On this episode, Matt talks about avoiding department silos, the importance of being prescriptive, and his secret sauce for success in RevOps.
0:00
Welcome to Rise of RevOps.
0:08
I'm the Faze on CEO of Cast Meon Studios.
0:11
And today I am joined by a special guest, Matt.
0:13
How are you?
0:14
I'm Duke Eddy.
0:15
And how you doing?
0:16
Excited to have you on the show.
0:17
Excited to chat revops, or perhaps some other terms
0:22
that we will talk about later in the show.
0:26
And all the cool stuff that you are doing at Bombora.
0:31
So let's get into it.
0:34
What does Bombora do?
0:36
And who do you sell to?
0:38
Yeah, so we are in the intent data space.
0:41
We essentially are helping sales and marketing teams
0:44
align on what companies may be in the market for their solutions
0:48
or their competitors.
0:49
So we help you sell to who wants to buy you a lot faster.
0:54
And you have a new role.
0:57
So tell me a little bit about what you do.
1:01
Yeah, so I am the VP of Sales and CX Operations for Bombora.
1:07
My team supports all three of our business units,
1:10
our agency business, our publisher and co-op business,
1:14
as well as our direct sales units.
1:16
And everything, reporting and dashboarding, tools and systems.
1:22
If it touches Salesforce, we're going to be involved.
1:25
If it's part of the tech stack, we're going to be involved.
1:28
And then one big thing that we're pushing now
1:30
is scalability and repeatability, sales process,
1:34
renewal process, things of that nature.
1:37
And how big is the team?
1:40
How big is the company?
1:42
Yeah, so we're just under 250 employees.
1:46
In our ops team, we've got five.
1:49
So that's myself, a dedicated CX operations person.
1:54
It's actually a former CSM that's been invaluable
1:56
in helping us design some of those processes.
1:59
We have a full-time analyst and then a full-time systems
2:01
admin that supports all of our systems that touch Salesforce.
2:05
And then we have an admin that's kind of a jokingly
2:09
called the puppet master occasionally,
2:11
because if it's coming into Salesforce or it's data being
2:14
ingested, it's going to come through.
2:17
And do you feel like RevOps is unique in your organization?
2:22
How does it compare to other RevOps teams, do you think?
2:25
Yeah, I think you see a couple different schools
2:28
at that, where you can just slap a RevOps title
2:31
on everyone in ops and hope that that leader knows sales
2:34
and marketing.
2:36
When I came into Bumbora, we had RevOps titles,
2:39
but they were very focused.
2:41
Where I think some of our RevOps folks
2:42
were marketing-specific, some were sales-specific,
2:46
and then you had a couple.
2:47
I think they were kind of in between.
2:48
So what we've learned from our uniqueness
2:51
is we don't necessarily need to be--
2:54
it's not about reporting line, it's not about title.
2:56
It's how do sales and marketing need to interact?
2:59
And how can we improve those processes,
3:02
the data management and hygiene?
3:05
Processes and tools like Outreach,
3:06
where maybe that's not somewhere where marketing lives,
3:09
but we can be taking some of our marketing strategy
3:11
and building it into those tools to help that alignment
3:15
between sales and marketing.
3:16
So I think for us, it was unique, and we had the titles,
3:19
but we didn't quite do RevOps where today,
3:22
myself and my counterpart shout out to Dave Kennedy,
3:25
who's our VP of marketing ops,
3:27
where he and I work side by side
3:29
in making sure that when we're addressing problems
3:32
that are going to be cross-functional,
3:34
that we're doing that together and not in silos.
3:37
- And so tell me what it was like coming into this role
3:41
for you, what were those first 90 days like?
3:44
- Yeah, fire drill, for sure.
3:46
- I think I was looking enough.
3:49
I started here as an SDR leader.
3:51
I've got an operational background.
3:54
I started at a company when we were about 30 large.
3:57
We scaled to about 220 by the time I left.
4:00
So I've learned how to build tech stacks.
4:03
I've learned the inner workings of how that communicates
4:06
with marketing platforms like Marketo and HubSpot.
4:09
So I had a unique view of where I had been through it before,
4:14
and we had an opening with our sales ops leader
4:16
leaving for another opportunity.
4:18
So it became more about how can I be beneficial
4:21
to the company outside of just my current role.
4:23
So a lot of it was really just digging in,
4:26
what aren't we doing today that we have to be doing?
4:29
It's looking at the table stakes, forecasting,
4:32
opportunity management.
4:34
Do we have the right sales stages?
4:36
And that was kind of where we started
4:37
was really ground up of taking a step back and saying,
4:41
just because we have been doing it a certain way,
4:43
doesn't mean we should be.
4:45
That might have been the right option at the right time,
4:48
but I think that we needed to iterate
4:51
on quite a bit of stuff.
4:51
So a lot of it was really that 30,000 foot view
4:54
taking a step back.
4:55
What do we have today that we're good with?
4:57
What are we missing?
4:58
And then what do we have today
5:00
where we think we can improve upon it
5:01
and then prioritizing from there?
5:03
- And we're gonna get into all that
5:07
here in our next couple segments.
5:09
So let's get to our first segment, Rev Obstacles.
5:12
We talk about the tough parts of Rev Obst.
5:15
What's the hardest rev-ups from that that you faced
5:17
maybe in those first 90 days or in the past six months?
5:20
- It's just like for me so far in my career,
5:22
it's been alignment, right?
5:24
Where it eventually comes through,
5:27
but you have an executive team
5:29
that maybe hasn't been used to, you know,
5:32
a very high level of operations, right?
