Revenue operations (RevOps) aims to better align marketing, sales, and customer success functions to improve revenue growth. There has been a 300% increase in RevOps roles since 2019 as more companies implement RevOps strategies. RevOps breaks down silos between teams by unifying data, technology, and processes. Key performance indicators for RevOps include customer churn, revenue per employee, and account relationship score. Implementing RevOps can include mapping the customer journey, aligning teams and data at each stage, and making incremental improvements.
As businesses today are learning, complete and integrated data can yield far more value throughout the consumer journey, organizations looking to break through these data silos and are turning to RevOps (Revenue Operations), a game changer for customer lifecycle management and revenue growth.
This document discusses developing a dashboard of key performance indicators (KPIs) to help guide businesses. It recommends establishing KPIs that measure customer satisfaction, sales performance by channel, inventory performance, cash flow needs, and other important metrics. A KPI dashboard can visually display these critical metrics from each department on one online platform. This gives management an accurate picture of business performance while allowing them to drill down into details. Regular benchmarking of KPIs against past performance can help identify areas for improvement and increased efficiencies to drive profitability and customer retention.
Your VoC Programme is underperforming - and you know itFuturelab
Your VoC Programme is underperforming - and you know it.
This paper is not to convince you that you should have a Voice of the Customer (VoC) program. It’s 2020 – we assume you have this by now. If not, please let us know if you need arguments to convince your manager, we will help you.
However, 50% of all Voice of the Customer practitioners are unhappy with their programme1.
Fred Reichheld, the creator of the Net Promoter System, claims that 70% of companies do NPS wrong. And too many VoC programmes that we at Futurelab have ever encountered are struggling to reach their full potential or present a substantial ROI. Given the current focus on ROI in the evaluation of VoC (and in the broader sense CX) programmes, this is a dangerous position to find yourself.
In this paper, we show you the key steps you must take to ensure the success of your VoC programme – whether it is based on NPS, CES or other metrics.
Please join us for one of the webinars where I will give you cases, examples and best and worst practice stories to bring it all to life: https://lnkd.in/g8gNeSB
#customercentricity #cx #customerexperience #voiceofthecustomer #VoC
#NPS
Your VoC Programme is underperforming - do something about itFuturelab
This paper is not to convince you that you should have a Voice of the Customer (VoC) program. It’s 2020 – we assume you have this by now. If not, please let us know if you need arguments to convince your manager, we will help you.
However, 50% of all Voice of the Customer practitioners are unhappy with their programme1.
Fred Reichheld, the creator of the Net Promoter System, claims that 70% of companies do NPS wrong. And too many VoC programmes that we at Futurelab have ever encountered are struggling to reach their full potential or present a substantial ROI. Given the current focus on ROI in the evaluation of VoC (and in the broader sense CX) programmes, this is a dangerous position to find yourself.
In this paper, we show you the key steps you must take to ensure the success of your VoC programme – whether it is based on NPS, CES or other metrics.
Please join us for one of the webinars where I will give you cases, examples and best and worst practice stories to bring it all to life: https://lnkd.in/g8gNeSB
Digital Leadership Interview : Claus Von Riegen, VP and Head of BMI at SAPCapgemini
"Disrupt yourself before being disrupted by others. But to make this happen, you have to create a separate team with the explicit mandate to disrupt the business and make it a priority."
This document provides advice for technology solution providers on expanding their service offerings to include an "as-a-service" model. Some key points:
- Moving to an as-a-service model with recurring monthly revenue from services like SaaS and HaaS can provide more predictable cash flow and make businesses more profitable and competitive over time.
- Adding new practice areas like cloud services, managed services, and security monitoring allows businesses to develop recurring revenue streams and reduce customer churn. This builds a more valuable legacy that is easier to sell.
- Transforming capital expenditures into affordable monthly operating expenses for clients through an as-a-service model can help close more deals.
- Establishing recurring
Secrets to Revolutionizing Enterprise Sales Growth with End-to-End RevOps wit...saastr
We are amidst the emergence of a new enterprise buyer era, where customers have the power and are engaging in more places than ever before. Companies need to reassess their business models, which requires best-in-breed solutions to drive adoption and accelerate growth. This is an age where the first vendor to respond to the customer wins. It’s a world where Gartner predicts that 75% of the highest growth companies will need to deploy revenue operations by 2025.
In this session, Calendly Chief Revenue Officer Kate Ahlering will advocate for embracing an accelerated sales strategy to support faster company growth and what this looks like. She will share insights into the end-to-end enterprise sales processes, playbooks, and tools to lead competitive revenue operations in the new world of work.
Understanding the Financial Health of your Subscription BusinessTotango
Industry leaders, Zuora and Totango, present which metrics truly give an accurate picture of the health of your subscription business. Which metrics should you calculate and optimize on - ARR, GEI, CRC or other ratios?
Chief Financial Officer, Tyler Sloat from Zuora shares 3 metrics they measure for their company and track against other best-in-class subscription companies. Chief Marketing Officer, Kaiser Mulla-Feroze from Totango, also presents a couple key metrics he finds missing from the boardroom discussions.
Visit totango.com to view the entire webinar and hear their insightful commentary that accompanies these slides and Q&A.
As businesses today are learning, complete and integrated data can yield far more value throughout the consumer journey, organizations looking to break through these data silos and are turning to RevOps (Revenue Operations), a game changer for customer lifecycle management and revenue growth.
This document discusses developing a dashboard of key performance indicators (KPIs) to help guide businesses. It recommends establishing KPIs that measure customer satisfaction, sales performance by channel, inventory performance, cash flow needs, and other important metrics. A KPI dashboard can visually display these critical metrics from each department on one online platform. This gives management an accurate picture of business performance while allowing them to drill down into details. Regular benchmarking of KPIs against past performance can help identify areas for improvement and increased efficiencies to drive profitability and customer retention.
Your VoC Programme is underperforming - and you know itFuturelab
Your VoC Programme is underperforming - and you know it.
This paper is not to convince you that you should have a Voice of the Customer (VoC) program. It’s 2020 – we assume you have this by now. If not, please let us know if you need arguments to convince your manager, we will help you.
However, 50% of all Voice of the Customer practitioners are unhappy with their programme1.
Fred Reichheld, the creator of the Net Promoter System, claims that 70% of companies do NPS wrong. And too many VoC programmes that we at Futurelab have ever encountered are struggling to reach their full potential or present a substantial ROI. Given the current focus on ROI in the evaluation of VoC (and in the broader sense CX) programmes, this is a dangerous position to find yourself.
In this paper, we show you the key steps you must take to ensure the success of your VoC programme – whether it is based on NPS, CES or other metrics.
