Customer success manager interviews test a mix of empathy, commercial awareness, and process. The role exists at the intersection of support, sales, and strategy, and interviewers want to see that you understand all three dimensions. The candidates who stand out are those who can quantify their impact: NRR, churn rate, time-to-value, and expansion revenue are the numbers that matter.
What CSM interviews test
Interviewers are checking: Can you build trusted relationships with customers? Can you spot churn risk early? Can you drive expansion without being pushy? And can you work cross-functionally with sales, product, and support to get things done for your customers?
Churn and retention questions
"How do you identify an at-risk account before they churn?"
"I track a combination of product usage, engagement patterns, and relationship signals. Usage dropping below baseline is often the first sign. A change in champion (like their main contact leaving) is another. Missed QBRs, slower response times to emails, or complaints escalating in support tickets all point to health deteriorating. I use a health score that combines these signals, and I aim to get ahead of any account that drops into amber at least 90 days before renewal."
"Tell me about a time you saved an account that was about to churn" is almost always asked. Prepare a specific example with context, what you did, and whether you retained them. If you've lost a customer despite your best efforts, that's also a valid example: show what you learned.
Onboarding and adoption questions
"How do you run a customer onboarding?" Show that you have a structured process: kick-off call to align on goals and success metrics, a 30/60/90 day plan, regular check-ins, training milestones, and a formal "go live" or handoff point. Tie every step back to the customer's business outcome, not just product feature adoption.
"What do you do if a customer isn't using the product after onboarding?" Show that you diagnose before you prescribe: is it a technical barrier? A change management issue inside their company? A misalignment between what they bought and what they actually need? The response varies based on the root cause.
Commercial and expansion questions
"How do you approach upselling or expansion within an account?" The answer shows that you lead with customer value, not quota. You expand when you can genuinely show the customer an upgrade or add-on will help them achieve more of their goals. Tie expansion conversations to QBR reviews and milestone achievements, not to end-of-quarter pressure.
- Net Revenue Retention (NRR): revenue retained + expansion, as a % of starting ARR
- Gross Revenue Retention (GRR): revenue retained excluding expansion
- Time to Value (TTV): how quickly customers reach their first success milestone
- Health score: composite of usage, engagement, support, and relationship signals
- CSAT and NPS: customer satisfaction and advocacy metrics
Behavioral questions
"Tell me about a difficult customer conversation you had to lead"
S/T: "A key customer discovered a data discrepancy that had been causing incorrect reporting in their dashboard for six weeks. They were understandably angry and threatening to escalate to our CEO."
A: "I called the customer within 30 minutes of getting the alert. I didn't wait for engineering to confirm the fix first. I acknowledged the impact directly, took full ownership on behalf of the company, and committed to a detailed incident report within 24 hours. I kept them updated every four hours. Once the fix was deployed, I offered a service credit and arranged a call with our VP of Engineering to walk them through what happened and what we'd built to prevent it."
R: "They renewed six weeks later at a 15% expansion. The VP told me that our response to the incident was the reason they stayed. The customer became a reference account."