On this episode, we talk to Stephanie about the importance of a learner mindset, why rev ops is essential to driving change within companies of any size, and how to put the infrastructure in place to enable growth and scalability.
0:00
Welcome to Raza RevOps, I'm the
0:07
CEO of Cast Me In Studios and today I'm
0:09
joined by a special guest Stephanie, how are you?
0:12
Great, thank you for having you today.
0:14
Yeah, excited to have you on the show,
0:16
excited to chat about RevOps and all the
0:19
cool stuff that you're doing at Okta, so
0:21
let's get into it. Tell me first, how did
0:24
you get into RevOps? Sure, I actually started
0:28
my career far from RevOps, it was actually in IT
0:31
for financial services and quickly realized
0:34
my passion really lied more on the revenue
0:36
side of the house versus cost efficiency
0:39
side. I exited that and started to really
0:41
focus more on the sales and channel space
0:43
and the revenue drivers of most companies
0:45
and dived into supporting a lot of different
0:47
M&As and that was my first blush, really
0:50
driving different change and transformations
0:52
for many companies and it was super exciting,
0:55
super exciting to see the impact that you can
0:57
have really merging different companies
0:59
together to get to their ultimate goals
1:02
around acceleration or growth and new product
1:05
and realized it would be great to get
1:07
some operational expertise in the sales
1:09
space and the channel space so I actually
1:11
found an amazing opportunity at Salesforce,
1:14
they were at the time building out marketing
1:16
cloud and you are familiar with Salesforce
1:19
marketing cloud and it actually created
1:20
from three different acquisitions so
1:23
really was amazing to leverage the things I
1:26
love which is revenue driving, driving
1:28
transformation through M&A, I'm building
1:31
deeper expertise in the sales ops space.
1:34
It was a wild ride, six years later we got to a
1:37
billion dollar cloud for mark which was the
1:40
goal of those three companies that we
1:42
required, then took a lens on how do I
1:44
drive more a different type of transformation
1:47
at Splunk where they were an on-prem
1:50
perpetual shop and moving to the cloud,
1:52
that was also a multi-year journey and
1:54
four years later we were successfully
1:56
transitioned over to the cloud and then
1:58
repeating a different type of transformation
2:00
here at OFTA today where we're looking at
2:02
moving from a single product to a multi-product
2:04
platform.
2:06
And it's so cool to see that sort of
2:08
transformation from finance to revenue
2:10
operations and how much change that
2:12
you've been able to drive, what is it about
2:14
rev ops that sort of allows change to
2:16
happen like that I'm curious?
2:19
I think rev ops is central to
2:22
basically the heart of a company.
2:24
We look at everything from a data from a
2:27
process from an end-to-end perspective
2:29
and I think that that expertise for many
2:32
companies is what helps rev ops drive
2:35
change for them and change requires having
2:38
the right strategy which often is driven
2:41
with the data that a rev ops can
2:43
bring. Change is driven by having the
2:46
right infrastructure and operational
2:48
rigor in place which rev ops helps
2:50
supports and puts in place.
2:52
Change is driven by providing the right
2:54
context and enablement which again
2:56
rev ops team is central to.
2:58
So I think there's lots of aspects of
3:00
rev ops and the different functions that
3:02
we play and the different things that
3:03
we bring to the table that the rev ops
3:05
team is just essential to driving
3:08
transformation for many companies.
3:10
What's your definition of rev ops?
3:12
I think for me there's I think of rev ops
3:14
in two buckets. There's rev ops that
3:17
helps run the business so you think about
3:19
having the right data, the right
3:21
analysis in place, forecast process,
3:23
cadence and then there's the other side
3:25
of rev ops that is really touching on
3:27
facilitating company pivots.
3:29
When we talk about growing from a
3:32
private company to a public company
3:34
growing from a billion to five billion
3:36
these major pivots that companies
3:39
make that's where rev ops is there to
3:41
kind of self-facilitate have the right
3:42
infrastructure have the right rigor in
3:44
the business processes to drive those
3:46
changes for the company.
