Why it matters
LTV is a board number first. Useful — as long as you know that's what it is.
I'll be honest about how we actually used this one at PipelineCRM: LTV didn't really drive decisions. It was a board number. It started earning a place on the scorecard once we had a board, after about $3M in revenue — before that, it was a figure I could have produced if you'd asked, but it wasn't running anything. Our LTV landed somewhere in the $4,500–$6,500 range against a $2,500 ACV, on gross margins of 85–87%. That's a perfectly healthy number for SMB SaaS. And it's exactly the kind of healthy number that can lull you to sleep.
Here's the trap, and it's a real one. You can look at LTV and Customer Lifetime together and quietly pretend you don't have a churn problem. You tell yourself: this customer is worth $5,000 and stays 36 months — meanwhile you're churning MRR at 1.5% a month and not really looking at it. The two numbers sit on the same page and the comfortable one wins. That cognitive dissonance is more common than anyone admits. LTV is an output. Churn is the input. If the input is bleeding, the LTV on your deck is fiction, no matter how good it looks.
So the way I ran it was to attack the inputs and treat LTV as the scoreboard, not the game. On one hand, aggressively manage the churn — treat at-risk accounts like the ER, not the waiting room. On the other, overdeliver on customer service and support so customers stay longer than they otherwise would. Every extra month of lifetime drops straight into LTV. You don't move LTV by staring at LTV. You move it by managing the churn and the lifetime that produce it — and then LTV moves on its own.