scores 40. A 25% growth, 15% mar­gin com­pa­ny also scores 40. From a val­u­a­tion per­spec­tive in 2026, these are rough­ly equiv­a­lent — and both are above the medi­an pub­lic SaaS com­pa­ny.

15. Magic Number

For­mu­la:

Mag­ic Num­ber = (Net New ARR in Quar­ter × 4) / Sales and Mar­ket­ing Spend in Pri­or Quar­ter

The Mag­ic Num­ber mea­sures sales and mar­ket­ing effi­cien­cy. It asks: for every dol­lar of S&M spend in the pri­or quar­ter, how much annu­al­ized new ARR did you gen­er­ate this quar­ter?

Magic NumberInterpretation
<0.5Inefficient — pull back on S&M and fix conversion first
0.5–0.75Marginal — investigate channel mix
0.75–1.0Healthy — efficient sales motion
>1.0Excellent — invest more aggressively in S&M
>1.5Suspicious — likely measurement error or short-term anomaly

A Mag­ic Num­ber above 1 says the S&M engine is more than pay­ing for itself with­in a year. Below 0.5 says you’re burn­ing cap­i­tal faster than the engine can con­vert it.

Profitability KPIs — Are You Building a Real Business?

The mar­ket’s tol­er­ance for unprof­itable SaaS has shrunk. These KPIs deter­mine whether the busi­ness is durable when cap­i­tal is expen­sive.

16. Gross Margin

For­mu­la:

Gross Mar­gin % = (Rev­enue − Cost of Goods Sold) / Rev­enue

For SaaS, COGS includes host­ing and infra­struc­ture, third-par­ty soft­ware baked into the prod­uct, cus­tomer sup­port, pro­fes­sion­al ser­vices deliv­ery costs, and a por­tion of DevOps. It does not include R&D, sales, mar­ket­ing, or G&A.

Bench­marks for B2B SaaS:

Gross MarginHealth
80%+Excellent — premium SaaS economics
70-80%Healthy — typical for B2B SaaS with some services component
60-70%Marginal — investigate infrastructure cost or services mix
<60%Concerning — model may not be truly SaaS at the unit level

Gross mar­gin sets the upper bound on every oth­er unit eco­nom­ic num­ber. A 60% gross mar­gin com­pa­ny has 25% less LTV per dol­lar of rev­enue than an 80% gross mar­gin com­pa­ny — for the same churn, the same ARPA, every­thing else equal.

17. EBITDA Margin

For­mu­la:

EBITDA Mar­gin % = EBITDA / Rev­enue

EBITDA stands for Earn­ings Before Inter­est, Tax­es, Depre­ci­a­tion, and Amor­ti­za­tion. It’s the stan­dard proxy for oper­at­ing prof­itabil­i­ty — what’s left after all oper­at­ing costs but before cap­i­tal struc­ture deci­sions.

For most B2B SaaS at $5M–$25M ARR, EBITDA mar­gin sits between ‑30% and +20%. Below ‑30% sug­gests struc­tur­al inef­fi­cien­cy or aggres­sive invest­ment beyond what the growth rate jus­ti­fies. Above +20% at sub-$25M ARR usu­al­ly means under-invest­ment in growth.

The Rule of 40 frame­work is the right lens — EBITDA mar­gin does­n’t exist in iso­la­tion; it trades against growth rate.

18. Free Cash Flow (FCF) and FCF Margin

For­mu­la:

FCF = Cash from Oper­a­tions − Cap­i­tal Expen­di­tures

FCF Mar­gin = FCF / Rev­enue

FCF is what’s left in the bank after you’ve paid for the oper­a­tions and the cap­i­tal invest­ments need­ed to keep the busi­ness run­ning. It is the truest mea­sure of busi­ness cash gen­er­a­tion and the num­ber a pri­vate equi­ty acquir­er will mod­el first.

