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How to calculate retention rate:
Formula + top 4 mistakes to avoid

Most entrepreneurs think that “growing” equals “gaining.” But in SaaS, there's a much more important factor than acquisition.

Customer retention is the essential—but often overlooked—foundation for growth in subscription-based services. Though you'd probably agree that the concept of customer retention is important, you're probably not taking the time or effort to calculate it right and try to improve it.

There is no way to run a sustainable business without a focus on user retention calculations. Any degree of user churn will drag down your company and sink your revenue. Instead of wasting your efforts on futile acquisitions that will churn out weeks and months later, focus on retaining and monetizing the customers you already have.

Start by understanding why you're thinking about retention the wrong way.

What is retention rate?

Retention rate is the percentage of customers who continue to use your products or services over a given period of time. A high retention rate means that a business has a low churn rate. Retention rate is an essential metric, especially for subscription businesses, as it shows the extent to which your business has a source of revenue regardless of whether you acquire any new customers. A high retention rate also indicates that you're offering customers real value – a great position to grow from.

Why customer retention rate is so important to track

Customer retention is a feedback metric; it helps you understand how your decisions directly affect your business by showing cause and effect—the changes you make, and the corresponding way that customers retain (or churn).

Retention helps you understand the effectiveness of your product, marketing, customer service, and pricing. When customers stay, you know to double down on your efforts. When customers churn, you know that you need to reevaluate and make a change.

Beyond helping you uncover issues that need resolving, retention also plays a hugely important role as the foundation of growth.

As startup advisor and investor Andrew Chen points out, acquiring users looks like the ultimate growth solution because it “seems to be the very definition of growth.” This leads SaaS companies to misguidedly focus too much on customer acquisition and not enough on customer retention, even though customer acquisition is one of the least effective growth levers.

In a study of 1,432 SaaS companies, C-level executives and founders overwhelmingly placed more emphasis on “gaining more logos” (customer acquisition) than on keeping customers around longer (customer retention).

C-level/founder growth preferences: What's most important? ~70% companies say more logos, ~5% say making more money per customer, ~20% say keeping customer around longer

Around 70% of SaaS leaders said that acquisition was their biggest goal, while about only 20% believed customer retention was their most important goal. That's not to say SaaS leaders don't care about retention—they just aren't prioritizing it or putting in the effort to optimize it.

But failing to actively try to increase your retention rate (the percentage of the total numbers of customers that continue with your service over time) and correspondingly decrease your churn rate (the percentage of customers that discontinue with your service over time) can mean a swift and painful death for your company.

Salesforce realized this the hard way in 2005 when their user churn rate was 8% per month. Every year, nearly three-quarters of Salesforce's customers were leaving. But Salesforce executives were too focused on customer acquisition to realize that as they added more customers, the foundation for their customer base was leaking out—in the form of terrible retention rates.

Chart shows change in percentage of Salesforce's active users in 12 months due to monthly churn at 8%. 100% active users reduces to less than 40% in 12 months

Salesforce found that customer retention rates this low (92%) made it nearly impossible to sustain, much less grow. To grow by just 1 customer at this rate, if Salesforce started the year with 1,000 customers and lost 630 over the course of the year, they would have to acquire 631 new customers from a now-smaller potential market in order to achieve any growth at all.

Companies in this position have to scramble to fill a leaky bucket. They can't focus on growing the value of their existing customers, which is the best bet for improving revenue. The book Marketing Metrics cites that the probability of a successful sale with a new prospect is 5-20% while the probability of a successful sale with an existing customer is 60-70%. You need to retain and upsell existing customers in order to have the most profitable model for your SaaS company.

Salesforce executives reacted to this death sentence with an initiative to step up customer success efforts. They received feedback from their retention metrics and were able to make decisions that effectively saved—and then drastically grew—the company.

How to calculate retention rate: The retention rate formula

To calculate retention rate, divide your active users that continue their subscriptions at the end of a given period by the total number of active users you had at the beginning of that time period.

Thus, the retention rate formula is pretty straightforward: the # of active users continuing to subscribe divided by the total active users at the start of a period = retention rate.

4 common retention rate mistakes

It seems simple enough, but there are many factors that contribute to retention. With so much riding on your retention rate, it's absolutely essential that you calculate it consistently and correctly. Understanding the four common mistakes below and the resounding effects they can have on your SaaS company will help you make solid calculations that inform smart decisions.

 

Mistake 1: You're not calculating both user retention and MRR retention

User retention and MRR retention are two different metrics that tell you different things. User retention rate measures the percentage of users that stay on with your service from week to week, month to month, et cetera. It's the metric that is most often referenced as “retention.”

Meanwhile, MRR retention is the revenue maintained over time from recurring subscription payments. It's the revenue that your company makes on a recurring basis once you deduct MRR lost from active cancellations and failed (delinquent) payments. It's most useful to think of this metric in terms of its inverse, MRR churn.