3:48
I love that and it's not something we've
3:49
discussed a ton on the show but in the
3:52
modern whether it's tech or b2b or
3:54
startup world where pivots are so
3:56
important and critical.
3:57
That's a really cool idea that a key
3:59
cog in the pivot is having rev ops.
4:01
That's a great idea.
4:02
So back to octa you mentioned the sort
4:04
of transformation that you're going
4:05
through and how does rev ops play a
4:07
role in that and I guess zoomed out
4:08
what is octa do for in case someone's
4:10
been living under a rock and doesn't
4:12
know about octa.
4:13
Our tagline is we allow everyone to use
4:15
technology safely on any device anywhere
4:19
whether that's providing secure access
4:21
providing authentication automation
4:24
and we provide that on a neutral platform
4:27
and we allow folks our companies our
4:29
different customer base to leverage that
4:31
both internally for their employee base
4:32
through our workforce cloud
4:34
my identity cloud product or with their
4:36
customers in our customer identity
4:38
product.
4:39
And how have you organized your rev ops team?
4:41
I've always thought of rev ops having
4:43
two different pillars.
4:45
There's a vertical and horizontal
4:47
vertical being folks that have really
4:49
deep SME expertise whether it's with
4:51
the business partners that they support
4:53
so whether that is your sales ops
4:55
function your partner operations
4:57
XDR operations and so on.
4:59
And then we have an horizontal
5:01
branch that really is chartered to
5:02
think more holistically across go to
5:04
market across the company to really
5:07
think about how do you drive
5:08
efficiencies how do you put the right
5:10
infrastructure in place so that we can
5:12
scale and grow quickly.
5:14
And then combining both having that
5:16
deep expertise and also having the
5:17
horizontal layer is I think what makes
5:19
rev ops super powerful and again
5:21
helping companies pivot.
5:23
And you mentioned sort of the
5:24
transformation of going to
5:25
multi-product and having that how have
5:27
you thought about taking this on
5:30
for as a rev ops challenge.
5:31
Specifically I think for octa
5:33
right what we do from a rev ops
5:35
again we support all the run the
5:37
business whether it's the UBRs that we
5:39
have or comp discussions helping
5:42
retire tech then and so on.
5:44
But what's different for my team is
5:47
we're also looking at how what are the
5:49
changes that needs that the company
5:50
needs to go through even on the
5:52
metrics front right when you go from a
5:53
single product to multi-product your
5:55
metrics become infinitely more
5:56
complicated when you're trying to
5:58
track different product families and
6:00
puts and takes.
6:01
You have to think about how do you
6:03
guide in terms of deal structuring
6:05
and approaches when you have
6:07
multiple products now in your
6:08
salesperson's bag versus single.
6:10
Even your forecasting cadence right
6:12
has to evolve now to really think
6:14
about not just hitting the overall
6:16
targets but what just the mix on how
6:18
to get there.
6:19
So those are all the things I think
6:21
rev ops does above and beyond kind
6:23
of what I would call run the
6:24
business activities.
6:26
Anything unique about octa's rev ops
6:29
team about how you think about rev
6:30
ops?
6:31
Again I think the differentiation for
6:34
me on the team's the rev ops team
6:36
that I run is we ask for again those
6:39
that deep that they developed these
6:41
deep functional expertise with the
6:42
business partners.
6:43
You're in the same boat with the
6:44
sales team you understand exactly what
6:47
their drivers are what their
6:48
challenges are you're in deep with the
6:50
partner team understanding the partner
6:51
strategy the implementation the
6:54
challenges that they might have
6:55
feedback from the partners.
