The great Phil Kreindler from Infoteam Consulting once famously said: “How you sell is why you win.” The phrase resonated and still is a guiding construct behind modern RevOps today.
In fact, RevOps is all about how you sell, how you set up and how you operate. RevOps, or revenue operations, merges sales, marketing and customer success operations to improve the overall customer experience and drive efficient growth and it’s becoming the new agenda for sales leaders, marketing directors, and customer success managers. Following a clear roadmap and focusing on collaboration, transparency, removing friction and data-driven decision-making, B2B manufacturing can start to make inroads towards a successful RevOps transformation.
So, where do you start?
The first step in your RevOps strategy is to identify and dismantle internal silos which can cripple growth.
Silos often exist from legacy management structures. RevOps doesn’t look to destroy departments which have been in place for some time - and to be fair, you’d never get started if this is the strategy you set out to achieve - it’s a non-starter.
However, you can spot the traits of silos and the inefficiencies they bring with them. Here are some traits to look out for in your initial analysis:
Silos create friction and barriers. Breaking down barriers creates an integrated approach for customer teams.
Review departmental communication channels paying particular attention to hand-offs. Look for bottlenecks and roadblocks that could harm your goal for seamless information, data flow and teamwork.
Once you have your laser target on fixing internal divisions, you need to start to map your revenue operations (RevOps) processes.
Here are some ideas for places to start:
Ensure every touchpoint along the customer journey is optimised for consistency and efficiency. You can start by conducting a thorough process and data audit, verifying you're capturing accurate and relevant information to inform your strategies and decisions and thinking about the customer...
RevOps people are rarely the leaders and directors of any of the traditional departments. However, we are increasingly seeing job titles including chief revenue officer and chief commercial officer.
If they're just job titles, you still have a RevOps problem.
RevOps will become a trusted right-hand person to the leadership of the business.
Here are some strategies to get you started with RevOps
In more than 35 years in the B2B space, I've seen hundreds of disconnects between sales and marketing's strategic and operational goals —actually annoying levels of RevOps disconnect.
Get everyone’s goals aligned. Don’t give marketing a goal to open up and dominate a new SME market in a new channel and then give sales a goal of retention of large enterprises. I’m just using the example to highlight.
Be brave and get someone to look at handoffs, data, efficiencies and successes. Back them, give them permission and support what can be ‘very constructive’ feedback at times.
Ensure senior management knows who your RevOps people are and make sure they back the philosophy of making RevOps improvements.
Everyone from leadership to frontline employees must understand and align with your objectives. It's about knowing your endgame and working backwards to identify the technologies, processes and metrics needed to get there. Start by removing friction wherever customers interact with your brand, creating a seamless experience that not only meets but exceeds expectations.
Implementing any new strategy requires evaluating its potential impact against the effort required. RevOps can bring substantial benefits to a company but you need to be smart.
You must prioritise initiatives with
Data-driven decision-making is the foundation of RevOps.
Reporting is often the first issue people realise they have and where they need to work back from. It’s a classic “I need to report to the board and it takes me a day to pull the data together in Excel.” The actual issue often isn’t a reporting issue; it’s a process and compliance issue.
But first, let’s deal with data. You're going to need good, compliant data, often from multiple sources, technology, integrations, and people.
Establish key metrics
Start by identifying the most important revenue-related metrics for your business. Some common RevOps metrics to consider include:
Customer acquisition cost (CAC)
Customer lifetime value (LTV)
Monthly/annual recurring revenue (MRR/ARR)
Customer churn rate
Sales cycle length
Win rates
Pipeline velocity
Focus on metrics that align with your overall business goals and provide insights across marketing, sales, and customer success.
Set up data sources
As mentioned, to report your metrics, you'll need to connect and centralize data from various systems, such as:
CRM (e.g. Salesforce, HubSpot)
Marketing automation platform
Customer success software
Financial systems
Support ticketing system
Ensure your data is clean and consistent and flows into a central data warehouse or reporting tool.
Create dashboards and reports
Build dashboards and reports to visualise your key metrics. Some essential RevOps reports include:
Sales pipeline report - Shows deals by stage, size, and conversion rates
Customer acquisition report - Tracks new customers and acquisition channels
Revenue forecast - Projects future revenue based on pipeline and historical data
Customer health score - Measures likelihood of churn or expansion
Use data visualisation tools to make reports easily digestible for different stakeholders.
Automate your reporting
Set up automated data syncing and report generation to save time and ensure up-to-date insights.
It makes sense if your colleagues and leaders can self-serve RevOps reports and dashboards. We often do this with HubSpot - where reports and dashboards are accessible in real time. There is nothing worse than spending a whole day pulling weekly reports together.
Iterate and expand
Start with a core set of metrics and reports, then expand and refine over time to suit your business needs. Continuously gather feedback from stakeholders to improve reporting.
Choose a strong platform to do most of the heavy lifting
Platforms like HubSpot can help you with reporting and dashboards, and there are many tools, including Databox, to consider.
RevOps is a game-changer for B2B, especially for those looking to break down silos, streamline operations, and boost revenue. It's about leveraging the right data, working on cross-departmental collaboration and cooperation, and fully committing to a strategy built around customer needs.
Final tips and advice:
By mapping the customer's entire journeys, removing friction, keep people on board and continually refining your approach based on tangible feedback, RevOps will deliver real change—it could be the revolution you've been looking for.