MRR Churn = sum of revenue lose from active cancellations + sum of revenue lost from failed payments

Calculate your company's MRR churn rate by dividing the MRR churn by the total MRR at the beginning of the month.

MRR churn rate for january = MRR churn in January / end of month MRR for december

We've explained that user retention provides important feedback on your company's product, marketing, customer service, and pricing. But your MRR retention lets you know if your company can sustain profitability.

It's important to look at the two types of retention in conjunction with one another or you may be misled. For instance, one month you may see 7 of your 100 users churn—that's a 7% user churn rate, or a 93% user retention rate.

Total users at beginning of month: 100
Users churned: 7
User retention rate: 93%

If each of those churned customers were on your lowest-tier plan and paid $50/month, that's $350 in MRR Churn for that month. If your MRR at the beginning of the previous month was $9,000 ($2,500 from 50 low-tier plan customers paying $50/month, $4,000 from 40 mid-tier plan customers paying $100/month, and $2,500 from 10 enterprise-tier customers paying $250/month), your MRR churn rate is 3.9% and your MRR retention rate is 96.1%.

Total MRR at beginning of month = $9,000
MRR Churn: $350
MRR retention rate: 96.10%

Now let's imagine that if instead of seeing 7 of your lowest-tier customers churn, you had seen 2 of your enterprise-tier customers churn. With user retention rate at 98% instead of 93%, this might look like a much better scenario for your company.

Total users at beginning of month: 100
Users churned: 2
User retention rate: 98%

But by losing these 2 enterprise-tier customers, your MRR churn for that month is $500. That's a 5.6% MRR churn rate and 94.4% MRR retention rate.

Total MRR at beginning of month: $9,000
MRR churn: $500
MRR retention rate: 94.40%

Though the difference between a 96.1% and a 94.4% MRR retention rate might not sound significant, over the course of 12 months, it represents a 12% difference in your monthly revenue. If you started with $9,000 in MRR, that's the difference between making $5,580 MRR at the end of the year or $4,500 MRR at the end of the year.

Chart: Change in percentage of MRR in 12 months due to MRR churn. 

3.9% MRR churn rate
5.6% MRR churn rate

Plotted as % MRR vs Months. Both decrease. The latter more steeply.

If you had only looked at user retention, you would have assumed you were doing better in the second scenario. Meanwhile, valuable revenue would have been leaking out of your business while you doubled down on the wrong practices.

Mistake #2: Counting your cancelled customers as churned customers

Churned customers have stopped paying you. Cancelled customers have indicated that they are going to stop paying you when the next payment is due, but their subscription period has not expired.

Depending on how long your customer's subscription term is and when within the period they “cancel,” you have a window of opportunity to win the customer back. According to our study of 149,000 SaaS customers, about 45% of churned customers cancel an average of 3 weeks before the end of the period. There is significant opportunity there to increase retention.

Graphic: Subscription period with window of opportunity from point where customer cancels

If you're counting these cancelled customers as churned, you're throwing away opportunity to retain customers and revenue. You're skewing your current and future metrics for the worse.

Imagine that in one month, 12 of your 100 users cancelled. If all of those users actually churned, you'd have a scrawny 88% monthly retention rate. This would be absolutely unsustainable over time—after just 6 months you'd lose over half of your original customer base (54%).

Total users at beginning of month: 100
Users churned: 12
User retention rate 88%

If you could recover some of those cancelled customers, you'd accrue significantly more revenue over time in those retained customers' recurring revenue.

Though most cancelled customers do have the intention of churning, some may have frustrations or run into obstacles that could be easily overcome with a customer service call. If you can convince even half of those cancelled customers to retain, you'd raise your user retention rate to 92%. After 6 months, you'd have 22% more retained customers than if you had let all of those customers churn.

Total users at beginning of month: 100
Users churned: 6
User retention rate: 92%

By counting those cancelled customers as definitely churned, you would have:

  • Lost all of those customers by not focusing any attention on trying to win them back
  • Missed out on putting significant customer service opportunities into practice
  • Missed out on the opportunity to gain customer feedback by talking to cancelled customers
  • Made alarming predictions for future months that would have negatively affected your business decisions

The practices you put in place to retain cancelled—but not churned—customers could ultimately increase your overall user retention rate month to month. Counting cancelled customers as churned is a huge mistake that eliminates this opportunity for improvement.

Mistake #3: Not calculating retention at different stages of customers' lifetimes

The average of retention rates across customer lifetime isn't uniform. If you treat it as though it is, you won't be able to properly improve retention at all stages of customers' lifetimes. Instead, set retention benchmarks for various different cohorts and stages of the lifecycle.