6:57
You work with the horizontal teams
6:59
there that really think about how do
7:01
you incorporate business expertise
7:03
into creating a better process a
7:06
more scalable process how do you
7:07
create automation in your day to day
7:11
to really bring efficiency not just
7:13
for the go to market operations team
7:15
but for all the business partners that
7:17
we support.
7:18
All right let's get to our first
7:19
segment rev opsicles when we talk
7:21
about the tough parts of rev ops
7:24
what is a transformation that you
7:25
driven from the rev ops perspective.
7:28
I think I've mentioned there's
7:29
cross my career I've done a lot to
7:30
support different companies whether
7:32
it's a sales source of the
7:34
marking cloud trying to combine three
7:35
different companies to create that
7:37
next billion dollar cloud for sales
7:39
force.
7:40
Splunk we went from a perpetual on-prem
7:42
model to SaaS which I know is the
7:45
journey many companies been going
7:47
through and octa and you know
7:48
going from one product to
7:50
multi-product but I think what each
7:53
of these companies have gone through
7:54
different change and their different
7:56
pivots in their life cycle but I
7:57
think what makes them what's common
8:00
for them is that when they think
8:02
about transformation I think there's
8:04
three things that all of them have
8:05
right first they start with having
8:07
clarity and alignment from top to
8:09
bottom on what is the change that
8:11
we're trying to drive what the
8:13
success look like what is the
8:14
north star that we're using to
8:16
guide every decision we make every
8:18
action.
8:19
I think each company also has this
8:20
commitment to really creating
8:22
skill, scalable operations and
8:24
infrastructure because change is
8:27
hard if you're trying to make
8:28
changes while having to still
8:30
support a lot of manual processes
8:31
and overhead it makes it infinitely
8:33
that much harder right and I think
8:35
the third is really that we look at
8:37
providing everyone enough time and
8:39
we're spending enough energy on
8:40
change management to make sure
8:42
everyone comes along on that
8:43
change right that they actually
8:46
understand what we're doing
8:47
incorporate that into their day to
8:49
day actions right and if you don't
8:51
actually spend enough time doing
8:52
that honestly what ends up
8:54
happening is most companies
8:55
loses their most valuable resource
8:57
which is their employees and time
8:59
and frustration and all that other
9:01
stuff that goes into that right
9:03
it's you think of the employee
9:04
hours that you invest in terms of
9:07
get salary perspective into that
9:09
type of change and like the ROI
9:11
has to be great obviously taking
9:12
something like going on-prem to
9:14
cloud or combining three
9:15
different products into one cloud
9:17
or things like that which are
9:18
like massive revenue driving
9:20
initiatives it's necessary for the
9:22
business to continue to thrive to
9:24
be able to do that stuff you're
9:25
not worried about the investment
9:27
in time but of course it's going
9:28
to be massive do you track that
9:29
stuff as part of your deliverables
9:31
like how much time is being spent
9:32
on this i think what we really
9:34
track when we think about
9:36
transformation is success metrics
9:38
like most transformation takes
9:41
years quarters years to occur right
9:44
the marketing cloud was over to hit
9:47
their billion mark was almost over
9:48
a six-year time frame the journey
9:50
from on-prem perpetual to cloud
9:53
took spunk almost about four years
9:55
to get there and in octa we're
9:57
still on this journey today
9:58
so i'd say the metric that i anchor
10:03
on is really not time but those
10:05
incremental success metrics that we
10:07
know that shows us that we're going
10:08
in the right direction right because
10:10
you want to make sure again you're
10:12
moving an entire organization like
10:14
shifting a cruise ship right almost
10:16
if you want to make an analogy there
10:18
you got to make sure that that there
10:19
are those intramilestones that
10:22
indicate to the organization as a
10:23
whole that hey we're on the right
10:25
path and i think it's also
10:27
important to spend a lot
10:28
time thinking about like what do you
10:30
look at from an adoption metric
10:31
standpoint how are you testing to
