Untitled document
Written By Sara Irfan
Last updated About 4 hours ago
General Overview
What This Is
The Revenue Intelligence helps you understand how money flows across your customers. What’s growing, what’s stable, and what may be at risk.
Instead of looking at revenue in isolation, GoCSM brings subscriptions, usage-based spend, renewals, payments, and churn into one clear view so you can make informed decisions.
Why This Matters
Most revenue problems don’t start with cancellations, they start with small warning signs that go unnoticed.
Revenue Intelligence helps you:
Spot revenue risk early
Understand which customers matter most financially
Prepare for renewals before they become urgent
Make smarter retention and expansion decisions
This allows you to act before revenue is lost, not after.
Where to Find It

How It Works
Revenue Intelligence pulls data from your customer subscriptions and usage-based activity and organizes it into easy-to-read insights.
It focuses on:
Recurring subscription revenue
Usage-based wallet spend
Revenue changes over time
Renewals and upcoming expirations
Payment issues that may put revenue at risk
Data is synced nightly, so numbers may not reflect same-day activity. This view is designed for trend analysis and decision-making, not real-time billing or accounting.
What Revenue Intelligence Covers
Revenue Intelligence in GoCSM includes insights such as:
Total revenue and revenue trends
Monthly recurring revenue (MRR)
Cost, margin, and margin percentage
Growing and declining accounts
Upcoming renewals
Failed payments and low wallet balance signals
Revenue churn and churn rate
Each of these is explained in its own article so you always know what the numbers mean.
What Revenue Intelligence Does Not Do
Revenue Intelligence does not replace:
Customer Health Status
Happiness Level
Product Adoption tracking
Accounting or financial reconciliation tools
Revenue alone does not tell the full story. GoCSM is designed to show revenue alongside customer behavior and engagement, not instead of it.
Track Revenue Intelligence Metrics
What This Is
This article explains the core revenue metrics used in GoCSM. What each one means, what it includes, and how to read it correctly.
These definitions help you understand the numbers you see across Revenue Intelligence dashboards and reports.
Why This Matters
Revenue metrics are only useful if they’re understood correctly.
Clear definitions help you:
Avoid misreading trends
Know which numbers require action
Use consistent language across your team
Get clearer answers from GoCSM AI
Where to Find It
Dashboard → Revenue Intelligence

How It Works
GoCSM calculates revenue metrics using:
Active subscriptions (recurring revenue)
Usage-based wallet spend (for services like SMS, AI, calls, email, ads)
Renewal timing
Payment status
Data is synced nightly, so metrics are designed for trends and decisions, not same-day billing reconciliation.
Key Revenue Metrics Explained
Total Revenue
The total revenue generated during the selected time period.
Includes subscription revenue
May include usage-based wallet spend, depending on the service
Best used to understand overall performance, not profitability
Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR)
The predictable revenue you expect each month from active subscriptions.
Subscription-based only
Does not include usage-based wallet charges
Used as the foundation for revenue stability analysis
Average Revenue Per Account
The average amount of revenue generated per active account.
Helps measure account value
Useful for identifying expansion opportunities
Can decline even when total revenue looks stable
Cost
The cost associated with delivering services to customers.
Commonly tied to usage-based services
Not all plans or services have costs
Margin
The amount left after cost is subtracted from revenue.
Shows profitability by account, plan, or service
High revenue does not always mean high margin
Margin Percentage
How efficient your revenue is.
Shows how much of each dollar you keep
Helps identify profitable vs risky growth
New Revenue
Revenue gained from:
New subscriptions
Subscription upgrades
This reflects growth activity.
Lost Revenue
Revenue lost from:
Subscription cancellations
Subscription downgrades
This highlights revenue contraction.
Revenue Churn
The amount of recurring revenue lost over a period of time.
Focuses on financial impact
More meaningful than customer count alone
Upcoming Renewals
Subscriptions approaching their renewal date.
Signals upcoming decisions
Opportunity for proactive engagement
Failed or At-Risk Payments
Revenue tied to payment issues.
Includes failed payments and low wallet balance signals
Often an early warning sign of churn
How to Use the Revenue Overview Dashboard
What This Is
The Revenue Overview Dashboard gives you a high-level snapshot of your overall revenue performance and profitability.
It combines revenue, cost, margin, churn, renewals, and payment risk into one place so you can quickly understand what’s happening and where to look next.
Why This Matters
Revenue issues usually appear as patterns, not one-time events.
This dashboard helps you:
See revenue health without digging into reports
Spot early warning signs before revenue is lost
Focus on trends instead of daily fluctuations Decide which accounts or areas need deeper review
It’s designed to guide decisions, not replace accounting tools.