Please join us for one of the webinars where I will give you cases, examples and best and worst practice stories to bring it all to life: https://lnkd.in/g8gNeSB
#customercentricity #cx #customerexperience #voiceofthecustomer #VoC
#NPS
Your VoC Programme is underperforming - do something about itFuturelab
This paper is not to convince you that you should have a Voice of the Customer (VoC) program. It’s 2020 – we assume you have this by now. If not, please let us know if you need arguments to convince your manager, we will help you.
However, 50% of all Voice of the Customer practitioners are unhappy with their programme1.
Fred Reichheld, the creator of the Net Promoter System, claims that 70% of companies do NPS wrong. And too many VoC programmes that we at Futurelab have ever encountered are struggling to reach their full potential or present a substantial ROI. Given the current focus on ROI in the evaluation of VoC (and in the broader sense CX) programmes, this is a dangerous position to find yourself.
In this paper, we show you the key steps you must take to ensure the success of your VoC programme – whether it is based on NPS, CES or other metrics.
Please join us for one of the webinars where I will give you cases, examples and best and worst practice stories to bring it all to life: https://lnkd.in/g8gNeSB
Digital Leadership Interview : Claus Von Riegen, VP and Head of BMI at SAPCapgemini
"Disrupt yourself before being disrupted by others. But to make this happen, you have to create a separate team with the explicit mandate to disrupt the business and make it a priority."
This document provides advice for technology solution providers on expanding their service offerings to include an "as-a-service" model. Some key points:
- Moving to an as-a-service model with recurring monthly revenue from services like SaaS and HaaS can provide more predictable cash flow and make businesses more profitable and competitive over time.
- Adding new practice areas like cloud services, managed services, and security monitoring allows businesses to develop recurring revenue streams and reduce customer churn. This builds a more valuable legacy that is easier to sell.
- Transforming capital expenditures into affordable monthly operating expenses for clients through an as-a-service model can help close more deals.
- Establishing recurring
Secrets to Revolutionizing Enterprise Sales Growth with End-to-End RevOps wit...saastr
We are amidst the emergence of a new enterprise buyer era, where customers have the power and are engaging in more places than ever before. Companies need to reassess their business models, which requires best-in-breed solutions to drive adoption and accelerate growth. This is an age where the first vendor to respond to the customer wins. It’s a world where Gartner predicts that 75% of the highest growth companies will need to deploy revenue operations by 2025.
In this session, Calendly Chief Revenue Officer Kate Ahlering will advocate for embracing an accelerated sales strategy to support faster company growth and what this looks like. She will share insights into the end-to-end enterprise sales processes, playbooks, and tools to lead competitive revenue operations in the new world of work.
Understanding the Financial Health of your Subscription BusinessTotango
Industry leaders, Zuora and Totango, present which metrics truly give an accurate picture of the health of your subscription business. Which metrics should you calculate and optimize on - ARR, GEI, CRC or other ratios?
Chief Financial Officer, Tyler Sloat from Zuora shares 3 metrics they measure for their company and track against other best-in-class subscription companies. Chief Marketing Officer, Kaiser Mulla-Feroze from Totango, also presents a couple key metrics he finds missing from the boardroom discussions.
Visit totango.com to view the entire webinar and hear their insightful commentary that accompanies these slides and Q&A.
Revenue Operations centralizes the operational functions of all revenue focused groups across an org such as Marketing, Sales, and Customer Experience. Business Operations take this one step further and encompasses Product and internal operations groups such as Human Resources and Finance.
In this presentation, Joe Gelata reviews both models and how they can help increase alignment and effectiveness of teams across the organization:
- Delivering critical insights and business intelligence from across the business and market.
- Implementing process improvements to gain efficiency.
- Managing and integrating cross-function business technologies and data.
- Enabling employees and partners with knowledge and tools to do their jobs better.
The document discusses the growing trend of recurring revenue business models and why it presents opportunities for companies. Key points:
- Recurring revenue models provide predictable cash flows that investors reward with higher valuations.
- New technologies like cloud computing and consumer preferences for subscription services have enabled more companies to adopt recurring revenue models.
- Companies can gain competitive advantages by using recurring models to reach new customers, differentiate themselves, and disrupt existing industries.
The document discusses the growing trend of recurring revenue business models and why it presents opportunities for companies. Key points:
- Recurring revenue models provide predictable cash flows that investors reward with higher valuations.
- New technologies like cloud computing and consumer preferences for subscription services have enabled more companies to adopt recurring revenue models.
- Companies can gain competitive advantages by using recurring models to reach new customers, differentiate themselves, and disrupt existing industries.
This document discusses Revenue Performance Management (RPM) as a strategy for managing a company's interactions with buyers through the entire purchase process to enable predictable, rapid and profitable revenue growth. The key benefits of RPM include helping businesses grow faster, better forecast long-term revenue, optimize resource allocation, and spot revenue outliers. RPM has emerged as a strategy due to trends enabling a 360 degree view of customers, measuring sales and marketing activities, and scaling personalized interactions. Successful RPM requires modeling the integrated sales and marketing funnel, continuous improvement through benchmarking, making data actionable through deep analytics, and long-term forecasting to identify new opportunities.
The document outlines an 8-step process for organizations to build a data-driven culture centered around web analytics. It discusses establishing urgency, gaining executive buy-in, developing a vision with analytics at the core, internal communication strategies, identifying quick wins, continuous improvement processes, and routinely using data to drive insights. Organizations should assess where they are along a 5 stage path from just starting to use analytics tools to having fully integrated data systems that continuously deliver insights.
This document outlines a Lean approach to marketing and sales. It describes using value streams to map out the customer journey, with pillars representing different stages like collaboration, sales, and repeat business. Value stream teams focus on understanding customer needs and delivering value. Kanban boards are used to visualize workflow and identify bottlenecks. The document also discusses using tools like SWOT analysis and a capabilities matrix to develop strategies, and applying principles of continuous improvement, respect for people, and flow to marketing processes.
[DSC MENA 24] Ahmed_Refaay_- Where to Start Your Data Analytics Journey.pptxDataScienceConferenc1
The world of data analytics is booming, offering exciting opportunities to those who can unlock the power of information. This talk will equip you with a roadmap to kickstart your data analytics journey. We'll explore three key areas to empower your beginning: Business Acumen: Gaining a business understanding is crucial. We'll discuss how to translate business problems into data-driven solutions, ensuring your analysis is relevant and impactful. Six Sigma Foundations: This problem-solving methodology can be a valuable asset. We'll delve into the basic principles of Six Sigma and how they can improve your data analysis approach, leading to more efficient and accurate insights. Data Analytics Fundamentals: We'll introduce essential data analysis concepts like data wrangling, visualization, and basic statistics. Understanding these fundamentals will equip you to handle and interpret data effectively. By combining business acumen, Six Sigma principles, and foundational data analysis skills, you'll be well-positioned to embark on a rewarding data analytics journey. This talk will provide a clear starting point and ignite your curiosity to explore this dynamic field further. at the end we shall share some business cases from our success stories.
