Churn Rate
Churn rate is the percentage of customers or recurring revenue a business loses over a given period, such as a month or a year.
In depth
Churn rate is usually calculated by dividing the customers (or revenue) lost during a period by the total at the start of that period. Teams distinguish between customer churn, which counts logos lost, and revenue churn, which weighs each account by its contract value, so a single large cancellation can move revenue churn far more than logo churn. A common pitfall is averaging churn across very different cohorts: a spike from a low-value trial segment can mask healthy retention among your core customers, leading you to misread the real problem.
In a quiz-funnel and lead-qualification workflow, churn often starts at acquisition rather than onboarding. When a scorecard quiz attracts and scores poor-fit leads, those weak-fit accounts convert but cancel quickly, inflating churn downstream. Tightening qualification criteria, scoring intent and budget signals before handoff to sales, and routing only high-scoring respondents to paid plans typically lowers churn more reliably than any retention campaign applied after the fact.
Example in practice
Frequently asked questions
How do you calculate churn rate?
Divide the number of customers (or amount of recurring revenue) lost during a period by the total you had at the start of that period, then multiply by 100. For revenue churn, weight each lost account by its contract value rather than counting logos equally.
What is a good churn rate for SaaS?
It varies by segment, but many B2B SaaS companies target monthly churn under 1-2% for established mid-market and enterprise accounts. Self-serve and SMB products usually run higher, so compare against your own cohort rather than a universal benchmark.
Can lead qualification lower churn rate?
Yes. Much churn originates from poor-fit customers who never should have converted, so qualifying leads on budget, intent, and fit before sign-up reduces early cancellations. A scorecard quiz that scores respondents helps you route only strong-fit prospects to paid plans.