Where to Find It
Dashboard → Revenue Intelligence → Overview
How It Works
The Revenue Overview Dashboard pulls data from:
Subscriptions (recurring revenue)
Usage-based wallet spend
Service costs
Renewal dates
Payment activity
Data is synced nightly, so numbers may not reflect same-day changes. This dashboard is best used for weekly and monthly reviews.
Each card and chart is meant to point you toward investigation, not act as a final answer.
What You’ll See on the Dashboard
Revenue, Cost, and Margin Summary

Top-level cards showing:
Total Revenue
Total Cost
Total Margin
Margin Percentage
These help you understand both growth and profitability at a glance.
Revenue and Margin Trends

Line charts showing how revenue and margin change over time
Direction matters more than exact values
Short-term movement is normal
Consistent declines require attention
Growth and Decline Indicators
Visual indicators highlighting:
Growing accounts
Declining accounts
This helps you understand whether revenue movement is driven by expansion or contraction.
Churn, Renewals, and Payment Risk
Cards and sections that surface:
Revenue churn
Upcoming renewals
Failed payments and low wallet balance signals
These are early warning areas that should be reviewed regularly.
How to Use This Dashboard Effectively
Start with trends, not individual numbers
Click into Sub-accounts or Churn Analysis when something stands out
Review alongside Health Status and Product Adoption
This dashboard works best as a starting point, not a final destination.
Tips
Review weekly for patterns, monthly for decisions
Watch margin changes, not just revenue growth
Assign clear ownership for renewals and payment follow-ups
Track Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR)
What This Is
Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR) shows the recurring subscription revenue generated in a given month from active subscriptions.
Why This Matters
MRR is the foundation of subscription revenue stability.
It helps you:
Understand how consistent your recurring revenue is
Measure sustainable growth over time
See the direct impact of upgrades, downgrades, and cancellations
Establish a reliable baseline for forecasting future performance
Strong MRR indicates your business is built on a dependable subscription base.
Where to Find It
Path: Dashboard → Revenue Intelligence → Overview
How It Works
GoCSM calculates MRR based on active, recurring subscriptions and their monthly plan value.
MRR changes when:
A new subscription starts
A subscription is upgraded
A subscription is downgraded
A subscription is cancelled
Data is synced nightly, so MRR reflects directional trends rather than same-day fluctuations.
What’s Included in MRR
Active recurring subscription charges
Ongoing plan fees
What’s Not Included in MRR
Usage-based wallet spend (SMS, AI, calls, email, ads)
One-time fees
Setup or onboarding charges
Cancelled subscriptions
This keeps MRR focused on predictable, recurring income.
How MRR Differs From Total Revenue
MRR shows subscription stability
Total Revenue may also include usage-based charges
Both are important, but they answer different questions.
How to Read MRR Correctly
Rising MRR = sustainable growth
Flat MRR = stability with limited expansion
Declining MRR = early revenue risk
Small, consistent changes matter more than short-term spikes.
Understand Average Revenue Per Account
What This Is
Average Revenue Per Account shows how much revenue you earn, on average, from each active account.
This helps you understand account value, not just total revenue.
Why This Matters
Total revenue can grow while account value stays flat or even declines.
Average Revenue Per Account helps you:
Measure the quality of your revenue
Spot upsell and expansion opportunities
Identify hidden revenue risk behind stable totals
This is especially useful for agencies managing many accounts at different price points.
Where to Find It
Path: Dashboard → Revenue Intelligence → Sub-accounts
How It Works
GoCSM calculates this metric by dividing total revenue by the number of active accounts.
It changes when:
New accounts are added
Accounts upgrade or downgrade
Accounts cancel
Because revenue includes subscriptions and usage-based spend, changes may not always come from plan changes alone.
How to Read This Metric
Rising average = accounts are expanding in value
Flat average = growth is coming mostly from new accounts
Declining average = contraction or pricing pressure
This helps you understand how revenue is changing, not just how much.
When This Metric Matters Most
During upsell and expansion planning
When evaluating pricing and packaging
When total revenue looks healthy but churn is increasing
Understand Cost, Margin, and Profit
What This Is
This article explains how cost, margin, and profit are calculated and displayed inside GoCSM’s Revenue Intelligence.
These numbers help you understand not just how much revenue you’re generating, but how much of it you actually keep.
Why This Matters
High revenue does not always mean a healthy business.
Understanding cost and margin helps you:
See which revenue is truly profitable
Identify services that cost more than they return
Avoid scaling low-margin accounts
Make smarter pricing and packaging decisions
This is especially important when you offer usage-based services.
Where to Find It
Path: Dashboard → Revenue Intelligence → Overview
How It Works
GoCSM compares revenue earned against cost incurred for each account, plan, and service.