How to create and measure a recurring revenue businessLeandro Faria
This document discusses key metrics for recurring revenue and subscription businesses. It identifies Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR) as the most important metric, measuring predictable recurring revenue from customers. It also discusses bookings, revenues, billings, customer acquisition cost (CAC), customer lifetime value (LTV), and churn as essential metrics to track at different stages of growth. The right metrics to focus on depend on the company's stage, from acquiring first customers to managing growth.
This document provides an overview of Oracle Sales Cloud and its capabilities for enabling modern sales. It highlights common pain points customers face around sales tools not addressing current challenges, declining pipeline and sales productivity. It then outlines Oracle Sales Cloud's solutions such as empowering mobile and productive reps, providing insight-driven 360-degree customer views, and enabling collaborative selling. The document also includes customer examples and competitive differentiators compared to Salesforce.
Key_Findings_and_Trends_from_SAP_Ariba_Benchmarking_SAP_Ariba.pdfOzge KAYA
This document summarizes key findings from SAP Ariba's benchmarking data from 2015-2017. The top findings include: procurement is expanding its influence over spend; capturing savings is important but broader value should be tracked; digital procurement adoption is increasing; transactional efficiency allows "always on" operations; risk management needs more focus; and compliance impacts bottom-line savings. Industry-specific oil and gas data shows areas of strength and opportunities for improvement in procurement metrics.
This document discusses the importance of revenue performance management (RPM) for marketing departments. It notes that companies that adopt RPM see better revenue growth and follow a more optimized process that links marketing and sales. RPM provides analytics that give leadership a unified view of opportunities throughout the buying cycle. When marketing is accountable for revenue goals, companies benefit from increased lead generation, faster deal cycles, and higher pipeline conversion rates.
The document summarizes an inaugural RevOps HubSpot User Group meeting. It includes an agenda for the meeting which covers introductions, definitions of RevOps, HubSpot's growth platform, and a question and answer session. Short biographies are provided for the two hosts, Christopher Antonopoulos and Kyle Jepson. Jepson then discusses what Revenue Operations is and its importance in seamless customer experiences, scaling businesses, and breaking linear growth. An overview of the Revenue Operations Certification is also presented. Finally, the meeting wraps up by inviting attendees to future RevOps HUG meetings and providing contact information.
This document discusses customer success strategies and metrics for ad tech companies. It includes perspectives from leaders at LiveRamp, Rocket Fuel, PubMatic, and Lotame. They discuss how they define customer success, the types of customers they have, how they measure success, and how they are growing their customer success organizations. Key points include focusing on renewals, upsells, customer happiness ratings, onboarding processes, account planning, and using metrics like net promoter scores.
SALESFind the Right Metrics for Your Sales Teamby Fran.docxanhlodge
SALES
Find the Right Metrics for
Your Sales Team
by Frank V. Cespedes and Bob Marsh
AUGUST 22, 2017
“What gets measured gets managed” is a longstanding business aphorism. But today’s
sales technologies enable companies to measure almost anything, which leads many
managers to try to measure everything. As a consequence, managers don’t have a
NO THANKS, I WANT TO CONTINUE READING.
Get the latest from HBR emailed to your inbox.
Sign up now
clear sense of what is really driving sales in their business, while salespeople, who are
inundated with dozens of metrics, get lost in the day-to-day noise. The result is poor
management of what matters.
The challenge, of course, is to decide on the right metrics. Consider the results of a
survey of key performance indicators (KPIs) being used by more than 800 sales teams
across industries. Wins are the most common metric used across sales roles and
industries. On average, firms measure closed deals and rep production against quota
monthly, which isn’t surprising. Selling is a performance art, and “making the
number” should be the goal of any sales organization, but a closed deal is an outcome
and a lagging indicator; it can’t be used by the salesperson or sales manager to
improve future outcomes.
This is why leading indicators such as demos, web registrations, calls, or C-suite-level
meetings are often more instructive. Instead of reviewing historical results, which are
beyond a rep’s control, they offer real-time feedback on whether salespeople are
spending their time and efforts in the best way. Leading indicators are within a rep’s
control. If salespeople are behind on a key indicator, for example, they and their
managers can change behavior to increase the probability of success.
Deconstruct Your Sales Funnel
In order to improve sales outcomes and clarify the relevant sales KPIs in your
business, you need to deconstruct your sales funnel.
Here’s a typical flow of activities:
Prospecting: cold calls, email, phone, LinkedIn, etc.
Qualifying: initial conversations aimed at separating the merely interested from the NO THANKS, I WANT TO CONTINUE READING.
Get the latest from HBR emailed to your inbox.
Sign up now
actual prospects and determining who is a qualified opportunity
Advancing opportunities: discussions with qualified opportunities to communicate
the value of your product to the right contacts
Closing: final steps in negotiating and winning the business
Post-sale: service, order fulfillment, possible customization, and onboarding activities
to ensure the client is successful
Every company is different, but every business has a sales conversion funnel. Some
funnels are relatively short and simple, while others are long and complex. Knowing
what type of funnel applies in your business is essential to clarifying key metrics and
performance management practices, including sales incentives.
Consider one SaaS company that sells .
The document provides an overview of defining success metrics using the 7 Domains framework. It discusses the 7 Domains, which are Vision, Metrics, Roadmap, Governance, Adoption, Process, and Technology. The agenda includes an overview of the 7 Domains, explaining why defining success metrics is important, discussing business goals, value drivers, metrics/KPIs, and capability mapping. It emphasizes aligning metrics with business objectives and value drivers, defining relevant KPIs to measure success, implementing KPIs with supporting data and buy-in, and optimizing KPIs through feedback.
The document outlines the top 10 business goals for small and midsize companies as identified in a survey. The goals are: 1) Acquire new customers, 2) Improve revenue growth, 3) Increase efficiency and productivity, 4) Reduce costs, 5) Enable growth while maintaining high quality, 6) Nurture innovation, 7) Promote customer loyalty, 8) Improve cash flow, 9) Increase staff retention and development, and 10) Enhance competitive advantage. For each goal, the document provides tips and examples on how companies can achieve those goals.
Products and Services Business Coachingbrentalistair
The document describes business coaching products and services offered by Mars Venus Coaching, including one-on-one coaching, group programs, seminars, and workshops. The flagship program is one-on-one coaching available weekly or bi-weekly that can be customized. Seminars cover topics like marketing, sales conversion, increasing customer purchase frequency and transaction value, and improving profit margins. A 13-week group program called Foundations to Business Success addresses the 5 Fundamental Principles of Business Success over its sessions.