5:34
Or maybe the process hasn't mattered
5:36
as long as you got to the number
5:37
where I think it's trying to get, you know,
5:40
trying to build a business case for executives
5:42
to show the value of what a true focused operational unit
5:47
can do for, especially for a growing business like Bumbora is
5:51
where, you know, it's hard to get budget for your rev-ups
5:54
by the be it your tech stack, be it headcount.
5:57
You know, you have to invest in that stuff
5:59
to help your business become more predictable
6:02
so you can balance those budgets better, right?
6:04
Where if you know, if we have this process
6:06
and on a giving quarter, you know, taking,
6:09
we have X seasonality, we have Y headcount
6:12
to hit the number that you can put all of that together
6:15
and be able to make sure that you're meeting those budgets
6:17
where you're not having to readjust quarter by quarter, right?
6:20
And really flying by the CD or pants,
6:22
you can do all that planning in October, November, December
6:25
and feel confident in that operating plan
6:28
and that, you know, your plan to generate leads,
6:31
how much pipeline each of your reps needs to hit their number
6:33
and really what the company needs to do
6:35
to hit a given operating plan.
6:37
You can be a lot more prescriptive in that
6:39
rather than being reactive
6:41
to the things that are popping up, you know, every day
6:43
where you get these small requests where you're like,
6:46
"Oh yeah, we can fix that when you're looking at fixing it."
6:48
It's all of a sudden like, well, we don't have these three
6:50
processes to even like hold like have data hygiene
6:54
on this field you're asking us to create.
6:56
So we've got to create a process around it.
6:58
We have to train and enable on it.
7:00
And I think that the more focus you put into operations,
7:04
the better you're able to address that
7:06
rather than making it up as you go.
7:09
And how do you balance supporting sales marketing
7:11
and CX or customer success?
7:15
- The Calm app's really good for meditation.
7:17
You know, a lot of it is just like over-communicate, right?
7:22
I think it's, you know, there's a lot of Zoom burnout.
7:27
You know, there's a lot of unnecessary,
7:28
I'm sure everyone working from home knows
7:30
there's a lot of unnecessary meetings
7:32
that were a lot more necessary when you were in an office.
7:34
So I think a lot of it is, how can you better collaborate?
7:37
How do you turn some of those meetings into working sessions
7:39
where, you know, I've seen, you know,
7:41
my team does a phenomenal job of this where it's,
7:44
okay, let's talk through the business problem
7:46
you're trying to solve.
7:47
Don't give us the solution you want us to build.
7:49
Let's talk through how we can do that.
7:51
And I think it's just, it's communication.
7:53
I know it's way more simple.
7:55
It sounds more simple than it is,
7:57
but over-communicating, making sure that you're staying
8:00
on top of not just creating the process and rolling it out,
8:03
but is it measuring what you thought it would?
8:06
Is it be, is that process being enforced?
8:09
I think if you don't have that cross-functional buy-in,
8:12
it can create silos where ops is just creating process
8:16
for a sales leader that's asking for it,
8:18
but that sales leader's not enforcing that process.
8:20
So it's work for the sake of work
8:22
where if you have a really tight unit between, you know,
8:26
sales marketing, ops, even finance for that matter,
8:30
if you can work as a unit, the amount of stuff you can get done
8:32
and plan for becomes a heck of a lot more broad
8:37
than just saying, hey, here's the number we need to hit.
8:39
Here's your budget, go figure it out.
8:41
- What's your biggest rev oops that you've made?
8:45
Mistake in the past year?
8:46
- I tend to, of course, correct way too far
8:49
on one side or the other.
8:52
I can think of, you know, we've moved towards a shared goal
8:56
where it's not necessarily, is it inbound?
8:59
Is it outbound?
9:00
It's, do we have enough pipeline and deals
9:02
for our team to hit the mark?
9:04
And my biggest oops was, I didn't think through
9:07
some of the downstream effects of how's that going
9:09
to affect tracking?
9:10
How do we still measure SDR efficacy?
9:13
How do we manage, like, what the AEs are doing
9:15
from an outbound perspective, is that impacting the pipeline?
9:19
And I think it's just these new grand ideas
9:21
that you hear them all the time in rev ops, right?
9:23
I feel like it's every six months, there's a new big idea
9:26
that companies are following this and it's helping alignment.
9:29
And I think it's hearing that big idea and wanting
9:33
to pounce on it, but not necessarily talking about your org
9:36
and thinking through all the downstream effects
9:39
that changing that type of you can really have on a company.
9:43
Luckily, we were able to pivot on it,
9:45
but there was a good three months there where
9:48
I don't think you could really trust that source reporting
9:50
is because that just wasn't in our minds
9:52
because we were trying to move away from that
9:54
where it's not, you know, your sales
9:56
and marketing team doing this.
9:58
It's more about how are we going to arrive at the goal,
10:01
but the efficacy piece kind of suffers
10:04
when you don't think of all those downstream effects.
10:06
- Yeah, so what would be your advice to someone
10:09
who is listening, how to rev ops,
10:12
how to sort of avoid that sort of thing?
10:15
- I found it's not taking a step back, right?
10:17
It's, okay, if we do this, what is going to touch this process?
10:22
So if it's source and you know that's an opportunity
10:26
and you're measuring when you're grouping the data by,
10:29
okay, where are all of our opportunities being sourced?
10:33
Then you know, okay, so the executives are going to want
10:35
to see this from a team by team breakdown.
10:38
You're going to want to see SDR payback here.
10:40
And so I think it's just really talking out loud,
10:44
whiteboarding for me has always been a huge help
10:46
and just document out loud or on that whiteboard.