Retention rates of customer cohorts are often different in the early stages of those customers' lifetimes, the middle stages, and the later stages. You can break down customer behavior at these stages into short-term, mid-term, and long-term churn.

Chart: % active customers by month. Short-term churn until month 1. Mid-term churn from month 3. Long term churn from month 6.

Customers churn for different reasons at different stages of their lifetimes with your company—therefore encouraging them to retain requires different tactics at every stage.

Consider a cohort of customers that began on or by January 1st. Within the month of January, you might see high churn from those customers—say a 10% user churn rate. They're just trying out the product and may not find the value right away.

A few months later in April, when the percentage of active users from that cohort only drops from 80% to 78%, you'll see a 2.5% user churn rate. As customers spend more time using the product, they incorporate it into their workflow or into their daily routines. In August when the percentage of active users from that cohort drops from 75.9% to 75.8%, you'll see a 0.2% user churn rate from that cohort. At this point, customers have discovered the value and become power users.

Cohort 1. User churn rate in January: 10%. User churn rate in April: 2.50%. Uer churn rate in August: 0.20%

Now consider a second cohort that starts in April. In April, they churn at a 10% user churn rate, and in August, they churn at a 2.5% user churn rate.

April Total monthly user churn rate = 12%. August total monthly user churn rate: 2.70%. By cohort those numbers are 10% and 2.5% respectively.

If you're not considering short-term, mid-term, and long-term churn for different cohorts of customers, your user churn rate will only tell you the total monthly churn. When you have a month with particularly high or low sign-ups, you might see a large change in retention rates and not understand why.

Focusing on retention by stage allows you to target the different reasons for churn at each stage and develop the most effective strategies for mitigating each one.

For example, you can improve user onboarding to combat short-term churn. To address mid-term churn, look to constantly add value to the customer experience by improving small bugs and communicating consistently with email campaigns. Finally, you can reduce long-term churn by upgrading current customers to larger plans that give them more of your company's core value.

Evernote is an excellent example of how long-term churn should be handled. Because they make an effort to get their core value in front of their customers over and over again, their retention curve looks like a smile.

Mistake #4: Not calculating different retention rates for customers on different plans

Just as cohorts of customers who sign up at different times will have different retention rates across the span of their cohort's lifetime, customers on different plans will typically show different rates of user retention.

Enterprise-tier customers, or those customers on your most expensive plans, are likelier to have higher user retention. According to our study of 941 SaaS companies, customers with 4-digit ARPU had almost 50% less churn than customers with 1 to 2-digit ARPU.

Chart: Higher ARPU correlates to lower churn. 
75th percentile, 50th percentile and 25th percentile plotted by churn % vs average revenue per user

Correspondingly, this study also found that higher percentages of annual contracts correlate with better retention.

Chart: The higher % of annual contracts, the better
75th, 50th, and 25th percentile companies plotted on churn% vs annual contracts

Enterprise-tier / high ARPU customers typically have longer contracts. This presents less opportunity to churn. The high ARPU value that they present to your SaaS company also increases the likelihood that a lot of customer service time and effort is spent on retaining them.

Your highest churn is likely coming from your low-tier plan customers. These customers are less likely to have annual contracts. Your company might take them less seriously and may not direct the right amount of time and effort into retaining them. Though they might not represent a significant loss in MRR when they churn, their choice to discontinue can still affect your brand's reputation—which can negatively affect future acquisition.

Enterprise tier. Contract length is long. ARPU is high. User churn rate 0.5%
Low tier: Short contract length. Low ARPU. User churn rate 4%

Realizing the difference in retention between customers on different plans is essential to gaining the strategic and actionable feedback that retention rates provide. The difference in retention rates for different customers will tell you about the strengths and weaknesses of your customer service approaches to those different customers. Focus on white-glove service for all customers by communicating with them frequently and taking action on their frustrations.

Conversely, if you realize that you have a problem with low retention among your enterprise-level customers, you'll see a significant portion of your revenue leaking from your MRR every month. This is important feedback as well, because it might indicate that you have issues with your pricing, packaging, or contract length. Experiment with price adjustments and consider encouraging more annual plans.

Breaking retention down by the users on each plan helps you further understand where and how your SaaS company can make changes that increase bottom-line retention and bottom-line revenue.

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Retention rate is the ruling metric

Your SaaS company's retention isn't ever going to be static—so you need to pay constant attention and put in the time and effort to calculate it and optimize it. By understanding the nuances of your customers' retention, you'll gain valuable feedback about the decisions you make for your SaaS company. ProfitWell Metrics simplifies all the manual calculations to offer a dashboard overview of retention over time.

ProfitWell Metrics Retention Rate dashboard showing breakdown by reactivations, upgrades, downgrades, churn

Don't focus on gains to grow. Direct your attention towards getting customers to stick around, and you'll build a stable foundation with huge potential for internal growth. No silver bullets, just solid strategy.

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