10:33
make sure people are actually
10:34
absorbing and understanding the
10:35
change and then last but not
10:37
least you measure the trend line in
10:39
your financials right like we said
10:41
every one of these pivots is
10:42
really supposed to be this
10:43
boost and acceleration in growth
10:46
and yes change is disruptive so you
10:48
might see a dip at the beginning
10:50
of your change journey but as people
10:52
come along as you're starting to see
10:54
this success and you're actually
10:55
transforming your organization
10:57
you should start to see that reflected
10:59
in your financials do you seek out the
11:01
companies with the big problems
11:03
because it seems not that big problem
11:05
is not the right way that's but big
11:06
opportunities because it seems like
11:09
you have so much strategy in the way
11:11
that you think about go to market
11:12
and the way that you think about
11:14
ops and optimizing that sort of
11:15
stuff it's not just your whatever if
11:17
the ktllo type tasks like hey no i
11:20
want to
11:20
seek this sort of institutional change
11:22
because and then and when you do
11:24
something like that and you do pick
11:25
something i'm curious like
11:26
how much of that getting that cross-functional
11:29
alignment across teams and how much of
11:31
it is on you just shoulder the burden
11:32
of the huge project
11:34
to answer your first part i think what
11:36
i go back to i look for companies that
11:38
allow me to
11:39
continue to focus on the thing i'm
11:40
passionate about revenue drivers right
11:42
what are the things that's really
11:43
going to help accelerate growth quickly
11:45
which again massive transformation and
11:48
pivots tend to do that and yes those
11:50
tend to be bigger longer term
11:52
projects to take on and as you mentioned
11:54
cross-functional
11:56
i would say it's not on any individual
11:58
to shoulder that cross-functional burden
12:00
it is actually on the entire company
12:02
to make sure that cross-functionally
12:03
we're in line like we said any
12:05
transformation starts of having clarity
12:07
and alignment top to bottom right on
12:10
what is that north star what is that
12:11
one thing that's going to be most
12:13
important for the company because by
12:14
definition one means that there is a
12:16
singular priority that is most
12:19
important and that is what the entire
12:21
company and organization needs to rally
12:23
around to help the company achieve
12:25
what's your biggest revoops moment of the
12:28
past year
12:29
i often find that assumptions lead to
12:31
those revoops moments
12:32
you mentioned if you don't take the time
12:35
and energy to really focus on change and
12:38
getting everyone to align on the change
12:40
and understand the change if we can
12:41
result in a lot of frustration
12:43
that for me is what happens when you
12:45
have too many assumptions that you're
12:47
relying on assumptions are great
12:48
because it allows folks to run quickly
12:51
make decisions get to actions get to
12:52
results
12:53
however if your organization as a whole
12:56
especially when you're dealing with
12:58
large cross-functional initiatives if
13:00
everyone's not on the same page with the
13:02
same set of assumptions it can lead to a
13:04
lot of that frustration and frankly it
13:07
impedes your ability to move quickly on
13:09
that change
13:10
so when you think about the old thing
13:12
you got to slow down to then hurry up
13:13
later like that's exactly what i find
13:16
that we need to do to avoid those rev
13:18
oops moments where you really need to
13:20
slow down the beginning make sure
13:22
everyone has the same foundational
13:24
understanding of the problem statement
13:26
the metrics of success the ultimate like
13:29
north star make sure that you have
13:31
henna's from everyone on like do you have
13:33
clarity on this before then you
13:35
embarking on executing against that
13:37
project
13:38
and if you don't that's i think when you
13:40
end up again with a lot of frustrated
13:42
people in a lot of wasted time
13:44
that thing is i think a little bit
13:47
challenging for rev ops leaders at times
13:49
because they have the sort of the three
13:52
headed hydro sales marketing and customer
13:54
success
13:55
that are constantly asking them for this
13:57
or that
13:58
and so to even just get out of the
14:01