10:51
What are all of the things downstream of this change
10:54
that could even potentially be affected?
10:57
And then you start to process of elimination of,
11:00
okay, well, if we handle it on this singular piece,
11:04
then it makes a couple of these other downstream pieces
11:06
go away because we're handling it at the top.
11:09
But I think you got, I think in my experience,
11:11
people don't take into account how granular of a problem,
11:14
even one small change can make,
11:17
especially with how much automation exists
11:19
between tools and systems these days.
11:21
So I think it's really back to the overcommunication
11:24
and it's out loud, brainstorm,
11:27
everything you possibly think that change is going to touch
11:31
with all of their cross-functional owners
11:34
and then try to arrive.
11:35
I mean, are you always going to get it?
11:36
No, if we got it right every time,
11:38
there'd probably be a lot less of us, right?
11:40
Because that's because it's just run itself.
11:42
But I think it's striving for that perfection
11:45
of just always making sure that you leave no stone unturned
11:50
and then making sure that you're bringing in anyone
11:52
that you think from a business leader standpoint
11:55
is going to be a recipient
11:56
or that's going to be negatively affected by that change.
11:59
- All right, let's get to our next segment,
12:02
the tool shed, we're talking tools, spreadsheets, metrics,
12:06
just like everyone's favorite tool, qualified.
12:08
There'll be to be tool shed is complete without qualified.
12:10
Go to qualified.com right now and check them out.
12:14
Matt, what is in your tool shed?
12:18
What's the software you're using?
12:20
What are the dashboards?
12:21
Where are you spending the most of your time?
12:24
- Yeah, so qualified, new customer,
12:27
but I will give them credit where credit is due.
12:30
I have never had a tool launch without a huge pickup
12:33
like we have.
12:34
We launched last week, it's been live, it's phenomenal.
12:37
It's everything that I thought it would be.
12:39
So massive shout out.
12:41
I'm not getting paid for that comment by the way.
12:43
- Hey, now.
12:44
- But we love it.
12:45
We love to hear it.
12:46
- So the big ones for us, obviously Salesforce first CRM,
12:49
we use HubSpot for marketing outbound.
12:53
We've got some really cool process between Salesforce
12:57
and HubSpot where we're actually ingesting Bumbora data
13:01
and building scores.
13:02
So we've got three different main scores that we use
13:04
and account score and intense score
13:07
and an engagement score.
13:08
That's a combination of HubSpot data, Salesforce data
13:11
and Bumbora's own data.
13:13
So obviously Bumbora's part of our stack
13:15
because if it wasn't, that'd be crazy talk.
13:18
Sales navigator, Gong, we use outreach as our SEP.
13:23
And then we've got for the CX team,
13:28
we use a tool called Plan Hat that's really great
13:30
that helps with lifecycle adoption, health scores
13:34
and things of that nature.
13:35
That's our core stack and then cognizant
13:38
from a prospecting standpoint.
13:40
- Awesome.
13:42
Well, let's talk metrics.
13:46
- Yeah.
13:46
- What matters to you?
13:48
- Kind of everything, but top-top level,
13:50
do we have enough pipeline to hit the operating plan
13:52
and do we know where that pipeline is coming from?
13:55
Those are the big ones, right?
13:56
I think it's building the executive dashboards
13:59
that have what is the top-top level metrics we care about
14:02
and how can we plan accordingly for that?
14:05
How do we know in a given quarter
14:06
where we think we're gonna land from a forecasting standpoint?
14:09
I think the next level down from that is
14:12
we're gonna have a lot of time to do
14:14
and then we're gonna have a lot of time to do that.
14:17
And then we're gonna have a lot of time
14:19
to get to the bottom level.
14:20
And then we're gonna have a lot of time
14:22
to get to the bottom level metrics.
14:24
And then we're gonna have a lot of time
14:26
to get to the bottom level metrics
14:27
and then we're gonna have a lot of time
14:29
to get to the bottom level metrics.
14:31
And then we're gonna have a lot of time
14:33
to get to the bottom level metrics
14:35
and then we're gonna have a lot of time to get to the bottom
14:38
level metrics.
14:39
And then we're gonna have a lot of time
14:41
to get to the bottom level metrics
14:43
and then we're gonna have a lot of time to get to the bottom level
14:47
and then we're gonna have a lot of time to get to the bottom level
14:51
and then we're gonna have a lot of time to get to the bottom level
14:54
and then we're gonna have a lot of time to get to the bottom level
14:57
and then we're gonna have a lot of time to get to the bottom level
15:00
and then we're gonna have a lot of time to get to the bottom level
15:03
and then we're gonna have a lot of time to get to the bottom level
15:06
and then we're gonna have a lot of time to get to the bottom level
15:09
and then we're gonna have a lot of time to get to the bottom level
15:12
and being able to have a holistic view of maybe where your big gaps are
15:16
in that data hygiene and even data collection.
15:18
So I'd say those are probably the core dashboards for me is
15:22
really forecasting, pipeline, do we have enough to hit the number?
15:25
And so we have enough, not just hit the number,
15:27
do we have enough for every rep to be successful?
15:29
Right? And if we don't, how do we make those,
15:31
how do we make those adjustments?
15:33
And that's where that sourcing piece comes in
15:35
and then the data hygiene piece,
15:37
I think is something probably every company could benefit from
15:40
because that's never gonna be perfect.
15:41
But I think the more that you can know where those gaps are,
15:44
the better.
15:46
Yeah, I mean, do you think data hygiene is a RevOps problem
15:52
or like should RevOps be solving it?