For SaaS, FCF is often more favor­able than EBITDA in the near term because annu­al pre­pay­ments col­lect cash upfront against rat­able rev­enue recog­ni­tion. A SaaS com­pa­ny can be EBIT­DA-neg­a­tive and FCF-pos­i­tive sim­ply because cus­tomers are pre­pay­ing for ser­vice that has­n’t been deliv­ered yet.

This is an asset for man­ag­ing the busi­ness — and a trap for eval­u­at­ing it. Adjust for changes in deferred rev­enue if you want a true pic­ture of oper­at­ing cash gen­er­a­tion.

Engagement KPIs — Leading Indicators of Retention

Engage­ment KPIs are lead­ing indi­ca­tors. They tell you what’s about to hap­pen to reten­tion 3–6 months from now. Use them for prod­uct and cus­tomer suc­cess deci­sions, not for the head­line score­card.

19. Daily Active Users / Monthly Active Users (DAU/MAU)

For­mu­la:

DAU/MAU Ratio = Dai­ly Active Users / Month­ly Active Users

For prod­ucts with dai­ly-use intent (col­lab­o­ra­tion tools, observ­abil­i­ty plat­forms, dash­boards), the DAU/MAU ratio is a strong proxy for prod­uct stick­i­ness. A 50%+ ratio is excel­lent; 30%+ is healthy; below 20% sug­gests episod­ic rather than habit­u­al use.

For prod­ucts with inten­tion­al­ly low­er-fre­quen­cy use (annu­al plan­ning tools, com­pli­ance soft­ware), DAU/MAU is mis­lead­ing. Don’t track what does­n’t apply.

20. Feature Adoption Rate

For­mu­la:

Fea­ture Adop­tion % = Num­ber of Accounts Using Fea­ture / Total Active Accounts

Track adop­tion for the 5–10 fea­tures that, inter­nal­ly, you believe pre­dict reten­tion. If a fea­ture is sup­posed to dri­ve stick­i­ness and only 15% of accounts use it after 90 days, the reten­tion sto­ry is at risk.

21. Time to Value

Time to Val­ue is the num­ber of days from a cus­tomer sign­ing up to them real­iz­ing the first con­crete out­come the prod­uct was sold to deliv­er. It is the most under-tracked met­ric in B2B SaaS.

The com­pa­nies with the best NRR are almost uni­ver­sal­ly the com­pa­nies with the short­est Time to Val­ue. Speed-to-val­ue dri­ves expan­sion, reduces churn, and short­ens sales cycles for the cus­tomer’s next pur­chase deci­sion. If you don’t have a tar­get Time to Val­ue and a mea­sured actu­al, set one.

The Eight KPIs to Put on Your CEO Dashboard

You don’t need 20 SaaS KPIs on a week­ly dash­board. You need eight that, tak­en togeth­er, cov­er every cat­e­go­ry and sur­face anom­alies fast. Here’s the short­list for a $5M–$25M B2B SaaS com­pa­ny:

#KPIWhy it's on the list
1Net New MRRDecomposes growth into its four components
2Net Revenue RetentionThe single best predictor of long-term value
3Gross Revenue RetentionCleanest measure of product-market fit at the dollar level
4LTV/CAC (by segment)One-number summary of unit economics health
5CAC Payback PeriodCash-flow companion to LTV/CAC
6Burn MultipleCapital efficiency in the most-watched form
7Rule of 40The single number investors will ask first
8Gross MarginUpper bound on every other unit economic number

Every­thing else is sup­port­ing detail. If your week­ly lead­er­ship meet­ing can review these eight, iden­ti­fy which one is mov­ing and why, and pick the lever to pull next, you have a work­ing dash­board.

