Sales

Recognized Revenue

Definition

Total revenue recognized under the company's accounting standard (ASC 606 / IFRS 15) during the period — distinct from billings (what was invoiced) and from ARR (an annualized run-rate snapshot). The income-statement top line and the basis for GAAP reporting. Common pitfall: confusing recognized revenue with ARR — for a company with mid-year contract starts, ARR exit will exceed recognized revenue for that year; the gap shrinks as the cohort matures. Boards reviewing a recognition-heavy investor pack should always see ARR alongside revenue to avoid mis-pricing growth.

Why it matters

The audited top line that anchors every GAAP-based valuation multiple, debt covenant, and tax filing. Boards need it to track the path to profitability (revenue − cost), which subscription ARR alone cannot show.

How it's calculated

Recognized Revenue = Sum of revenue earned during the period under ASC 606 (or IFRS 15). For subscription contracts, recognized ratably over the contract term; for usage / professional services, recognized as delivered. Distinct from bookings (signed contracts) and billings (invoiced amounts). Public-reporting companies should reconcile this line to the income statement.

How to interpret it

For an early subscription business, recognized revenue typically lags ARR by 20–40% on an annual basis depending on contract-start distribution within the year; the gap shrinks at steady state. A material divergence between recognized-revenue growth and ARR growth in the same period usually signals either a billing-policy change or a contract-mix shift (e.g. shift to upfront-billed multi-year).

Source

Editorial definition As of 2026-04-01

imboard Editorial

Stage relevance

Pre-Seed Recommended Seed Recommended Series A Core Series B Core Series C Core Public Core

Typically owned by

Finance

Related KPIs

ARR

Annual Recurring Revenue — the value of all recurring subscription revenue normalized to a one-year run-rate as of the period close. The headline operating metric for a subscription business; every growth and efficiency ratio (NRR, GRR, magic number, CAC payback, Rule of 40) is calibrated against it. Excludes one-time fees, professional services, and non-contractual usage. Common pitfall: confusing ARR (contracted recurring) with revenue (recognized) or with CARR (contracted incl. not-yet-live) — the SMSB standard draws sharp lines between them, and boards expect the same discipline. The KpiVarianceTable widget surfaces forecast / actual / variance / status / future-forecast columns against the same field.

CARR

Contracted Annual Recurring Revenue — recognized MRR × 12 plus the annualized value of contracts that are signed but not yet live (i.e. implementation, ramp, deferred-start). Per the SMSB standard, CARR sits between ARR (live only) and pipeline (unsigned) on the revenue-certainty spectrum: contractually committed but not yet delivered. Boards reading CARR > ARR gap can quantify the in-flight implementation backlog and the leading indicator of next-period ARR. Common pitfall: counting verbal commitments or LOIs as CARR — only signed contracts qualify under the SMSB definition.

Bookings Backlog

Total value of signed contracts that have not yet been recognized as revenue — future revenue locked into the books. Equivalent to "remaining performance obligation" (RPO) in public-SaaS disclosures, though private companies often track only the in-period portion. Board reads this as the visibility horizon: a healthy backlog means recognized revenue is largely already-sold and not dependent on Q-end heroics. Common pitfall: confusing backlog with pipeline — backlog is contractually committed, pipeline is unsigned opportunity. Surface the two on the same dashboard but never sum them.

Bookings Backlog Total

Total dollar value of all signed contracts that have not yet been recognized as revenue — the visibility window into future revenue at a point in time. Closely related to sales.bookings_backlog; this entry serves as the FlowSubform `start` slot for the per-period bookings-backlog flow (open + new bookings − recognized − cancellations = close). Common pitfall: omitting cancellations from the flow leaves a phantom backlog that overstates future revenue visibility — every backlog flow needs an explicit cancellation line even when zero.

Gross Margin

Recognized revenue minus cost of goods sold (COGS), divided by recognized revenue, expressed as a percentage. The single best read on whether the business model can ever generate operating leverage — a low gross margin caps every downstream efficiency metric (CAC payback, LTV/CAC, Rule of 40). For SaaS, COGS includes hosting, third-party software, customer support, and customer-success cost-of-service. Common pitfall: omitting customer success from COGS inflates the margin and breaks comparability with peer benchmarks. Anchored to KBCM/Sapphire SaaS Survey 2024 §Gross Margin.

Growth Rate (YoY)

Year-over-year percentage growth in ARR (or recognized revenue, if explicitly anchored) — comparing the current period to the equivalent period 12 months prior. The single most-watched investor metric and the largest single driver of SaaS valuation multiples. Common pitfall: comparing to the prior quarter (QoQ) and reporting it as "growth rate" — boards and investors mean YoY unless explicitly noted otherwise. Anchored to KBCM/Sapphire SaaS Survey 2024 §YoY ARR Growth for cross-company benchmarking.

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