15:56
It depends on what day you ask me that.
15:58
Today, my answer is really, I think it's a group effort, right?
16:02
RevOps should be prescriptive, you know, when you can be,
16:06
should be prescriptive in how that data should be collected
16:09
and like what object it could be effectively captured on.
16:12
That way that RevOps can provide actionable reporting,
16:15
not just where you are, but like, here's the data
16:18
and here's what the data is telling us, right?
16:21
Where I think that some companies,
16:23
it's a lot of, you know, and I experience it a lot today,
16:26
personally, where you're reactive, right?
16:29
You're reactive to requests where maybe a field didn't exist
16:32
and you weren't collecting data and now you need to start.
16:34
So people try to balance, oh, well, should we create this
16:38
and collect all the historicals?
16:40
Or should we create this, measure it going forward,
16:42
fill out the historicals as we need to?
16:44
Because in my career, what I've seen so far
16:47
is that that can really slow a project down, right?
16:49
If you want to do historicals for a field
16:51
that doesn't exist today, that's work on your AEs,
16:54
on your CSMs, on your leadership team,
16:56
to go back and fill out that information
16:58
that could potentially drag that project on for weeks.
17:01
So I think, you know, we've just recently ran into that
17:03
with a couple of things that we want to track and see X
17:05
of not just why people buy, but what did they justify
17:10
the spend on, right?
17:12
Like we could say, oh, they bought because they want
17:14
more qualified leads.
17:16
So they bought because marketing wants a mechanism
17:19
of where to focus their time.
17:20
But at the end of the day, how did they justify that, right?
17:22
And that's not something we collected.
17:24
And that's going to be a lot of work on the CX team
17:26
to go back and collect historical.
17:28
So I think it's more about focusing on how to build
17:30
that process and measure it going forward
17:32
than doing the full look back.
17:34
You can do the look back at any time,
17:36
but you got to start somewhere from the collection standpoint.
17:39
- What about an example of something that happened
17:44
in your pipeline that you noticed wasn't working.
17:51
Maybe you saw metrics or maybe it's coming from leadership.
17:55
How'd you go about fixing it?
17:57
- Yeah, so early in my career, when I first started
18:01
really running forecasting and understanding,
18:03
you know, taking that the best case, most likely worst case,
18:07
we noticed a lot of stuff was getting stuck in one stage.
18:12
But we didn't have a lot of understanding of why
18:15
it was getting stuck on this stage.
18:16
Like, is it how we qualify?
18:18
Is it what we're telling reps to do in this stage?
18:20
'Cause it was a guided sales motion
18:22
where each stage had a path to success essentially.
18:25
And so what we found was that was just where reps
18:29
were parking deals because the next stage was proposals.
18:33
So they hadn't quite shared pricing,
18:35
but they weren't quite ready to close the deal out
18:37
and be done with it and move on to the next one.
18:40
And so what the problem that created was we had a lot
18:43
of dead pipeline that probably should have been wiped out,
18:46
you know, quarters in advance.
18:48
That we're just pushing out quarter over quarter.
18:50
So it helped us A, understand we need better
18:54
qualification metrics in stage zero and one where A,
18:58
are the reps actually moving what's a legitimate
19:02
evaluation of our product into the pipeline.
19:05
And what it ended up doing was the cascading effect.
19:08
We realized we were probably under qualifying accounts.
19:11
We were over qualifying opportunities that most
19:15
of which probably should have never made it
19:16
to the pipeline in the first place.
19:18
And it was making us look like we had a horrendous win rate
19:22
in that second stage, but realistically,
19:25
we were just doing a bad job qualifying those opportunities
19:28
and so it helped us rebuild those paths to success of,
19:31
here's some questions we suggest you asking
19:34
in the qualification phase in the discovery phase.
19:37
And it helped us really draw some hard lines where SDRs
19:40
to feel comfortable handing something off.
19:42
Here's the type of information we want.
19:44
And then using something like MedPIC, Bant
19:48
to tie your sales stages to better influence that data.
19:53
And then what we learned after that was we're losing
19:56
in proposal because we were priced too high in the market.
19:59
But we would have never caught that previously.
20:02
Had we not stopped and said, why are all of our deals
20:04
failing out in stage or stalling out or failing out in stage?
20:08
- Yeah, that's super fascinating.
20:10
And a really interesting insight because you had basically
20:17
like the Oreo sandwich of either side of it
20:22
were both pressing into the same stage
20:25
when neither of them probably should have been
20:28
in that stage to begin with.
20:29
And so you're kind of like, not triple reporting
20:33
but you're essentially just, have it kind of completely
20:38
wrong there.
20:40
I'm curious, what were the questions that,
20:43
I don't know if you remember some of the questions
20:45
that you wanted them to ask?
20:47
- So it was like we had one that was talking about,
20:50
so the software was like verification software
20:53
for like students, teachers, they support like those programs,
20:58
like Spotify student discount program, for example.
21:01
So it was more about, we were asking what we wanted to know,
21:05
right?
21:06
Where like, what's your budget?
21:07
What's, how do you view a tool like this?
21:10
Instead of asking the questions of like,
21:12
what's your marketing spend look like this year?
21:15
How do you have your promotions laid out
21:18
on your promo calendar?
21:20
And things where that would give us a far better signal
21:23
that it's an active evaluation that we're moving
21:26
appropriately through a funnel, where I think some
21:30
of those questions we weren't asking,
21:31
so we were asking during the pricing phase,
21:34
where we started to realize we needed to ask them
21:36
about that upfront because we just weren't doing it.
