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Revops Leader Onboarding Coach

在头90天内辅导新任收入运营(RevOps)主管、VP RevOps或RevOps总监——该岗位整合销售运营、营销运营等职能。

person作者: charlie-morrisonhubclawhub

revops-leader-onboarding-coach

Coach a newly-hired RevOps leader through their first 90 days. RevOps is one of the most ill-defined senior roles in B2B SaaS — sometimes it's "Salesforce admin team that grew up", sometimes it's "Chief of Staff to the CRO", sometimes it's "the analytics function that lives between marketing and sales." First-90-day decisions about scope, focus, and stakeholder relationships set the trajectory.

This is parallel to chief-of-staff-onboarding-coach in role-ambiguity, but with a sharper functional center (revenue tech stack, data, process automation).

When to engage

Trigger when:

  • "I start as VP RevOps next week, first 90 days plan"
  • "Inherited a RevOps team of 8; what's the first thing to fix?"
  • "Forecast accuracy is broken; I'm being hired to fix it"
  • "We have Salesforce, HubSpot, Outreach, Gong, ZoomInfo, ChurnZero, ChiliPiper — and they don't talk to each other"
  • "My boss is the CRO but the CFO wants more from the role"
  • "RevOps is being expanded from Sales Ops to revenue operations — what should I prioritize?"

Do not engage for: pure Salesforce administrator roles (different scope), pure marketing operations roles (different focus), or strategic-function/Chief of Staff coaching (use chief-of-staff-onboarding-coach).

Step 0: Disambiguate the role

RevOps spans 5 archetypes; figure out which one you're actually in.

The 5 RevOps archetypes

  1. Automation-led (most common at Series B-D). Primary goal: keep the tech stack running, automate routine work, build workflows. CRM admin + marketing-ops admin + integrations. Strong technical center.

  2. Data-led (common at Series C+). Primary goal: revenue analytics, dashboards, attribution, forecast accuracy. Heavy SQL / data-warehouse / BI work. Cross-functional reporting.

  3. Strategy-led (less common, more senior). Primary goal: go-to-market strategy support, territory design, comp-plan design, capacity planning. Closer to "Chief of Staff to CRO."

  4. Process-led (common in mid-market enterprise). Primary goal: deal-desk, contract operations, RFP support, pricing approvals, quote-to-cash discipline.

  5. Hybrid (most actual roles). Primary 1-2 archetypes + secondary support for others.

The CRO (or CFO/CEO if RevOps reports there) often hasn't articulated which archetype they want. The first job is to make this explicit and aligned.

Disambiguation conversation with the principal

Within first 7 days, schedule 60-90 min deep dive:

  • "What does RevOps look like 6 months from now if I'm wildly successful?"
  • "What's the most-broken thing today that I should prioritize?"
  • "Which of these would you de-prioritize: forecasting, territory design, automation, attribution, deal desk?"
  • "What did the previous RevOps leader do well / not well?"
  • "What's our budget for RevOps headcount + tools next year?"
  • "Where does the line sit between RevOps and Sales Management?" (Critical — see below.)
  • "Will I have direct reports? Now or later?"

Walk away with one-page memo: archetype, top 3 outcomes for first 6 months, principal expectations, success metrics.

Step 1: Principal stakeholder map

RevOps reports vary, and each reporting line shapes priorities.

Reporting to CRO (most common, ~60%)

  • Priority: sales-team productivity, forecast accuracy, pipeline hygiene, comp.
  • Risk: Marketing Ops and CS Ops feel orphaned.
  • Strength: tight feedback loop with sales leadership.

Reporting to CFO (~20%)

  • Priority: revenue accuracy, deal-desk discipline, contract operations, ASC 606.
  • Risk: cultural distance from sales reps; perceived as compliance function.
  • Strength: budget influence, finance-aligned analytics.

Reporting to CEO (~10%)

  • Priority: cross-functional revenue strategy, exec-level analytics.
  • Risk: stretched too thin; lacks operational depth.
  • Strength: org-wide credibility.

Reporting to COO (~10%)

  • Priority: revenue + delivery + customer success operational integration.
  • Risk: revenue-specific issues compete with broader ops priorities.
  • Strength: full operational view.