SaaS KPI action priority — Vertical ladder of glowing translucent horizontal rungs ascending into darker space

The Order to Fix Things

When the dash­board shows mul­ti­ple prob­lems — and it usu­al­ly will — the order you address them mat­ters. Fix in this pri­or­i­ty:

  1. Reten­tion first (GRR and NRR). Acquir­ing cus­tomers into a leaky buck­et is wast­ed cap­i­tal. If GRR is below 90%, every dol­lar of new ARR is par­tial­ly replac­ing the dol­lar you just lost. Fix the leak before turn­ing up the inflow.
  2. Unit eco­nom­ics sec­ond (LTV/CAC and CAC Pay­back). If LTV/CAC is below 3 or CAC Pay­back is over 24 months, scal­ing acqui­si­tion will burn cash faster than it builds val­ue. Fix the per-cus­tomer eco­nom­ics before pour­ing fuel on the fun­nel.
  3. Effi­cien­cy third (Burn Mul­ti­ple and Mag­ic Num­ber). Once reten­tion and unit eco­nom­ics are healthy, look at how effi­cient­ly cap­i­tal is being con­vert­ed into growth. This is where the spend­ing deci­sions get made.
  4. Growth rate fourth. Pull the growth lever last, because pulling it before reten­tion and unit eco­nom­ics are sound just ampli­fies a bro­ken mod­el.
  5. Mar­gin expan­sion last. A SaaS com­pa­ny at $10M ARR should not be opti­miz­ing EBITDA mar­gin at the expense of growth unless the growth lever is gen­uine­ly tapped out. Use the Rule of 40 frame­work to find the right bal­ance.

The most com­mon mis­take is revers­ing this order — chas­ing growth (lever 4) before fix­ing reten­tion (lever 1). It feels pro­duc­tive because the top-line num­ber moves, but it makes the under­ly­ing busi­ness worse, not bet­ter.

How Acquirers Read Your KPIs

When a strate­gic acquir­er or pri­vate equi­ty firm eval­u­ates a SaaS busi­ness, they don’t look at all 20 KPIs above. They look at six, in rough­ly this order:

  1. NRR. This is the first num­ber they ask for. NRR > 110% changes the con­ver­sa­tion; NRR < 100% caps the mul­ti­ple regard­less of every­thing else.
  2. Growth Rate (con­sis­tent over mul­ti­ple peri­ods). One quar­ter of high growth proves noth­ing. Acquir­ers want to see four to eight quar­ters of con­sis­tent or accel­er­at­ing growth.
  3. Gross Mar­gin. Sets the ceil­ing on every oth­er num­ber. 70%+ is required to be con­sid­ered “real SaaS eco­nom­ics.”
  4. Rule of 40 score. The effi­cien­cy-of-growth fil­ter that deter­mines whether you trade at cat­e­go­ry medi­an or pre­mi­um.
  5. GRR. The hon­est mea­sure of churn, stripped of expan­sion. Tells them whether the NRR is real or papered over by upsells to whales.
  6. LTV/CAC and CAC Pay­back. Whether the growth engine is scal­able. They will run sen­si­tiv­i­ties on these to mod­el their post-acqui­si­tion val­ue cre­ation.

You are not being eval­u­at­ed on the breadth of your dash­board. You are being eval­u­at­ed on six num­bers, and you should know exact­ly what they are and be able to artic­u­late why they look the way they do.

What NOT to Track on the CEO Scorecard

Some SaaS KPIs get tracked out of habit and con­tribute noth­ing to exec­u­tive-lev­el deci­sions. Move these to the team score­cards where they belong:

  • NPS in iso­la­tion. NPS is a use­ful pulse but a poor lead­ing indi­ca­tor of churn. Track it, don’t lead with it.
  • Web­site traf­fic and MQLs. These are mar­ket­ing KPIs, not CEO KPIs. Roll them up to “Net New MRR from inbound” instead.
  • Sup­port tick­et vol­ume. Oper­a­tions met­ric. Roll up to churn root-cause analy­sis.
  • Open rates and CTRs. Tac­ti­cal mar­ket­ing met­rics.
  • Van­i­ty met­rics (fol­low­ers, down­loads, press men­tions). No busi­ness deci­sion changes based on these.