21:40
And so what was happening was, we are getting people through
21:43
that had an understanding of what we did,
21:46
that admitted that they thought that our tool
21:48
could solve their problem, but that was about us.
21:52
It wasn't about them.
21:52
We weren't asking customer focus questions
21:55
that would help us understand, are they really going
21:58
to buy something like us?
21:59
'Cause we're an investment, right?
22:00
I think we're 10x higher than our next competitor.
22:03
And so we needed to be able to build that business case
22:06
and where I saw us fall down a lot was early
22:09
and luckily we were able to catch it,
22:11
but I think that it'd be easy to just say,
22:15
well, we lose most of our deals in stage two.
22:18
- Yeah.
22:18
- And then be done with it, move on to the next thing, right?
22:21
And I think that was the first time my career
22:23
where I realized there was always more to the story
22:24
than what the data is telling you.
22:26
It's about figuring out the narrative behind it
22:29
and using that narrative to help you inform change.
22:32
- Yeah, and I think that a great RevOps leader
22:35
may or may not have a great VP of sales, right?
22:40
That is like being able to dig in
22:42
and figure that stuff out and to say like, oh, hey,
22:46
and it's easy for the rep to just say, hey, it's pricing,
22:49
right? Or, you know--
22:52
- My response is my favorite one.
22:55
- No, for sure, yeah, yeah.
22:56
And that's exactly right.
22:57
And it's like, and then you have the abandoned deal
23:02
and you're like, man, we abandoned,
23:04
we can no response abandoned, all this stuff.
23:07
And yeah, maybe like you said, maybe it is pricing
23:10
as the root cause of that, but it's also, you know,
23:15
it's being set up poorly from the jump street
23:20
because they're like, yeah, I would love to have a Maserati,
23:23
but you know, like they're gonna test drive the Maserati
23:26
and they're gonna check it all out.
23:28
But at the end of the day, like they never even identified
23:31
that they had Maserati money, even though they have a,
23:36
I don't know, a need for speed.
23:37
- Yeah, I think there's plenty of tools out there
23:39
that have really big price tags on them,
23:41
but they add value to your company.
23:44
It's just all about where your company is, right?
23:46
And if you can't help your sales team understand
23:49
why they're losing deals, then you just keep going back to,
23:53
well, here's all of our closed-loss reason codes.
23:55
I don't know why this isn't telling us what we're doing.
23:58
And I think it's trying to be more prescriptive
24:00
and there's a fine balance of being reactive
24:03
to the fire drills and then being proactive with a sales leader
24:07
whether they're operationally savvy or not.
24:10
It's helping them understand what you could be doing better
24:14
and then like letting them help you make the decision of,
24:16
okay, here's our suggestions of what we could do,
24:20
but are they gonna enforce all of that with their team?
24:22
Because the work that a lot of ops teams put into
24:25
building process ends up leaving a bad taste in their mouths
24:29
and why I think sometimes you see like an AE go at odds
24:33
with it with a sales ops team of,
24:37
you're not helping each other, right?
24:38
Ops is saying put in this data,
24:40
but that's all you're getting.
24:42
It's not, hey, if you put in this data
24:43
and we can keep it clean,
24:45
here are the insights that we can give you
24:46
to help you close more deals, right?
24:48
And I think it's just that small piece of miscommunication
24:53
maybe or like poor expectation setting where,
24:55
hey, we need you to put this data in,
24:58
but there's no rationale behind it.
24:59
We just need you to do it versus,
25:01
hey, if we do this, here's the end result
25:04
that we can provide to you.
25:06
And I found in my career so far that's been a big,
25:08
that's been a big differentiating factor for me.
25:10
- Yeah, and it identifies,
25:12
and I think that the rep never understands the like,
25:16
hey, if you put this in there
25:19
and then we learn a bunch of stuff about this stage
25:25
and then we learn that, okay, it turns out
25:28
because of the fact that we've been able to categorize this
25:32
for six months as this,
25:33
we need to actually build a whole 'nother piece of content
25:36
around this topic or we need to create,
25:42
whatever it is, additional sales assets
25:46
or create another deck or, oh, it turns out
25:49
we're losing to this one competitor a bunch.
25:51
Like, you don't realize we're losing to this competitor
25:53
a bunch 'cause you don't see the whole field
25:55
and they never mention this competitor,
25:57
but from all the activity on the website that we're seeing,
26:01
we put a link up there that said us versus them
26:04
and everybody in this stage of conversation
26:07
seems like they're clicking on this.
26:09
Like, there's so many different third and fourth order effects
26:12
that the rep doesn't necessarily see there
26:14
and that's where it creates work on the backend
26:19
that can go back and solve the problem for all the reps.
26:24
- Yeah, and I think it's just helping him understand
26:25
what's in it for me, right?
26:27
Like, we're only human, like it can't just be,
26:30
oh, we're mandating this and you need to do it.
26:32
I think it's being able to work with everybody and say,
26:34
here's why we need to do it.
26:36
And if you still arrive with a sales leader
26:38
that, hey, that's not important,
26:40
then sometimes as an ops leader,
26:42
you're just gonna have to defer to that person.
26:45
Yeah, I think I have a bad habit of like,
26:47
but here's where we could be, right?
26:49
Where I think sometimes it's trying to balance
26:51
the where you could be, but where you need to be today.
26:55
And I think that's where I think a lot of communication
26:58
breakdowns end up happening is you focus on where you could be
27:02
or you need to be, but you're not focused on shoring up
27:04
where you are today and where you can take those incremental
27:08
steps to really help everyone buy in to changing a process
27:12
or requiring specific fields get filled out
27:15
before you can move to the next stage and lose a thought.