Whichever line you're in, build relationships across the others. RevOps without strong cross-functional ties is dead.

Step 2: First 30 days — Listen

The single most-leveraged 30 days you'll have. Don't waste it acting.

Stakeholder interviews (45 min each)

Schedule with:

  • CRO (multiple times)
  • VP Sales
  • VP Marketing
  • VP Customer Success
  • CFO
  • CIO / Head of IT
  • Top 5 sales reps (volunteer or random sample)
  • 2-3 sales managers
  • 2-3 marketing operations managers / lifecycle marketers
  • 2-3 CSMs
  • Existing RevOps team (1:1 with each direct, plus skip-levels)

Standard questions:

  • "What's working well in revenue operations today?"
  • "What's broken or stuck?"
  • "What does great support from RevOps look like for you?"
  • "Where are you blocked by other functions today?"
  • "What's the dashboard / report you wish you had?"
  • "What's the manual process you wish was automated?"
  • "What's your honest take on the previous RevOps approach?"

Document review

  • Last 4 quarters of forecasts: what was forecast, what shipped, what was the variance?
  • Pipeline-stage definitions and exit criteria.
  • Lead-routing rules.
  • Comp-plan documents.
  • Territory definitions and quota assignments.
  • Attribution model (if any).
  • Deal-desk process documentation.
  • Customer-segmentation framework (ICP, accounts, segments).

Tech-stack audit

  • CRM: license count, customizations, integration list.
  • Marketing automation: instance health, campaign hygiene.
  • Sales engagement (Outreach/Salesloft/Apollo/etc.): rep adoption, sequence library.
  • Conversation intelligence (Gong/Chorus/Avoma): coverage, signal use.
  • Data sources / warehouse: BigQuery / Snowflake / Redshift; what's loaded, what's not.
  • BI tool (Looker / Tableau / Mode / etc.): dashboards, usage.
  • Dialer / phone (Aircall, RingCentral): rep usage.
  • Scheduling (ChiliPiper, Calendly, HubSpot): meeting flows.
  • Data enrichment (ZoomInfo, Clearbit, Apollo): list quality.
  • CS platform (Gainsight, ChurnZero, Catalyst, Vitally): coverage, health-score logic.
  • Documentation / quote-to-cash (Salesforce CPQ, DealHub, PandaDoc, Conga): contract flow.
  • AI tools (Clari, Aviso, BoostUp, etc.): forecasting / coaching.

Data audit

  • CRM hygiene: how many records, missing-fields percentage, duplicate rate.
  • Lead-routing accuracy: are leads landing where they should?
  • Pipeline-stage discipline: do reps follow stage exit criteria?
  • Forecast methodology: rep commits + AI signals + management adjustments?
  • Attribution: is there a model? Is it trusted? Are there multi-touch / first-touch / last-touch debates?

You're looking for the 1-3 most-broken things to focus on in the first 90 days. Most companies have 5-10; you can't fix all of them in 90 days.

Step 3: First 90 days quick wins

Pick the top 3-5 quick wins. Don't aim for perfection; aim for momentum.

Common high-leverage quick wins

  1. Forecast accuracy improvement. Tighten the methodology, add deal-stage exit criteria, run a weekly forecast review with sales managers. Improvement from 70% accuracy to 85% can change the company's cash management.

  2. Pipeline-stage clean-up. Standardize stage definitions and exit criteria. Force reps to fill in close-date, deal-amount, and required fields. Surfaces dead pipeline (typically 15-30%).

  3. Dashboard standardization. Replace 50 different dashboards with 5-10 standard ones used consistently. Builds shared truth.

  4. Lead-routing rebuild. Often a top-3 frustration. Map current rules, find broken cases, rebuild with clear logic.

  5. CRM hygiene blitz. Targeted fix on top-3 broken fields. Often unlocks other capabilities.

  6. Forecast call cadence. Weekly pipeline review with sales managers, not just exec-level. Forces rep accountability.

Quick wins to avoid in first 90 days

  • Comp-plan rewrite (use sales-comp-redesign-coach later).
  • Territory redesign (high-stakes; need rep relationships first).
  • New tool selection / procurement (typically 3-6 months process).
  • Attribution model rebuild (multi-quarter project).
  • Org redesign of RevOps team (need to know team first).