Growing business performance indicators: what to measureDaniel Plume
This document discusses key business performance indicators that small and growing businesses should measure. It outlines several sales performance metrics to track, including sales revenues, customer acquisition cost, building a typical customer profile, and size of gross margin. It also discusses measuring the sales funnel. For service performance, the document recommends measuring speed of service, cost to serve, customer loyalty and retention rates, and implementing a consistent customer service measurement. The overall goal is for small businesses to focus on the most important metrics that will help them navigate growth and scale their business successfully.
LSA17: Best Practices for Local Advertiser Retention (Green Banana, Boostabil...Localogy
The document provides best practices for advertiser retention based on research conducted with small and medium sized businesses. The research found that the top reasons advertisers cancelled were poor results, poor customer service, and high costs. Additional findings indicated that customers cared more about customer experience than the product or sales. The company analyzed the findings and implemented solutions like improved communication of success milestones, personalized customer service, and entry-level pricing packages. As a result, the company saw a reduction in churn, happier employees and clients, improved brand, and a more energetic company culture.
Fueling AI with Great Data with Airbyte WebinarZilliz
This talk will focus on how to collect data from a variety of sources, leveraging this data for RAG and other GenAI use cases, and finally charting your course to productionalization.
Revenue Operations centralizes the operational functions of all revenue focused groups across an org such as Marketing, Sales, and Customer Experience. Business Operations take this one step further and encompasses Product and internal operations groups such as Human Resources and Finance.
In this presentation, Joe Gelata reviews both models and how they can help increase alignment and effectiveness of teams across the organization:
- Delivering critical insights and business intelligence from across the business and market.
- Implementing process improvements to gain efficiency.
- Managing and integrating cross-function business technologies and data.
- Enabling employees and partners with knowledge and tools to do their jobs better.
The document discusses the growing trend of recurring revenue business models and why it presents opportunities for companies. Key points:
- Recurring revenue models provide predictable cash flows that investors reward with higher valuations.
- New technologies like cloud computing and consumer preferences for subscription services have enabled more companies to adopt recurring revenue models.
- Companies can gain competitive advantages by using recurring models to reach new customers, differentiate themselves, and disrupt existing industries.
The document discusses the growing trend of recurring revenue business models and why it presents opportunities for companies. Key points:
- Recurring revenue models provide predictable cash flows that investors reward with higher valuations.
- New technologies like cloud computing and consumer preferences for subscription services have enabled more companies to adopt recurring revenue models.
- Companies can gain competitive advantages by using recurring models to reach new customers, differentiate themselves, and disrupt existing industries.
This document discusses Revenue Performance Management (RPM) as a strategy for managing a company's interactions with buyers through the entire purchase process to enable predictable, rapid and profitable revenue growth. The key benefits of RPM include helping businesses grow faster, better forecast long-term revenue, optimize resource allocation, and spot revenue outliers. RPM has emerged as a strategy due to trends enabling a 360 degree view of customers, measuring sales and marketing activities, and scaling personalized interactions. Successful RPM requires modeling the integrated sales and marketing funnel, continuous improvement through benchmarking, making data actionable through deep analytics, and long-term forecasting to identify new opportunities.
The document outlines an 8-step process for organizations to build a data-driven culture centered around web analytics. It discusses establishing urgency, gaining executive buy-in, developing a vision with analytics at the core, internal communication strategies, identifying quick wins, continuous improvement processes, and routinely using data to drive insights. Organizations should assess where they are along a 5 stage path from just starting to use analytics tools to having fully integrated data systems that continuously deliver insights.
This document outlines a Lean approach to marketing and sales. It describes using value streams to map out the customer journey, with pillars representing different stages like collaboration, sales, and repeat business. Value stream teams focus on understanding customer needs and delivering value. Kanban boards are used to visualize workflow and identify bottlenecks. The document also discusses using tools like SWOT analysis and a capabilities matrix to develop strategies, and applying principles of continuous improvement, respect for people, and flow to marketing processes.
[DSC MENA 24] Ahmed_Refaay_- Where to Start Your Data Analytics Journey.pptxDataScienceConferenc1
The world of data analytics is booming, offering exciting opportunities to those who can unlock the power of information. This talk will equip you with a roadmap to kickstart your data analytics journey. We'll explore three key areas to empower your beginning: Business Acumen: Gaining a business understanding is crucial. We'll discuss how to translate business problems into data-driven solutions, ensuring your analysis is relevant and impactful. Six Sigma Foundations: This problem-solving methodology can be a valuable asset. We'll delve into the basic principles of Six Sigma and how they can improve your data analysis approach, leading to more efficient and accurate insights. Data Analytics Fundamentals: We'll introduce essential data analysis concepts like data wrangling, visualization, and basic statistics. Understanding these fundamentals will equip you to handle and interpret data effectively. By combining business acumen, Six Sigma principles, and foundational data analysis skills, you'll be well-positioned to embark on a rewarding data analytics journey. This talk will provide a clear starting point and ignite your curiosity to explore this dynamic field further. at the end we shall share some business cases from our success stories.
How to create and measure a recurring revenue businessLeandro Faria
This document discusses key metrics for recurring revenue and subscription businesses. It identifies Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR) as the most important metric, measuring predictable recurring revenue from customers. It also discusses bookings, revenues, billings, customer acquisition cost (CAC), customer lifetime value (LTV), and churn as essential metrics to track at different stages of growth. The right metrics to focus on depend on the company's stage, from acquiring first customers to managing growth.
This document provides an overview of Oracle Sales Cloud and its capabilities for enabling modern sales. It highlights common pain points customers face around sales tools not addressing current challenges, declining pipeline and sales productivity. It then outlines Oracle Sales Cloud's solutions such as empowering mobile and productive reps, providing insight-driven 360-degree customer views, and enabling collaborative selling. The document also includes customer examples and competitive differentiators compared to Salesforce.
Key_Findings_and_Trends_from_SAP_Ariba_Benchmarking_SAP_Ariba.pdfOzge KAYA
This document summarizes key findings from SAP Ariba's benchmarking data from 2015-2017. The top findings include: procurement is expanding its influence over spend; capturing savings is important but broader value should be tracked; digital procurement adoption is increasing; transactional efficiency allows "always on" operations; risk management needs more focus; and compliance impacts bottom-line savings. Industry-specific oil and gas data shows areas of strength and opportunities for improvement in procurement metrics.
This document discusses the importance of revenue performance management (RPM) for marketing departments. It notes that companies that adopt RPM see better revenue growth and follow a more optimized process that links marketing and sales. RPM provides analytics that give leadership a unified view of opportunities throughout the buying cycle. When marketing is accountable for revenue goals, companies benefit from increased lead generation, faster deal cycles, and higher pipeline conversion rates.
The document summarizes an inaugural RevOps HubSpot User Group meeting. It includes an agenda for the meeting which covers introductions, definitions of RevOps, HubSpot's growth platform, and a question and answer session. Short biographies are provided for the two hosts, Christopher Antonopoulos and Kyle Jepson. Jepson then discusses what Revenue Operations is and its importance in seamless customer experiences, scaling businesses, and breaking linear growth. An overview of the Revenue Operations Certification is also presented. Finally, the meeting wraps up by inviting attendees to future RevOps HUG meetings and providing contact information.