27:17
- It also gives you a little bit more ammo
27:21
when a bunch of people are asking for something
27:25
and to say, hey, I know that this is something
27:28
that you keep coming in contact with.
27:30
You're the only record it keeps in coming in contact with.
27:33
- Yeah. - With this.
27:34
Nobody else complains of this, that's, you know, et cetera.
27:38
And so like we can figure out a way to help you in particular
27:41
with this one problem, but like this one might kind of be
27:44
a you thing, like a one-on-one coaching thing,
27:47
not necessarily like a systemic thing.
27:49
- Yeah, I think, you know, we, like one thing
27:51
that I've seen in my career is using GONG
27:53
for something like that, right?
27:54
Where GONG's got a lot of really great like rep coaching
27:57
tools where it's trying to enable your sales leadership
28:00
team to where, hey, you're gonna have to take time
28:02
out of your day to do it, but here's where you can find
28:04
this stuff and here's the type of things that we can do
28:07
with that data and then, you know, being able to roll that up
28:10
to a product marketing team for, you know, product requests
28:12
or product feedback, being able to see like,
28:15
is a rep monologuing too often and maybe that's where
28:18
it's falling down.
28:19
Like there's just so many insights that you can gather
28:21
from how complex these tech stacks are today where
28:26
a sales leader's not gonna do the homework themselves.
28:28
Like they don't have time.
28:29
They've got a big number over their head.
28:31
They gotta go hit, right?
28:32
And I think that's where ops can come in of,
28:34
you're already paying for the tool,
28:36
work with your CSM, work with your account manager
28:38
on how you could better leverage that tool
28:41
and then provide those trainings for the reps,
28:43
for the, you know, for even the execs to some extent
28:46
of help everyone buy in and understand what you're getting
28:49
out of that part of your stack to be able to change
28:52
behavior and drive and drive those improvements
28:55
at really any step of the process,
28:57
not even necessarily just opportunity management.
29:00
- All right, let's talk spreadsheets.
29:03
You have a favorite.
29:05
- You know, I've gotta say it's usually my,
29:09
my joking favorite is every time I forget to include
29:12
object ID from Salesforce and I need to do,
29:15
create a fancy V look up for it.
29:18
But I think the best one that I've seen is in lieu
29:22
of like a clarity or like an insight squared
29:25
forecasting spreadsheets because Salesforce is not a great,
29:29
as I'm sure everyone knows, is not great at moment
29:32
in time snapshots.
29:35
So it's taking your forecast every time you present it.
29:38
You know, for us we're trying to build a forecasting schedule
29:41
around that and being able to timestamp in that spreadsheet.
29:45
Okay, when we pulled it this week of the quarter,
29:48
here's where we stood.
29:49
And then being able to use those snapshots in time
29:52
to see how A, we've progressed and then B,
29:55
measure forecasting accuracy because I mean,
29:58
how many, I mean, I've only been at two companies in SAS,
30:01
but that was huge, right?
30:03
Where, hey, we wanna be like, we even had it
30:05
from, I remember correctly, leadership got bonus
30:07
on being within a certain amount of that forecasting accuracy,
30:11
right?
30:12
And you can't do that in a lot of systems
30:14
unless you're pretty advanced
30:16
and using something like Clary.
30:17
So that's probably my favorite spreadsheet
30:20
'cause it saves me time and helps me understand data trends
30:24
without having to worry about manipulating data
30:27
within a system that that system can't necessarily handle.
30:31
Any blind spots that you have
30:34
that you wish you could measure better?
30:38
You know, I think like in general,
30:39
it's like the small things like fields,
30:42
you could be tracking that could influence a health score
30:45
or fields that you could be tracking
30:47
that would maybe help you understand
30:49
why a certain persona buys more often than not.
30:53
I think it's those little things where you can get so caught up
30:55
in building the process itself
30:58
that sometimes the little things that you could really draw
31:02
like a legitimate data point on,
31:03
either to ask for more resources,
31:06
to build that piece of content like you mentioned earlier,
31:10
I think sometimes that those are easy to miss
31:13
and you kind of, it's more hindsight is 2020
31:15
but you don't find them
31:17
until you've been doing it a little bit longer.
31:19
So I think it does go back a little bit
31:20
to the over-communicate piece of it
31:24
where try and understand from people
31:26
where they feel their gaps are
31:28
so you can holistically help the company solve those gaps
31:32
rather than just focusing on the onesie-toozy requests
31:34
that come in where you're kind of treating those
31:36
as a fire drill, right?
31:37
Like, oh, we got this request, we need to build this field
31:40
and it's taking the time to ask,
31:42
well, why do you need to build that field?
31:44
And then being able to not just create a new field
31:46
but create a process that you can enforce
31:48
that you set the expectation with the team
31:51
that needs to execute on it.
31:52
I think that's really the thing
31:55
that early in my career, I miss the most.
31:57
I still miss it like every day now
31:59
but I feel like I'm doing a better job
32:01
of like taking the step back
32:03
and even just listening to what people are saying.
32:05
It's just like what we tell salespeople
32:07
we want them to do.
32:08
Active listening, listen to what that business owner
32:11
or the requester is telling you, right?
32:14
Like, why is that field important?
32:17
Who's the end audience that we want to be able to see this data?
32:20
What are you looking to achieve through it?
32:22
It's sometimes it can be as simple
32:23
as just asking those questions
32:25
and listening to how they talk about it
32:27
to provide how you think the best solution can be accomplished.
32:31
- Do you have something,
32:34
whether it's a tool or otherwise that you can't live without?