What to communicate

  • Top 3-5 quick wins with target dates (typically week 8-12).
  • Longer-term roadmap items with target quarters.
  • Trade-offs ("we'll defer X until Q2 to focus on Y").
  • Cross-functional implications.

Step 4: 6-month deeper plays

After quick wins are landing, take on deeper structural projects.

Common 6-month projects

  1. Territory + quota design. Often biggest unlock. Use icp-redefinition-coach + sales-comp-redesign-coach as inputs. Annual cycle.

  2. Attribution model. Multi-touch with proper data infrastructure. Often involves marketing-ops collaboration. 1-2 quarter project.

  3. Comp-plan modernization. Particularly when previous comp wasn't aligned to current strategy. Heavy stakeholder-management.

  4. AI-revenue tooling rollout. Conversation intelligence (Gong/Chorus), AI-driven forecast (Clari), opportunity scoring. Vendor selection + integration + adoption playbook.

  5. Workflow automation. Sales rep manual tasks → automated. Quote generation, contract drafting, customer-handoff workflows.

  6. Deal-desk operationalization. Standard pricing, discount approvals, contract templates, escalation matrix.

  7. Data warehouse build. Centralize CRM + marketing-automation + product-usage + financial data into a single source of truth.

Sequencing logic

  • Pick 1-2 deeper plays per 6 months.
  • Always have at least one quick-win in flight to maintain credibility.
  • Sequence: forecasting + pipeline first (impact in the current year), then territory + comp (annual cycle), then attribution + AI tooling (longer-term).

Step 5: Awkward overlap with sales managers

The hardest organizational question.

The line

  • RevOps recommends; Sales Management decides — for most operational decisions.
  • RevOps owns the system; Sales Management owns the people.
  • RevOps designs the process; Sales Management enforces it.

Where it breaks

  • Pipeline hygiene. RevOps says reps must fill in fields; sales managers don't enforce. Outcome: data is bad. Fix: management enforcement is a manager responsibility; RevOps provides the visibility.
  • Forecasting discipline. RevOps wants stage-based commit; sales managers prefer gut-feel. Fix: hybrid; RevOps provides AI-driven forecast as input; sales managers commit; both roll up.
  • Comp dispute. Rep disputes comp calculation; manager pushes RevOps. Fix: clear escalation matrix.
  • Reporting accuracy. RevOps shows pipeline as $X; sales says $Y. Fix: single source of truth, agreed by both, defended.

How to handle

  • 1:1 with each first-line sales manager early. Build personal relationship.
  • Be a partner, not a police force. "I'm here to help your team; here's how I can support."
  • Have the CRO clearly back you on policy decisions. Without CRO support, manager resistance wins.
  • Don't escalate small fights; pick big-leverage ones.

Failure modes

1. Becoming an automation help desk

Symptom: 80% of RevOps team time on tickets (Salesforce form requests, dashboard requests, integration fixes). Strategic work doesn't ship. Fix: tier the work. Tier 1 (helpdesk): RevOps Specialists / vendor; tier 2 (build / integrations): RevOps Engineers; tier 3 (strategy): RevOps Leadership. Establish SLA for tickets so they don't dominate.

2. Trapped in dashboards

Symptom: building lots of dashboards; few are used; data quality concerns drown change momentum. Fix: ruthless dashboard reduction; pair every dashboard with a named decision-maker / use case; kill orphan dashboards.

3. Reporting up without driving change

Symptom: monthly reports go to exec team; nothing changes based on the reports. Fix: every report ends with 1-3 specific recommended actions; track follow-through.

4. Tool-stack expansion without consolidation

Symptom: every new request adds a new tool; tool count balloons; integration overhead destroys productivity. Fix: every new tool requires retiring something; total tool count is a managed budget.

5. CRO-dependence

Symptom: every decision requires CRO approval; RevOps is glorified executor. Fix: build credibility with quick wins; earn decision rights through demonstrated judgment.

6. Reporting line politics

Symptom: shadow conflicts between CRO / CFO / CEO over RevOps direction; RevOps caught in the middle. Fix: explicit conversation about reporting line and decision rights; align with primary stakeholder; don't try to please all sides.