The short­er your score­card, the bet­ter your deci­sions. Eight num­bers, week­ly. Any­thing more dilutes atten­tion.

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I review SaaS KPIs?

Week­ly for the eight-KPI exec­u­tive score­card. Month­ly for the full set with cohort break­downs. Quar­ter­ly for bench­marks against indus­try medi­ans. Dai­ly reviews of MRR or growth tend to dri­ve over-reac­tion to noise.

What’s the difference between MRR and ARR?

MRR is month­ly recur­ring rev­enue; ARR is the same num­ber annu­al­ized (MRR × 12). Use MRR for inter­nal man­age­ment — month­ly vari­ances are eas­i­er to see. Use ARR for exter­nal com­mu­ni­ca­tion — investors and acquir­ers bench­mark in ARR.

Should I use blended or segmented KPIs?

Always seg­ment. Blend­ed com­pa­ny-wide met­rics aver­age out crit­i­cal dif­fer­ences between cus­tomer seg­ments and pro­duce num­bers that describe no actu­al cus­tomer. Seg­ment by ARR tier (SMB, mid-mar­ket, enter­prise), acqui­si­tion source, ver­ti­cal, and con­tract length at min­i­mum. 100% of the time, there are sig­nif­i­cant vari­ances between seg­ments.

What’s a healthy LTV/CAC ratio?

3:1 is the indus­try-stan­dard floor. Above 5:1 sug­gests you’re under-invest­ing in growth and could pro­duc­tive­ly spend more on acqui­si­tion. Below 3:1 means scal­ing acqui­si­tion will burn cash. Above 10:1 usu­al­ly indi­cates a mea­sure­ment error.

Is NRR or GRR more important?

Both. NRR is the sin­gle best pre­dic­tor of long-term val­ue. GRR is the hon­est mea­sure of prod­uct-cus­tomer fit because it strips out expan­sion. A high NRR with a low GRR means the expan­sion engine is mask­ing a churn prob­lem — acquir­ers will see through this. Report both.

What’s the Rule of 40 and why does it matter?

Rule of 40 = Growth Rate % + EBITDA Mar­gin %. If the sum is 40 or high­er, you pass. It cap­tures the trade-off between growth and prof­itabil­i­ty — a 30% growth, 10% mar­gin com­pa­ny is con­sid­ered rough­ly equiv­a­lent to a 50% growth, ‑10% mar­gin com­pa­ny. Pub­lic SaaS com­pa­nies above 60 typ­i­cal­ly trade at pre­mi­ums of 1.5–2x cat­e­go­ry medi­an mul­ti­ples.

What’s a burn multiple and why has it become so important?

Burn Mul­ti­ple = Net Cash Burned / Net New ARR. It mea­sures how many dol­lars you burn to add one dol­lar of new ARR. Best-in-class is <1x. It has become the dom­i­nant effi­cien­cy met­ric post-2022 because the mar­ket reset val­u­a­tions on the basis of cap­i­tal effi­cien­cy rather than growth-at-all-costs.

How do I calculate annual churn from monthly churn?

Do not mul­ti­ply month­ly by 12 — churn com­pounds. The cor­rect for­mu­la is Annu­al Churn = 1 − (1 − Month­ly Churn)^12. A 2% month­ly churn rate equals 21.5% annu­al churn, not 24%. The dif­fer­ence mat­ters for LTV mod­el­ing.

Related Reading

To go deep­er on the met­rics cov­ered here, see:

Exter­nal bench­mark sources to ver­i­fy cur­rent num­bers:

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author avatar
Vic­tor Cheng
Author of Extreme Rev­enue Growth, Exec­u­tive coach, inde­pen­dent board mem­ber, and investor in SaaS com­pa­nies.

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