Sales

Bookings Backlog

Definition

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.

Why it matters

The single best read on next-period revenue predictability — high backlog means the revenue line for the coming quarter is largely contractual, not pipeline-dependent. Boards use it to gauge whether the team is selling for in-quarter close or building durable forward visibility.

How it's calculated

Bookings Backlog = TCV of all signed customer contracts − Revenue already recognized against those contracts. For a SaaS business, the dominant component is unrecognized subscription value on multi-month / multi-year contracts. Most-comparable public-disclosure equivalent: ASC 606 Remaining Performance Obligation (RPO).

How to interpret it

Backlog at year-end ≥ 1.0× the next year's ARR plan is the "visible year" threshold most boards expect at Series B+ subscription companies (industry folk-wisdom — no single published standard; the underlying conventions derive from ASC 606 RPO disclosure norms in public-SaaS filings). Backlog declining as a share of forward plan = visibility eroding; usually demands a sales-cycle or pipeline-coverage drill-down.

Source

Editorial definition As of 2026-04-01

imboard Editorial

Stage relevance

Series A Recommended Series B Core Series C Core Public Core

Typically owned by

Sales Finance

Related KPIs

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.

Recognized Revenue

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.

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.

Pipeline Value

Sum of the dollar value of all active deals currently in the sales pipeline — unweighted (raw deal-value sum, not probability-weighted). Boards read this as the top-of-funnel sufficiency check: if pipeline coverage (pipeline value / forecast) drops below the historic conversion-rate-implied threshold, the forecast is at risk. Common pitfall: confusing pipeline value with weighted forecast — the unweighted number always exceeds the weighted, often by 3–5× depending on the stage mix. Always report both and the implied conversion ratio.

Weighted Pipeline Forecast

Total pipeline value with each deal multiplied by its stage-based close probability — the canonical probabilistic forecast number. More forecasting-useful than raw pipeline value because it accounts for the conversion-likelihood mix across stages (early-stage deals weighted ~10–25%, mid-stage ~40–60%, late-stage ~70–90%). Common pitfall: using globally-flat probabilities (e.g. always 50%) instead of stage-specific calibrated ones — a reliable weighted forecast requires the stage probabilities to be back-tested against actual close rates from prior periods.

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