7. Vendor-relationship mistakes

Symptom: tool decisions driven by vendor relationships rather than business need. Fix: structured vendor evaluation (POC, references, integration test); RFP process for >$50K decisions.

8. Scope creep into people / strategy

Symptom: RevOps drifts into managing reps, designing comp without authority, advising on hiring. Fix: stay in the operational lane; let people-management belong to sales managers; advise rather than direct.

Common roles on a mature RevOps team

  • VP / Head of RevOps: strategy + cross-functional leadership.
  • Director, Sales Ops: sales-specific operations; territory, comp, forecasting.
  • Director, Marketing Ops: marketing automation, attribution, lead lifecycle.
  • Director, CS Ops: customer success platform, health scores, expansion ops.
  • Senior Analyst, Revenue Analytics: SQL / BI / forecasting models.
  • Salesforce Admin / Architect: CRM customization, integrations, governance.
  • RevOps Engineer: automation, scripting, data pipelines.
  • Deal Desk Manager: pricing, contract operations, RFP support.

Team size scales roughly: $10M ARR → 1-2; $50M → 4-6; $100M+ → 10-20.

First-90-days checklist

Week 1

  • Meet CRO (multiple times), build personal relationship.
  • Inventory all current direct reports.
  • Get system access to all major tools.
  • Read all major existing documentation.

Week 2-3

  • Stakeholder interviews complete.
  • Tech-stack audit complete.
  • Data audit complete.

Week 4

  • Synthesize findings.
  • Draft 90-day priority list with CRO buy-in.
  • Communicate priorities to broader team.

Week 5-8

  • Execute on quick wins.
  • Establish weekly cadence with sales managers.
  • Start evaluation of any major tooling decisions.

Week 9-12

  • Show measurable progress on quick wins.
  • Plan deeper 6-month projects.
  • Establish operating cadence (weekly / monthly / quarterly review structure).

Natural exit ramps

RevOps is a high-leverage role with several promotion paths:

  • Chief Revenue Officer: common path; RevOps leaders move to CRO at smaller companies.
  • COO: broader operational role.
  • VP Strategy / Strategic Finance: if data-led archetype.
  • Founder / consultant: RevOps consultancies are a real career.
  • CRO at a similar-sized company: lateral move with CRO title.

Plan exit ramp from year 2; otherwise role tends to plateau as the operational center.

Anti-patterns

  • Acting before listening. First-30-day major changes destroy stakeholder trust.
  • No cross-functional relationships. RevOps reporting to CRO with weak Marketing / CS ties is missing 50% of the role.
  • Tool-first thinking. Buying tools before understanding the underlying process problem.
  • Dashboard fetishism. Building dashboards for the sake of comprehensiveness.
  • Avoiding the comp / territory work. It's where the real impact is; many leaders defer indefinitely.
  • Hiring before clarifying scope. Adding RevOps headcount when role isn't yet clear amplifies confusion.
  • Trying to win every fight with sales managers. Pick high-leverage battles; partner on the rest.

Workflow

For a new RevOps leader:

  1. Week 1: Disambiguate the role with CRO. Get system access. Meet team.
  2. Weeks 2-3: Listening tour. Tech audit. Data audit.
  3. Week 4: Synthesize. Draft priorities. CRO alignment.
  4. Weeks 5-12: Execute quick wins. Establish cadence. Build relationships.
  5. Months 4-6: Begin deeper structural projects. Maintain quick-win flow.
  6. Year 2: Major restructural projects (territory, comp, attribution).
  7. Year 3+: Strategic role; consider exit ramps.

Integration with other coaches

  • chief-of-staff-onboarding-coach: parallel role-ambiguity coaching.
  • sales-comp-redesign-coach: RevOps owns or co-owns comp redesign.
  • icp-redefinition-coach: RevOps provides data; sales-marketing co-leads.
  • nrr-recovery-coach: RevOps provides cohort data and reporting.
  • enterprise-sales-coach: RevOps supports enterprise-deal-desk operations.
  • competitive-intelligence-coach: RevOps often hosts CI infrastructure.
  • board-meeting-prep-coach: RevOps generates revenue dashboards for board.

RevOps is one of the highest-leverage senior roles in modern B2B SaaS. The first 90 days set the trajectory; spend the time to listen before acting.