This document discusses customer success strategies and metrics for ad tech companies. It includes perspectives from leaders at LiveRamp, Rocket Fuel, PubMatic, and Lotame. They discuss how they define customer success, the types of customers they have, how they measure success, and how they are growing their customer success organizations. Key points include focusing on renewals, upsells, customer happiness ratings, onboarding processes, account planning, and using metrics like net promoter scores.
SALESFind the Right Metrics for Your Sales Teamby Fran.docxanhlodge
SALES
Find the Right Metrics for
Your Sales Team
by Frank V. Cespedes and Bob Marsh
AUGUST 22, 2017
“What gets measured gets managed” is a longstanding business aphorism. But today’s
sales technologies enable companies to measure almost anything, which leads many
managers to try to measure everything. As a consequence, managers don’t have a
NO THANKS, I WANT TO CONTINUE READING.
Get the latest from HBR emailed to your inbox.
Sign up now
clear sense of what is really driving sales in their business, while salespeople, who are
inundated with dozens of metrics, get lost in the day-to-day noise. The result is poor
management of what matters.
The challenge, of course, is to decide on the right metrics. Consider the results of a
survey of key performance indicators (KPIs) being used by more than 800 sales teams
across industries. Wins are the most common metric used across sales roles and
industries. On average, firms measure closed deals and rep production against quota
monthly, which isn’t surprising. Selling is a performance art, and “making the
number” should be the goal of any sales organization, but a closed deal is an outcome
and a lagging indicator; it can’t be used by the salesperson or sales manager to
improve future outcomes.
This is why leading indicators such as demos, web registrations, calls, or C-suite-level
meetings are often more instructive. Instead of reviewing historical results, which are
beyond a rep’s control, they offer real-time feedback on whether salespeople are
spending their time and efforts in the best way. Leading indicators are within a rep’s
control. If salespeople are behind on a key indicator, for example, they and their
managers can change behavior to increase the probability of success.
Deconstruct Your Sales Funnel
In order to improve sales outcomes and clarify the relevant sales KPIs in your
business, you need to deconstruct your sales funnel.
Here’s a typical flow of activities:
Prospecting: cold calls, email, phone, LinkedIn, etc.
Qualifying: initial conversations aimed at separating the merely interested from the NO THANKS, I WANT TO CONTINUE READING.
Get the latest from HBR emailed to your inbox.
Sign up now
actual prospects and determining who is a qualified opportunity
Advancing opportunities: discussions with qualified opportunities to communicate
the value of your product to the right contacts
Closing: final steps in negotiating and winning the business
Post-sale: service, order fulfillment, possible customization, and onboarding activities
to ensure the client is successful
Every company is different, but every business has a sales conversion funnel. Some
funnels are relatively short and simple, while others are long and complex. Knowing
what type of funnel applies in your business is essential to clarifying key metrics and
performance management practices, including sales incentives.
Consider one SaaS company that sells .
The document provides an overview of defining success metrics using the 7 Domains framework. It discusses the 7 Domains, which are Vision, Metrics, Roadmap, Governance, Adoption, Process, and Technology. The agenda includes an overview of the 7 Domains, explaining why defining success metrics is important, discussing business goals, value drivers, metrics/KPIs, and capability mapping. It emphasizes aligning metrics with business objectives and value drivers, defining relevant KPIs to measure success, implementing KPIs with supporting data and buy-in, and optimizing KPIs through feedback.
The document outlines the top 10 business goals for small and midsize companies as identified in a survey. The goals are: 1) Acquire new customers, 2) Improve revenue growth, 3) Increase efficiency and productivity, 4) Reduce costs, 5) Enable growth while maintaining high quality, 6) Nurture innovation, 7) Promote customer loyalty, 8) Improve cash flow, 9) Increase staff retention and development, and 10) Enhance competitive advantage. For each goal, the document provides tips and examples on how companies can achieve those goals.
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2. In a nutshell, what is RevOps?
Growth of RevOps in businesses
The origin of RevOps: 6 ways SaaS has
changed relationships between customer
and business
How to break down silos for go-to-market
teams
The 5 main benefits of RevOps
The pillars of RevOps
Key performance indicators (KPIs) for
RevOps
How to build a revenue machine with
HubSpot
Incremental gains in RevOps
WHAT IS REVOPS & WHY
YOU NEED IT
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
BUILD YOUR REVENUE MACHINE
1.
2.
3.
7 COMMON REVOPS CHALLENGES
REVOPS FAQS
SUMMARY
4. Picture an orchestra:
a collection of individuals who all need to work in unison to achieve a result -
a pleasant melody. Can you imagine every chair playing their own tune, in
their own time at their own volume? That’s most organisations. But RevOps
(much like an orchestral conductor) unites disparate business functions, to
get them working in unison to achieve a collective result more powerful than
their collective parts.
It’s a framework to connect your technology, processes and strategy and create a frictionless
revenue-generating machine while delighting your customer at every stage.
Traditionally, due to the nature of trying to build a successful company in ‘real-time’,
businesses have been a collection of interconnected but disparate departments. Yes, they all
have the same goal (the company’s ultimate success), but they also have their own individual
needs and constraints. Likewise, the larger they get, each department also has its own ‘Head
of’, Vice President, or Director with a unique approach.
For example, in most organisations, sales operations report to the Head of Sales, marketing
operations report to the Head of Marketing, and Customer Success to, well, you get the idea.
Each team has its own set of goals, tools and priorities. And, for the most part, it works. But
the challenge with this way of working is that disparate systems mean friction points where
sales conversions are potentially lost for a variety of reasons.
Through better collaboration and visibility, RevOps looks to close the numerous and various
gaps across people, data, processes, technology, and team accountability through improved
operational efficiency. This will drive a more cohesive business by unifying teams through
shared goals and by sharing information.
WHAT IS REVOPS & WHY YOU NEED IT /
1 - IN A NUTSHELL, WHAT IS
REVOPS?
Revenue operations (or RevOps) better align
Marketing, Sales, and Customer Success functions
to encourage better revenue growth across an
organisation.
5. Short answer, It’s not easy and requires an in-depth examination of your entire business,
focusing on the good, the bad and the downright ugly. But the improved financial results are
well worth the effort.
M
a
r
k
e
t
i
n
g
O
p
s
C
u
s
t
o
m
e
r
S
u
c
c
e
s
s
O
p
s
SalesOps
REVENUE
OPERATIONS
SO, HOW DO WE GET TO THIS UTOPIAN STATE OF OPTIMAL GROWTH?
