NEW: How strong is your B2B pipeline? Score it in 2 minutes →

NEW: How strong is your B2B pipeline? Score it in 2 minutes →

NEW: How strong is your B2B pipeline? Score it in 2 minutes →

B2B glossaryPipelineGross revenue retention (GRR)

Gross revenue retention (GRR)

Gross revenue retention (GRR)

Gross revenue retention (GRR)

Pipeline

The percentage of recurring revenue retained from existing customers over a period, excluding upsells and expansions.

The percentage of recurring revenue retained from existing customers over a period, excluding upsells and expansions.

What is Gross revenue retention (GRR)?

What is Gross revenue retention (GRR)?

What is Gross revenue retention (GRR)?

The percentage of recurring revenue retained from existing customers over a period, excluding upsells and expansions.

In the context of B2B marketing and sales, gross revenue retention (grr) plays a central role in how teams build and maintain pipeline. Understanding gross revenue retention (grr) helps practitioners make better decisions about targeting, messaging, and process design.

Applying gross revenue retention (grr) correctly requires aligning it with your specific ICP, sales motion, and commercial objectives. Teams that use gross revenue retention (grr) effectively tend to see improvements in both efficiency and outcome quality across their revenue operations.

In a B2B pipeline model, this is only useful if it changes resourcing or prioritization. A clean definition helps the team decide where to push harder, where to cut waste, and which funnel step deserves attention next. It usually becomes more useful when it is defined alongside NRR, Churn, and Retention.

Operationally, define the rule, show the math, and make sure the same logic exists in your CRM and dashboard layer. If it is not obvious how the number is calculated or when the status changes, people will stop trusting it the moment pressure rises. Teams often get better results when they connect Gross revenue retention (GRR) to NRR and Churn instead of managing it in isolation.

The percentage of recurring revenue retained from existing customers over a period, excluding upsells and expansions.

In the context of B2B marketing and sales, gross revenue retention (grr) plays a central role in how teams build and maintain pipeline. Understanding gross revenue retention (grr) helps practitioners make better decisions about targeting, messaging, and process design.

Applying gross revenue retention (grr) correctly requires aligning it with your specific ICP, sales motion, and commercial objectives. Teams that use gross revenue retention (grr) effectively tend to see improvements in both efficiency and outcome quality across their revenue operations.

In a B2B pipeline model, this is only useful if it changes resourcing or prioritization. A clean definition helps the team decide where to push harder, where to cut waste, and which funnel step deserves attention next. It usually becomes more useful when it is defined alongside NRR, Churn, and Retention.

Operationally, define the rule, show the math, and make sure the same logic exists in your CRM and dashboard layer. If it is not obvious how the number is calculated or when the status changes, people will stop trusting it the moment pressure rises. Teams often get better results when they connect Gross revenue retention (GRR) to NRR and Churn instead of managing it in isolation.

The percentage of recurring revenue retained from existing customers over a period, excluding upsells and expansions.

In the context of B2B marketing and sales, gross revenue retention (grr) plays a central role in how teams build and maintain pipeline. Understanding gross revenue retention (grr) helps practitioners make better decisions about targeting, messaging, and process design.

Applying gross revenue retention (grr) correctly requires aligning it with your specific ICP, sales motion, and commercial objectives. Teams that use gross revenue retention (grr) effectively tend to see improvements in both efficiency and outcome quality across their revenue operations.

In a B2B pipeline model, this is only useful if it changes resourcing or prioritization. A clean definition helps the team decide where to push harder, where to cut waste, and which funnel step deserves attention next. It usually becomes more useful when it is defined alongside NRR, Churn, and Retention.

Operationally, define the rule, show the math, and make sure the same logic exists in your CRM and dashboard layer. If it is not obvious how the number is calculated or when the status changes, people will stop trusting it the moment pressure rises. Teams often get better results when they connect Gross revenue retention (GRR) to NRR and Churn instead of managing it in isolation.

Gross revenue retention (GRR) — example

Gross revenue retention (GRR) — example

A B2B team applies gross revenue retention (grr) in their outbound process by first defining clear criteria, then systematically applying them across their target account list. The result is a more focused, higher-quality pipeline that converts at a better rate than untargeted approaches.

A B2B company cleans up how it uses Gross revenue retention (GRR) after noticing that leadership likes the headline number but cannot explain what operationally caused it to move. They rebuild the logic so the term maps back to specific pipeline actions and owners. They also make sure it connects cleanly to NRR and Churn so the definition is not trapped inside one team.

Over time, that creates a more honest operating model. Pipeline reviews focus on throughput and conversion quality, not vanity activity. The team can then set targets with more confidence because the underlying term is no longer fuzzy. They track qualified pipeline created, stage conversion, and source mix before and after the change so they can tell whether Gross revenue retention (GRR) is improving the business or only improving surface activity.

Frequently asked questions

Frequently asked questions

Frequently asked questions

What is a healthy way to interpret Gross revenue retention (GRR)?
There is rarely one universal benchmark for Gross revenue retention (GRR). The useful approach is to compare it by source, segment, stage, and time period, then ask whether the number is supporting the business outcome you actually care about. Because gross revenue retention (grr) is tied to the percentage of recurring revenue retained from existing customers over a period, excluding upsells and expansions., a "good" number only matters if quality stays intact at the next step of the funnel.
What are the first things to check when Gross revenue retention (GRR) drops or spikes?
Start by checking inputs before you blame the headline result. In most B2B teams, gross revenue retention (grr) shifts because audience quality changed, the handoff process changed, follow-up speed changed, or the measurement logic changed. Segmenting the number usually shows the real cause faster than debating the blended average.
How often should Gross revenue retention (GRR) be reviewed?
Review cadence should match how quickly the team can act on the number. Fast-moving paid or outbound metrics deserve frequent checks, while slower pipeline or retention metrics benefit from weekly or monthly review with context. Ownership should sit with the team that can change the inputs, but the definition itself should stay consistent across functions.
Which breakdown should teams look at first for Gross revenue retention (GRR)?
The first useful breakdown is usually source or audience quality, then stage or offer type depending on the workflow. A single company-wide number often hides whether the problem is top-of-funnel fit, handoff quality, or conversion discipline. Break gross revenue retention (grr) down where decisions are made, not where dashboards are easiest to build.
What companion metric or concept gives Gross revenue retention (GRR) more context?
If you only pair Gross revenue retention (GRR) with one other concept, use NRR. It gives context for whether the number is strong for the right reason or simply flattering one step of the process while hurting the next. Looking at the terms together usually produces better decisions than trying to optimize Gross revenue retention (GRR) in isolation.

Related terms

Related terms

Related terms

Pipeline OS Newsletter

Build qualified pipeline

Get weekly tactics to generate demand, improve lead quality, and book more meetings.

Trusted by industry leaders

Trusted by industry leaders

Trusted by industry leaders

Ready to build qualified pipeline?

Ready to build qualified pipeline?

Ready to build qualified pipeline?

Book a call to see if we're the right fit, or take the 2-minute quiz to get a clear starting point.

Book a call to see if we're the right fit, or take the 2-minute quiz to get a clear starting point.

Book a call to see if we're the right fit, or take the 2-minute quiz to get a clear starting point.