From that comparison, it calculates:
Cost
Margin (profit)
Margin percentage
These values update automatically based on usage and billing activity.
Key Terms Explained
Cost
Cost represents what it takes to deliver services to your customers.
This can include:
Usage-based services (SMS, AI, calls, emails, ads)
Other billable services tied to customer activity
Not all plans or services have costs associated with them.
Margin
Margin is the amount left after cost is subtracted from revenue.
Margin = Revenue − Cost
This shows how much profit a customer, plan, or service is generating.
Margin Percentage
Margin % shows how efficient your revenue is.
It tells you:
How much of each dollar you keep
Whether growth is profitable or risky
A higher percentage means stronger profitability.
How to Read Cost and Margin Trends
Rising revenue with stable costs = healthy growth
Rising costs faster than revenue = margin pressure
Sudden margin drops often point to usage spikes
Always review trends over time, not a single day
See Where Revenue Is Gained or Lost
What This Is
This view helps you understand how your revenue changes over time by clearly separating revenue gains from revenue losses.
Instead of relying on one total number, GoCSM shows what is increasing revenue and what is reducing it.
Why This Matters
Revenue growth and revenue loss often happen at the same time.
This breakdown helps you:
Understand what’s driving growth
Identify where revenue is leaking
See whether new revenue is offsetting losses
Make better decisions around retention and expansion
It prevents false confidence based on totals alone.
Where to Find It
Path: Dashboard → Revenue Intelligence → Overview/Subaccounts/Churn Analysis
How It Works
GoCSM tracks revenue movement based on account and subscription activity.
Revenue gains come from:
New subscriptions
Plan upgrades
Increased usage-based spend
Revenue losses come from:
Subscription cancellations
Plan downgrades
Reduced usage-based spend
These changes are reflected automatically and update on a nightly sync.
How to Read Revenue Gains
Revenue gains indicate momentum.
Strong gains suggest successful acquisition or expansion
Gains driven only by usage may be temporary
Sustainable gains usually include subscription growth
Always look at gains alongside margin.
How to Read Revenue Losses
Revenue losses highlight contraction.
Cancellations have the largest long-term impact
Downgrades often signal reduced value or engagement
Decreased usage may indicate early risk
Losses should be reviewed together with Health Status and Adoption
See Which Plans Generate the Most Revenue
What This Is
This view shows how your total revenue is distributed across different subscription plans.
It helps you understand which plans contribute the most to your revenue and which ones may need attention.
Why This Matters
Not all plans contribute equally to business growth.
Understanding revenue by plan helps you:
Identify your most valuable plans
See which plans drive profitability
Spot pricing or packaging issues
Decide where to focus sales, retention, and expansion efforts
A smaller number of high-value plans can often outperform many low-value ones.
Where to Find It
Path: Dashboard → Revenue Intelligence → Overview
How It Works
GoCSM groups revenue based on the subscription plans your customers are on.
For each plan, it shows:
How much revenue that plan contributes
How revenue is distributed across all plans
This data is synced nightly and reflects trends, not same-day changes.
How to Read the Revenue by Plan Chart
Larger segments represent plans contributing more revenue
Smaller segments represent lower overall contribution
A plan with fewer customers can still dominate revenue if pricing is higher
This view focuses on revenue impact, not customer count.
What This Chart Can Reveal
Over-reliance on a single plan
Plans that generate revenue but low margin
Entry-level plans that don’t convert into higher tiers
Opportunities to simplify or restructure pricing
Understand Revenue by Product and Service
What This Is
This view shows how your revenue is generated across different products and services you offer, such as subscriptions, usage-based services, and add-ons.
It helps you understand what customers are paying for and where revenue is really coming from.
Why This Matters
Revenue does not behave the same across all products and services.
Some services:
Generate steady, predictable revenue
Have usage-based costs attached
Produce high revenue but lower margins
Understanding revenue by product helps you:
Identify your most valuable offerings
Spot services that are expensive to deliver
Optimize pricing, packaging, and usage limits
Avoid scaling low-margin services unknowingly
Where to Find It
Path: Dashboard → Revenue Intelligence → Overview
How It Works
GoCSM groups revenue based on the type of product or service being used, such as:
Subscription plans
SMS
AI usage
Phone and call services
Email and messaging
Ads or other usage-based tools
Revenue and associated costs are tracked together and synced nightly to reflect overall trends.
How to Read Revenue by Product
Larger segments indicate higher revenue contribution
Smaller segments may still carry high costs
Usage-based services often fluctuate more than subscriptions
This view shows revenue distribution, not profitability on its own.
Important Context About Cost and Margin
Some products and services have direct delivery costs.
This means:
High revenue does not always equal high profit
Margin can vary significantly by product
Usage spikes can reduce profitability quickly
Always review this view together with margin data.