Account planning for expansion and cross-sell

Last updated:

|Edit this page|

This account planning framework is designed to help team members (1) efficiently get up to speed on accounts and (2) consistently think through a set of strategic questions that elevate our role and partnership with the account. It encourages a proactive approach to identifying expansion and cross-sell opportunities, driving growth and customer success. This template was initially developed for managing a book of business primarily consisting of smaller startups. It will likely need modification to be useful for larger, more enterprise, accounts.

Here are some times where it may help:

  • When onboarding a new account.
  • As part of a regular account review cadence (e.g., quarterly).
  • When a significant change occurs within an account (e.g., new funding, leadership change, new strategic initiative, product launch).
  • To proactively identify and strategize on expansion or cross-sell opportunities.
  • Any other time you want to. Or not. No one is checking your work.

Account planning template

Business info:

  • Name:
  • Description:
  • Website:
  • HQ location:
  • Business type: B2B SaaS, E-commerce, Marketplace, Developer Tools, Fintech, Healthcare, etc.
  • Goal: Identify typical key metrics and challenges for this company type/stage (e.g., MRR, CAC, LTV for SaaS; GMV, AOV for E-commerce).

Business stage:

Businesses have different goals and constraints based on funding and stage. A venture-backed early-stage company may be very cash-conscious and focused on product-market fit, while a more established enterprise may be more focused on scaling, efficiency, and locking in multi-year discounts.

  • Current stage: (Seed, Series A/B/C+, Public, Bootstrapped, Acquired by X)
  • Funding:
  • Investors:

B. How they make money:

  • Key product(s) or services they offer: List their main offerings that their customers use.
  • Pricing, if available:

C. Vibe-based matrix:

Refer to the vibe-based sales matrix (internal only) - where does this account fit?

  • Potential ways to cross-sell:
  • Main risks:

II. Product Impressions:

Trying out a customer's product can give us useful context. It helps identify best practices we can recommend, understand their user experience firsthand, and spot potential cross-sell or value-add opportunities for PostHog.

  • Personal impression/user experience notes: Your observations as a potential user – what was intuitive, confusing, delightful? Any obvious pain points or areas for improvement? How do they handle onboarding, core workflows, etc.?
  • Potential areas where PostHog could provide insight for their product development/UX: "Their checkout flow has 5 steps; Session Replay could help them identify drop-off points." "They just launched a new mobile app; Product Analytics is crucial for tracking adoption."
  • Their product roadmap: What do you see on their roadmap that PostHog can enable for them?

III. Hiring roles / goals:

Review their careers page, LinkedIn job postings, and any announcements about team growth. Hiring trends can tell us what the business will be focused on in the next 12-24 months, what skills they're prioritizing, and what type of growth the business is forecasting.

  • Roles currently hiring for:
  • Goals associated with these new roles: (Document Product and growth related goals. This tells us what the business will be seeking)
  • Skills associated with these new roles: (Are there specific technical skills required? This can educate us about the customer's tech stack.)
  • How to position PostHog as an enabler for these roles/goals:

IV. Business objectives :

Collect as much context as you can about the customer and their goals. Look for opportunities to align PostHog to those goals.

  • What are they trying to achieve with PostHog? / What larger business goals does PostHog support? Increase feature adoption by X%, reduce onboarding drop-off by Y%, identify top 3 user paths to conversion, validate hypotheses for new product Z.
  • Do they feel the value from PostHog aligns with their expectations and investment? Yes/No/Partially. Are they happy with the value received?
  • What obstacles are they facing?
    • In using PostHog effectively: Technical hurdles in instrumentation, knowledge gaps in using advanced features, specific feature limitations for their use case, not enough time/resources allocated.
    • In their overall goal achievement (where PostHog might help but isn't fully leveraged): Lack of engineering resources to implement new tracking, siloed data preventing holistic views, difficulty translating data into actionable insights.
  • Are there upcoming constraints? Budget freezes, code freezes, headcount restrictions, technical migrations, major product re-platforming, seasonality impacting their business.
  • What do their future needs look like (6-18 months)? Where does PostHog fit into their roadmap? Scaling analytics capabilities, new product launches requiring instrumentation, desire for A/B testing at scale, moving towards a more data-driven culture, interest in predictive analytics.
  • How healthy do they think the relationship is? Have they enjoyed their interactions with us (Sales, Support, CS)? 

V. Stakeholders and power users:

  • For key contacts:
    • Name & role / title:
    • Priorities & Goals: 
    • Attending any trade shows/events where PostHog might be? 
    • Preferred Communication Channel / Cadence:

VI. Current PostHog products in use:

This can be easily checked in Vitally. Thinking through this in a structured fashion may be helpful when taking on a new account.

  • Asses the usage or maturity level for each product: Basic (simple insights), Intermediate (custom events, funnels), Advanced (correlation analysis, complex flags)

A. Underutilized products & cross-sell mapping:

In Vitally, you can often easily identify which products are underutilized or not adopted. It may be beneficial to map these out in a more general sense.

  • Product 1 (e.g., surveys):

  • Potential use case: "Gather qualitative feedback on new feature X." "Run NPS surveys directly in-app."

  • Next step to introduce/drive adoption: "Share case study on Surveys." "Offer to help set up their first survey."

  • Relevant case study / content:

  • Product 2 (e.g., A/B testing):

  • Potential use case: "Test different onboarding flows." "Optimize CTA button placement."

  • Next step to introduce/drive adoption: "Discuss their experimentation roadmap." "Show demo of A/B testing setup."

  • Relevant case study / content:

B. Optimization opportunities (for existing products):

  • "Not using custom events enough; could help them track X more granularly." "Could benefit from more complex funnels to understand Y." "Haven't explored correlation analysis for Z." "Feature flags could be used for targeted rollouts to segment A."

VII. Context / suggestions from others at PostHog:

Check Active Conversations in Vitally, support ticketing, Slack channels, CRM history.

VIII. Open requests and feedback

Has the customer submitted any feature requests or other relevant feedback?

IX. Risks:

  • Aware of any risks to this account's renewal or growth? Champion leaving, key user turnover, budget cuts, low adoption/engagement, unresolved issues, evolving needs, upcoming renewal date with low perceived value, negative sentiment.
  • Mitigation strategy:

Questions? Ask Max AI.

It's easier than reading through 661 pages of documentation

Community questions

Was this page useful?

Next article

How we work

This page covers more of the operational detail of how our team generally works - for a broader overview of roles and responsibilities, visit the overview page . Main metrics for each role Technical AE: new and expansion revenue in your book of business RevOps: overall revenue from $20k+ segment Other metrics we generally care about: Closed - won % from demo Time to close Lead volume in each segment Weighted pipeline Book of business Account Executives Each AE is assigned up to 10 existing…

Read next article