6. 10-20% increase in sales productivity
15% increase in profitability
19% increase in speed of growth
71% improvement in stock performance
100%-200% increase in digital marketing ROI
Impressive, right? But what if the system is working well and delivering the results we hear
you say? Well, if it ain't broke, don’t fix it. Right?
Not quite. According to HubSpot, 60% of current operations professionals end up repeating or
double handling business tasks due to a lack of team alignment. This means targets get
missed, goals aren’t reached and stakeholders across the board get frustrated. It’s a lose/lose
for everybody.
But once you get the orchestra all playing the same song, your business will thrive.
WHAT IS REVOPS & WHY YOU NEED IT /
2 - GROWTH OF REVOPS
IN BUSINESSES
Since 2019, there’s been a 300% increase in
RevOps-related roles on LinkedIn and a 57%
increase in companies implementing RevOps
strategies or building RevOps teams.
ACCORDING TO A RECENT HUBSPOT BLOG, COMPANIES THAT IMPLEMENT
REVOPS HAVE SEEN THE FOLLOWING IMPACT:
7. To provide this type of customer-first experience, you’ll need to spend some cash upfront. But,
the money you’ll likely spend to secure a customer (or the cost of acquisition) is only a small
fraction of what you can expect to earn from them over the course of their customer lifecycle.
Once you recognise and accept this shift in customer focus, you’ll be able to shift your energy
towards fostering customer loyalty and driving more revenue.
Most revenue is achieved after the point-of-sale.
Traditional funnels are dead, and now customer journeys are non-linear.
Customers now have thousands of options at their fingertips.
Customers now consistently demand a more personal, frictionless experience.
There are typically more stakeholders involved in a purchase decision.
The rate of change is ever increasing.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
WHAT IS REVOPS & WHY YOU NEED IT /
3 - THE ORIGIN OF REVOPS: 6 WAYS
SAAS HAS CHANGED RELATIONSHIPS
BETWEEN CUSTOMER AND BUSINESS
In most business deals, the greatest revenue is
often achieved after the point of sale. I.e., delighting
customers through a range of appropriate cross-
selling, up-selling and re-selling opportunities after
the initial conversion.
THESE ARE THE 6 MAIN WAYS SAAS HAS ALTERED RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN
CUSTOMERS AND THE BUSINESSES THEY BUY FROM:
8. Now let’s explore the same journey from a RevOps position:
As you can see, once RevOps is at play in the go-to-market arm of a business, it’s easier to
recognise sales, marketing, and customer success as a single function with a clear alignment
between data, technology, and processes.
WHAT IS REVOPS & WHY YOU NEED IT /
4 - HOW TO BREAK DOWN SILOS
FOR GO-TO-MARKET TEAMS
MARKETING OPS SALES OPS CUSTOMER SERVICE OPS
Data Data Data
Technology Technology Technology
Process Process Process
BEFORE REVOPS
Historically, most organisations separate their Marketing, Sales and Customer Success
departments as per the diagram above. But as you can see, this often leads to siloed data
sets, tech stacks and processes.
And the issue isn’t just the siloing of data. It also creates at least three clear friction points for
the customer as they pass from one function to the other as they move through the sales
process.
AFTER REVOPS
MARKETING OPS SALES OPS CUSTOMER SERVICE OPS
RevOps
Data
Technology
Process
9. Now let’s see how Marketing, Sales & Customer Service can be better connected through
RevOps.
It’s important to note RevOps doesn’t sit above or below the existing VPs of Sales, Marketing
or Customer Success. The role acts as a unifying entity to ensure the tools and processes of
each are best aligned for maximum results.
By having an overview of all depts, RevOps can spot and fix the numerous friction and drop-
off points that siloed growth functions often have.
VP
MARKETING
VP
SALES
VP
CUSTOMER SUCCESS
Demand Gen Marketing Ops Sales Staff Sales Ops Customer
Support
Customer Ops
Product
Marketing
Marketing Tools Sales Process
Management
Sales Tools Customer
Success
Managers
Customer Tools
Corp Comms Business
Analyst
Lead
Management
Sales
Enablement
Professional
services
Customer
Marketing
VP
MARKETING
VP
SALES
VP
CUSTOMER SUCCESS
Demand Gen Marketing Ops Sales Staff Sales Ops Customer
Support
Customer Ops
Product
Marketing
Marketing Tools Sales Process
Management
Sales Tools Customer
Success
Managers
Customer Tools
Corp Comms Business
Analyst
Lead
Management
Sales
Enablement
Professional
services
Customer
Marketing
VP REVOPS
Operations
Alignment
Customer
Journey
Alignment
Tool
Alignment
Data
Alignment
Insights
Management
Unified
reporting
EXISTING ROLES & RESPONSIBILITIES
REVOPS MODEL
10. FROM TO
Time wasted comparing info Data-driven decision-making and better collaboration
Tension created in hand-offs with “it’s not me, it’s
them” attitude
Complete visibility and accountability across all teams
Individual reports and processes Single source of truth shared by everyone
Subjective forecasting and many “make or break”
months
More consistent and predictable pipeline and business
growth
Everyone working for themselves in isolation
Better customer experience leading to higher win rates
and faster sales cycles
Making better decisions faster
Getting the right data in hand to make those decisions
Building trust and predictable pipeline
How having a codified, replicable process will help deals close faster
How RevOps will help the organisation build a consistent approach to scaling
In short, think of these benefits as:
But selling a fresh idea as bold as RevOps to sceptical colleagues or a resistant board isn’t
easy. Change can be hard work and a ‘No’ is always easier to get than a ‘Yes’ when it comes
to asking for extra budgets for fundamental business change.
With is in mind, there are two key points you should try and remember to communicate when
approaching your go-to-market teams with the idea of RevOps:
1.
2.
WHAT IS REVOPS & WHY YOU NEED IT /
5 - THE 5 MAIN BENEFITS OF REVOPS
11. DATA
Data health, data infrastructure, data administration,
data stewardship
CUSTOMER PROCESSES
Customer journey, sales process, segmentation,
QBRs, renewal, expansion
KPIS AND REPORTING
KPIs, business development, pipeline management, forecasting,
account retention, account expansion, sales performance
TECH STACK
Evaluation, acquisition, administration, integration, utilisation
TRAINING
Personal development, training,
coaching, onboarding
STRATEGIC INSIGHT AND PLANNING
Goal setting, target accounts, revenue opportunities
(analyse “best deals” and market)
If you take anything from this guide, let it be the following pillars:
WHAT IS REVOPS & WHY YOU NEED IT /
6 - PILLARS OF REVOPS
13. Cost of
Customer
Acquisition
MRR/ARR Renewals
Upsells /
Cross-Sells
Customer Churn
LTV
Forecast
Accuracy
Pipeline Velocity Sales Cycle Win Rate
Lead
Relationship
Score
Opportunity
Relationship
Score
Account
Relationship
Score
NPS
Revenue Per
Employee
BUILD YOUR REVENUE MACHINE /
1 - KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
(KPIS) FOR REVOPS
Customer churn
Revenue per employee
Account relationship score
There are several key performance indicators (KPIs)
to pay attention to when it comes to RevOps. When
you’re building out your RevOps function, the three
main things to evaluate are:
USEFUL AREAS FOR REVOPS TO MEASURE:
Historically, most organisations separate their Marketing, Sales and Customer Success
departments as per the diagram above. But as you can see, this often leads to siloed data
sets, tech stacks and processes.