32:37
- I think it's gone.
32:39
I mean, it's starting to, you know,
32:43
to shred into the forecasting area, right?
32:45
I mean, Salesforce is the easy answer
32:47
but with Gone, they're starting to come up with like data points
32:51
where, hey, when you have this many contacts
32:54
and an opportunity, you close them X amount more, right?
32:58
That's not a data point
33:00
that's gonna roll off the top of my head or an analyst head, right?
33:03
Because we're in that fire drill.
33:05
We're in the reactive mode
33:07
of all of the requests you're trying to do
33:09
where Gone just gives that to you in its insights piece.
33:11
And I think we're so busy worried
33:14
about all this tech that's out there that can do this thing,
33:17
this one thing really well,
33:19
where we're not focusing on all of the things
33:21
where Gone outwardly is call recording, right?
33:24
But there's forecasting elements.
33:26
There's, hey, this is slated to close this quarter
33:29
and you don't have a call booked for the next three weeks.
33:32
Like explain to me why you still think it's gonna get done
33:35
where I don't think we could do forecasting
33:37
without it in the way that we do it today.
33:39
And then rep coaching, I mean, building trackers,
33:43
the fact that you can add those anytime,
33:45
looking for product feedback,
33:47
a lot of what we're trying to evolve into
33:49
is gonna revolve around having that stuff in Gone
33:51
and making it actionable material
33:54
coming out of what we learned in those conversations.
33:57
- Do you have a,
33:58
any other tip from whether it's spreadsheets
34:05
or anything that you're doing with data
34:06
or any piece of advice around those pieces?
34:11
- I think from a data standpoint,
34:14
account scoring is one I've seen
34:16
that's like a, it's always a moving target
34:19
where I don't think I've seen people give enough time
34:22
to a model that they build.
34:24
- Sure.
34:25
- So like I think the big tip I would give is work really
34:27
closely with whoever is managing your marketing platform
34:30
be it Marketo, HubSpot, Acton, doesn't matter what it is.
34:35
But there's gotta be an element of scoring model
34:37
that's coming from all of your different systems
34:40
and a marketing leader that's in charge of that tool
34:44
isn't going to have all of that information
34:46
at the tip of their fingers.
34:47
Neither is a sales ops or a rev ops leader, right?
34:50
And you have to have all of the people involved
34:54
that that data is going to influence
34:56
to make sure you're building the scoring correctly.
34:59
Yeah, I mean, there's people out there saying MQL's are dead.
35:02
Like I wouldn't say they're dead.
35:04
I would just say it's time to look at them
35:06
in a completely different manner.
35:07
Like one thing that we're working on here
35:09
is account based SLAs.
35:13
So it's not one person,
35:14
but hey, this account has shown interest
35:16
have we started outreach to them, right?
35:19
Where that's an easy mechanism to tell your sales team,
35:22
hey, here's everyone that's showing a high level of intent.
35:26
Here's who we should prioritize.
35:29
And we wouldn't have that here
35:31
without a really strong marketing ops team
35:33
that was able to build that scoring
35:35
in association with the sales team.
35:37
And we look at it, we've got a meeting on Friday
35:39
where it's been a while since we looked at that
35:41
in our target account definition
35:42
and just continuing to iterate on that kind of stuff.
35:45
I think we'd probably be the biggest tip for me.
35:47
Never be scared.
35:48
You're never gonna get it perfect the first time.
35:51
Always be ready to iterate.
35:52
Let's get to our final segment.
35:56
Quick hits.
35:57
Quick questions and quick answers.
36:00
Number one,
36:03
if you could make any animal really big or really small,
36:09
what would you choose?
36:12
Ooh.
36:13
I think tiny hippos would be rad.
36:17
Like tiny domesticated hippos.
36:20
- How tiny are we talking about?
36:22
- Are we talking like hamster?
36:24
- Like corgi-sized hippos.
36:25
- Corgi, okay.
36:27
- Yeah.
36:28
- Do they still have the hippos mean temperament
36:30
or are they docile?
36:33
- I mean corgis are pretty mean too.
36:34
So let's give them the same, yeah, let's look.
36:36
They're corgi temperament.
36:39
- Okay.
36:40
I like that.
36:41
- Corgi's attitude and a hippos body.
36:43
(laughs)
36:44
- I was like that hippos can eat a watermelon.
36:48
I feel like it's very satisfying watching that,
36:50
but maybe this so you could throw them
36:52
like an orange or something.
36:53
- Yeah.
36:54
I mean, same.
36:55
You probably even see what they could do
36:56
to a watermelon at that size.
36:57
Who knows?
36:58
- That's true.
36:59
- Do you have a top three dinner party guests?
37:03
- Ooh.
37:04
- George Carlin.
37:10
- FDR.
37:11
And Dane Cook.
37:17
And where I'm coming from on Dane Cook is,
37:19
I just wanna know what happened.
37:20
- I think he made a lot of money.
37:23
(laughs)
37:25
- I think it's hard.
37:26
- I'm very fond childhood memories of Dane Cook
37:28
and then he just disappeared.
37:30
I'm like, for some reason,
37:31
that's my unsolved mystery in the back of my head
37:34
is what happened to Dane Cook.
37:36
- Yeah, it's a great question.
37:38
I think he probably made a ton of money
37:40
and probably the inspiration to be really funny
37:44
probably subsides a little bit when you--
37:48
- But could you imagine the conversation
37:49
between FDR and George Carlin,
37:51
like just the absolute goal that that would be?
37:54
- Dane Cook standing there like,
37:57
I was in a movie with Jessica Alba.
37:59
- All right, rom-coms, am I right?
38:03
- Right.
38:07
- Do you have a biggest RevOps misconception?
38:10
- We just take requests.
38:15
I think it's very easy to step into an org
38:19
and say, my team needs to do this, here RevOps,
38:22
here's the bullet by bullet list of what you need to do,
38:25
go implement this.
38:26
I think that's probably the biggest one
38:29
of all of that should be a conversation,
38:31
even as small as out of field.
38:34
You wanna understand, like I mentioned earlier,
38:36
what are we trying to accomplish here?
38:38
'Cause if I had a nickel for every time
38:40
I've seen us create a field in my career
38:42
where six months later, no one was using it
38:45
or enforcing the data being in that field,
38:48
I would probably not even need to work again.
38:50
It's crazy, so I think it's anyone
38:53
that's not in RevOps needs to understand.
38:55
It's a conversation, like RevOps should be a partner,
38:57
they're not someone that's just knocking out your to-do list.
39:05
- Is there a question that I haven't asked you
39:08
that you're like, wow, I wish Ian had asked me
39:11
a question about Blink?
39:12
- I mean, I definitely was probably expecting
39:18
a sales and marketing alignment piece,
39:20
but that might be a layup because Bumbora's,
39:23
the whole idea behind us is that we help sales
39:26
and marketing the line, but I promise
39:28
it's not perfect every day.
39:30
- Yeah, well, no, it's a key question.
39:35
Well, it's funny coming from the RevOps perspective
39:39
of serving sales marketing at CS.
39:44
It's kind of core, but yeah, tell me sales marketing.
39:49
What's going on?
39:51
Are we ever gonna line?
39:53
- I think a lot of it is just,
39:56
it's like open communication and I think just surfacing
40:00
information, right, where I think it's easy in my career
40:03
where I've seen, you know, you put up a deck
40:06
for a sales team or an all hands
40:08
and you're talking about all these ad impressions, right?
40:12
Or you're like, here's how many press mentions we had.
40:15
And from a sales perspective, having been a sales person
40:17
previously, that means nothing to me, right?
40:20
I think it's about how do you help the really great work
40:23
that marketing teams are doing to drive those metrics
40:26
and how do you tie dollars and cents to the metrics?
40:29
Because marketing would love credit for that, right?
40:31
Like marketing just wants to be recognized
40:33
for the work they're doing.
40:35
Same thing with sales.
40:36
And I think a lot of it is that recognition point
40:38
is where it breaks down and you have people arguing
40:40
for like sourcing credit on opportunities
40:43
rather than worried about, hey, we're doing all of this work.
40:46
We generated $8 million in pipeline this quarter
40:49
and based on all the different activities that marketing did,
40:52
marketing was able to influence 5 million of that.
40:55
Like that sounds and looks and is easier to interpretate,
40:59
it can't even speak, interpret rather than just say,
41:03
hey, look at all these press mentions we had, right?
41:05
Like what did that KPI that marketing is measuring?
41:08
What did that do to the bottom line?
41:10
Did it help us drive more pipeline?
41:12
Did it help us drive more revenue?
41:13
'Cause if you can't answer one of those questions
41:15
with some of it or find a way to tie it into that answer,
41:19
I think that's where you see a lot of the headbudding
41:20
come in because then it's just like,
41:22
okay, so you did a bunch of ads,
41:24
what are we supposed to do with that information?
41:26
Where that's not quite the case.
41:31
Over-communication's a theme in my career so far.
41:33
- Yeah, you're kidding me, right?
41:35
- Okay, last question.
41:37
Best advice for someone who just came into a role
41:41
as head of RevOps, what's your piece of advice?
41:45
- I mean, just talk with everybody.
41:49
Don't make changes into you, learn more about the business.
41:52
Take stock of your system and your tech stack.
41:55
It's really, it's like what I mentioned
41:56
at the top of the conversation.
41:59
Take a step back, ask what's working,
42:02
what's not working, interview everyone you can.
42:05
Now, combing through that information's gonna be a lot,
42:09
but I think you gotta hear it from the reps,
42:11
you gotta hear it from the leadership team,
42:14
you gotta hear it from the executives.
42:17
You gotta understand how is each person's day
42:20
effective positively or negatively
42:22
by what your RevOps team should be doing?
42:24
And that can help you figure out at the end of the day,
42:27
our job and RevOps, make everyone look like the hero,
42:31
surface the great work that everybody is doing
42:34
and help the executives understand,
42:36
yes, we are on pace to hit our number, no, we're not,
42:39
because then that leaves the one-to-one meetings
42:42
where that meeting with sales leaders,
42:43
where you're getting bugged every day
42:44
of where we are in the forecast,
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what's our most likely, where do we think we're gonna land?
42:49
If you can work with sales leaders
42:51
to be able to roll that data up,
42:53
it saves a lot of people a lot of time
42:55
and you help make the people look like heroes
42:57
and get the credit where the credits do,
42:59
rather than worrying about how you're gonna figure out
43:01
who should get credit.
43:02
- Matt, been fantastic chatting with you.
43:08
Thank you for all the insights.
43:11
I really appreciate it for listeners,
43:13
you can go to Bumboro.com to learn more.
43:16
Any final thoughts, anything to plug?
43:18
- I know it's just, I'm glad you guys are doing this,
43:20
but I think we need more podcasts out here about RevOps.
43:23
It's good to see RevOps finally getting its due
43:26
and I hope everyone starts to jump on the bandwagon
43:30
and realize it's really the backbone
43:31
of any of these successful orgs out there.
43:34
- I love it.
43:36
Awesome.
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