And the issue isn’t just the siloing of data. It also creates at least three clear friction points for
the customer as they pass from one function to the other as they move through the sales
process.
As should hopefully be clear, RevOps is about maximising the efficiency of your Marketing
Sales and Customer Service functions by better aligning tools and processes to reduce
conversion friction and delight the customer at every stage.
14. Without getting into too much detail, each of the indicators to the previous page tells a story
about your customer journey. They’re all data points with which a savvy RevOps practitioner
can better understand how to improve the customer journey and reduce friction.
Pipeline velocity too slow?
You might need to reduce friction in your quote send and sign off process.
Poor renewal rate?
Customer Success may need to share upsell data with Sales earlier in the process.
NPS score low?
Maybe customers need delighting earlier in the sales process.
Of course, these are only three example suggestions but they highlight how data points are
more than numerical information; they’re insights into where the customer journey can be
improved by better aligning how a business interacts with a customer.
15. MARKETING SALES CUSTOMER SUCCESS
RevOps
STEP 1 STEP 2 STEP 3 STEP 4 STEP 5 STEP 6
Awareness Consideration Decision Onboarding Retention Expansion
BUILD YOUR REVENUE MACHINE /
2 - HOW TO BUILD A REVENUE
MACHINE WITH HUBSPOT
Before a lead even enters your CRM, it’s important to condition all three departments
(Marketing / Sales / Customer Service) so they fully understand how and why a RevOps
approach works.
By knowing exactly where, when and how customer handovers will occur and intersect as the
prospect moves through your sales cycle, you can reduce friction, speed up onboarding and
ensure the customer’s, not the organisation’s needs, are the number one priority at all times.
With a clear understanding of expectations, it’s now time
to step into the customer’s shoes.
Create a process diagram and map every stage your
customer goes through as they move through your sales
process - from the first time they encounter your brand
messaging to the moment they sign their one year
renewal.
A - ALIGN TEAMS & MAP THE CUSTOMER JOURNEY
B - MAP THE CUSTOMER JOURNEY AND IDEAL CUSTOMER PROFILE (ICP)
It may seem excessive, but it’s a powerful insight into where and when marketing, sales and
customer service can often compete for the customer’s attention to satisfy their own
departmental needs.
16. Ensure your team members are given access to data at the
right time to reduce and standardise the sales cycle. One
way to think about the key stages is to follow HubSpot’s
lead; awareness, consideration, decision. Going about your
RevOps process in these stages is a great way to put your
team in the same mindset as your potential customer. As
consumers themselves, it probably won’t be a hard
concept to get across.
Get into detail and start working on this before the first meeting happens. Make sure everyone
is on the same page with who your go-to-market teams should be targeting, what their
common pain points are, what their typical business goals are, and how your product or
service offering is going to solve their problems.
If there’s a clear picture of the results your organisation can provide to customers, it’s a lot
easier for go-to-market teams to centre these conversations around current and future
customers, and tell a compelling story that gets them in the door, and keeps them loyal to
your organisation. If you’re able to show the value effectively, it’ll be hard for them to picture
life without your product or service
C - PROCESS AND DATA FOR KEY STAGES.
Think of the “awareness” stage as the first impression your organisation makes on the
customer. They could be coming across your website for the first time, and digging around
before as they make their shortlist of vendors to consider. What does your first impression
look like right now? Is it a good one? Make sure that it is.
The “consideration” stage is when the customer is weighing all of their options. They’re
thinking about things like pricing, onboarding, ease of use, and even your company’s values.
Like your first impression, there is also a secondary impression stage, and sometimes the
decision can be emotional. With this in mind, arm your go-to-market team members with the
tools and resources they need to be successful in continuing the conversation. Don’t set them
up for failure.
Lastly, the “decision” stage is when the customer in question decides which product or service
is the best fit. By the time they get here, they should have all of the information they need to
make the right decision for them. Ensure that you have everything in place for this to happen
before they reach the decision portion of their buyer’s journey.
For example
Why make a customer repeat information when it can be collected and
shared at a single point? What used to be the responsibility of the Customer
Service team can now be captured during the fact-finding call by the sales
team. The information Sales historically needed can instead be captured by
Marketing to allow for a smoother handover from MQL to SQL.
17. Keep in mind that incremental improvements can have
exponential results. As we like to say, slow progress is still
progress. As you go down the road of RevOps, don’t be
shy about iterating on your current process and getting rid
of the fluff that isn’t actually helping your team or your
business.
If you can cut your tech stack, do it. If you need new
documentation or templates for your sales team, get them
created. No matter the changes you make, as long as they
promote efficiency and unity in your team, you’ve likely
made the right decision.
You don’t have to start your tech stack from scratch, either, but make sure that you’re being
objective in evaluating what tools you already have. If they’re not helpful to your team or your
business, let them go. The tools you choose will depend on the maturity of your business,
therefore it is inevitable your tech stat will develop over time. In the short term, select tools
which provide the most value to your teams and enable them to deliver greater results.
With your CRM as the foundation, consider software that provides increased visibility of your
pipeline across sales. This can include revenue intelligence platforms like Ebsta and Drift, or
marketing platforms like HubSpot.
D - MEASURE AND IDENTIFY WHERE TO IMPROVE WHEN
IT COMES TO SPEED AND CONVERSION
E - BRING TOOLS THAT DELIVER INSIGHTS FASTER
OR SERVE AS FORCE MULTIPLIERS
Make sure that whoever’s leading the charge with RevOps
also puts a focus on getting the right tools from the right
vendors (like HubSpot). Sure, the process of evaluating
and implementing new technology is daunting, and it’s
certainly not appealing when you have to consider the
scepticism of some people on your team. However, if you
have someone that’s dedicated to choosing tools that will
actually create efficiencies (and probably result in more
money made), it’ll be easier to push the agenda for
technology adoption along.
18. Make sure everyone in your go-to-market “orchestra” is on the same page of the “song.” Don’t
let the fear of shifting gears or making changes stand in your way, either. As you go about
implementing your RevOps strategy within your organisation, be sure to encourage openness
and transparency within your team. What does transparency look like?
In this case, prompt people to give feedback on how the process is going in real-time. Of
course, you may not be able to act on every change suggested, but the sooner these things
come to light, the sooner they can be acted on and optimised for success in the short and long
term.
F - BUILD FEEDBACK LOOPS FOR RAPID KNOWLEDGE
SHARING AND OPTIMISATION
19. BUILD YOUR REVENUE MACHINE /
3 - INCREMENTAL GAINS IN REVOPS
Long story short, you don’t want to underestimate
the value of a well-oiled revenue engine.
HERE’S WHY
Once your RevOps strategy and practical applications are up and running, you’ll start to see
the fruits of your labor. But, don’t be surprised or discouraged if you don’t see results right
away. It’s going to take time for people on your team to adjust to this new way of operating.
Onboarding and implementing are both short term pains that will result in long term gains.
Think about the bigger picture, and be willing to put in the work overtime. The real key to
success with RevOps? Easy - it’s just getting started.
The sooner you start, the sooner you can improve your processes, and then sooner you can
see results
MARGINAL GAINS OVER TIME
Leads Conversion
Rate
Conversion
Rate
Win Rate ACV ARR
100 0.3 0.2 0.2 $10,000 $12,000
100 0.35 0.24 0.25 $12,000 $25,200
21. 1 Lack of buy-in
from business
leaders
Pinpoint on what grounds stakeholders object. Does
the board object on financial, operational or cultural
grounds? Do stakeholders feel threatened by
change? Only with a clear objection can you structure
a data-driven, logical response.
2 Lack of
alignment on
the customer
journey
Before implementing a RevOps program, take time to
do the hard yards and ensure basic customer journey
improvements can even be made.
3 Lack of internal
expertise or
ownership
A sure-fire path to failure is no one person has the
skills or time required to scope, implement and
monitor the project. As soon as you know it can be
done, start to map who exactly is going to drive the
idea on a macro and micro level.
4 Lack of budget Funding is hard to come by in any business. So before
you ask, ensure you’ve built a strong, data-driven
business case for RevOps.
5 Too much
technology
Most businesses use more tech than they need. A
robust tech audit will give you a clear idea of the
technical landscape so you can avoid any tech-based
logistical nightmares.
6 Lack of process/
resources
Have you got the internal resources required to
restructure? As with any project, ensure you have the
right pieces on the board before making a move.
7 Papering over
the cracks
If you start a RevOps function without fixing any of
the above points, you’re going to run into problems
later down the line. Fix it early and fix it once if you’re
serious about RevOps success.
RevOps is a powerful way to drive more revenue through your business, But as a relatively
new operational concept, there are a few potential difficulties you need to keep in mind:
7 COMMON REVOPS CHALLENGES /
REVOPS CHALLENGES
23. What does a RevOps team look like and how does it scale with
company size? What skills are needed? And how do you get
started building a RevOps team?
Different teams are going to need different resources. Start with a leader; get someone in
who has experience in this area. Be brave, as no one has all the answers as to what they’re
hoping to achieve with RevOps. RevOps is not an admin function, but strategic.
Is the VP of RevOps the same as a CRO?
No, CRO should instead be working alongside the VP of Revenue Operations. People in
RevOps don’t need to be good at running a sales process themselves. CRO needs to
understand the commercial side and drive the business forward. RevOps needs to
understand data, processes, and technology that will support GTM teams.
What size of company do you expect to have a separate RevOps
team?
Depends on the operation and what you’re trying to achieve. Smaller, more agile
companies, for example, may not have the resources to hire multiple roles in a RevOps
team framework; however, they can take steps towards overall team alignment by
establishing an internal RevOps committee formed by leaders within the different GTM
departments.
This way, conversations and decisions can be focused around overall company goals, and
initiatives can be planned and executed based on shared understanding between teams.
Medium to large-sized organisations with more resources available towards growth will
want to take steps toward building a dedicated RevOps team, and consider widening the
mandate to include ownership of business insights, tools and processes, or training and
enablement alongside general operational ownership.
Typically medium-sized businesses will begin by hiring for roles attached to specific teams
(Sales Operations, Marketing Operations, etc.) However, it’s important to ensure that these
roles are moving in lockstep with your internal RevOps committee to prevent the silos from
forming within the business.
Larger organisations, and organisations with more complex needs or hierarchies, will
absolutely want to hire a Revenue Operations leader or executive to sit alongside the
executives of other teams to foster alignment, drive strategic conversations, and to own
and champion any RevOps-related initiatives across the business.
This may require some internal restructuring, but it is important to bring staff, process, and
knowledge together under one operational umbrella that is fully aligned with the wider
company goals.
24. Most GTM teams have siloed tech stacks. How do you best
manage the transition given the level of disruption when it comes
to ripping and replacing tech?
It doesn’t have to be a rip and replace situation. Start by having one function responsible for
all of it. Let the operation be responsible for what they’re good at. So many efficiencies can
be brought by first getting everyone on the same page. Tiny changes at each stage of the
process have exponential growth. We suggest checking out HubSpot's CRM Platform,
which can help you consolidate your tech stack and unify your data to a single source of
truth.
How is this different to a modern marketing team with a cross-
functional growth team targeting improvements at each stage of
the customer lifecycle?
Focused RevOps function leads to a consistent message all across the organisation.
Do you think that every scaleup needs to employ this discipline
in the start and then avoid siloed conflict at a later stage?
Revenue Operations is a framework to aid in the growth of your business, so the earlier this
framework is considered, the easier it will be to align your internal resources, which reduces
the friction when the time comes to scale in earnest. The earlier you can justify, the quicker
you can scale. Get the right people in to help you run faster.
Which parts of the existing organisation show the most
resistance to this approach?
Sales is usually the first to push back. With strong management, this can be avoided. The
whole point is to generate more efficiency for scale, and more revenue for the organisation.
Ultimately, sales wants to earn more money. Even if they grumble, stick with being
consistent. Imagine the opportunity. Don’t see the shortsighted nature of sales be a
deterrent; you want them focused on the next deal.
25. What skills would a RevOps person need?
Think about what they were doing before the term started to gain popularity. It would be
people responsible for leading SDR teams, or responsible for GTM tech and getting the
word out within an organisation. Maybe they haven’t had the freedom or recognition to
flourish. Look forward to a track record of success whilst fighting against a tide.
Data-minded individuals & strategic or big-picture thinkers who are comfortable working
with different technologies and data sets are excellent candidates for RevOps roles. People
working within teams in specific functions (e.g. sales development) also make for great
candidates as they develop deep knowledge of internal processes and areas for potential
improvement.
On average, how long would you expect it to take to implement
a RevOps strategy?
Every organisation is different. Even when it’s in place, then the cogs need to start moving.
Nothing is left to chance in the GTM functions–we have data between our approaches now
26. Auxilio helps software companies organize and optimize their internal resources,
work processes, and platforms. Grow your business and revenue stream with three
powerful methodologies: Inbound, RevOps, and Growth-Driven Design &
Development on the HubSpot platform.
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