day-to-day operational piece and to
14:03
think more strategic can be challenging
14:05
a little bit
14:06
but then also
14:08
trying to say like hey this is a five-year
14:10
journey and obviously there's going to be
14:12
executive buy-in on that stuff
14:14
how do you bracket your time to make sure
14:15
that you are doing the day-to-day and
14:17
also
14:17
the like longer term planning and getting
14:20
everyone on the same page
14:21
i think this is why it's really again
14:23
important for me that my rev ops team
14:26
have the horizontal layer
14:27
because the only way to create more time
14:29
is if you automate and build
14:31
efficiencies
14:32
and you need that time in order to
14:34
really be strategic and be able to drive
14:36
company through its different pivots
14:38
so there is no easy answer i wish there
14:41
was more time in a day
14:43
but in order to create that time that's
14:45
where technology has been amazing
14:47
where technology has really even changed
14:49
the human behavior on so many different
14:51
fronts and made us more efficient
14:53
in some cases and that's what i look to
14:55
drive with my team is that horizontal
14:58
layer that we're looking at to really
15:00
bring the process improvement to bring
15:03
the
15:04
scalability that's going to give us the
15:06
time for the rest of the team to really
15:08
focus on thinking strategically
15:10
thinking through the pivots
15:11
obviously a sales force
15:14
later stage technology company when you're
15:16
there splunking same thing octa same thing
15:20
similar type of stages i'm curious like
15:22
how does that chain or that stage of a
15:24
company compared to how you would go
15:27
about approaching it if it was much
15:28
earlier or like a startup and how they
15:31
should think about rev ops
15:32
i actually think rev ops is super relevant
15:34
irregardless of the size of the company
15:37
because every company irregards your
15:39
startup or you've recently IPOed
15:42
or you're a massive behemoth like us
15:44
this goin and looking to continue the
15:47
growth and acceleration right on their
15:50
financials
15:51
you're going to be going through pivots
15:52
and that's what rev ops is there to help
15:54
facilitate it's help it's there to make
15:56
sure you have the right data
15:58
infrastructure operational business
15:59
processes
16:00
laid out in a really scalable fashion
16:03
to allow the companies to go through
16:04
those pivots
16:05
so if i have one word of advice for any
16:08
startup it's invest early in your rev
16:10
ops team because
16:11
that's going to build the foundations
16:14
that's going to allow you to
16:15
grow quickly
16:16
love it
16:17
any other piece of advice if you're rev ops
16:19
team of two or three or four or five
16:22
or something like that
16:23
and you're working in those early stages
16:25
of how do you help your leadership
16:27
think more strategically
16:29
when next week is important let alone
16:30
next quarter or next year
16:32
i think it is hard again i'm not going to
16:34
deny the day-to-day
16:36
activities and the demands on a rev ops
16:38
team can be infinite
16:40
but for me i've always guided everyone
16:42
to say
16:43
pause a minute understand what's being
16:45
asked and how does that fit into the
16:46
bigger picture
16:47
and then think ahead so if you're
16:50
working with a small startup and they've
16:51
got two salespeople
16:53
how are you going to how does your
16:55
process need to evolve so that tomorrow
16:57
it can support double
16:58
and then double from there
17:00
so at some point like if your team of
17:02
two now is 20
17:04
what's going to break
17:05
and if you kind of think ahead to what
17:07
is the company going to look like
17:09
in the next two or three or four years
17:10
and how is it going to grow and then
17:12
you apply that to what you're doing
17:13
today i think that is the mentality
17:15
is going to help establish
17:17
the right infrastructure for growth
17:19
despite everything that's being passed
17:22
you're always kind of working towards
17:23
something that's going to allow the
17:24
company to be
17:25
pivoting
17:26
let's get into the tool shed where we're
17:29
talking tools spreadsheets metrics
17:31
just like everyone's favorite tool qualified
17:33
you'll be to be tool shed is complete
17:35
without qualified
17:36
go to qualified.com right now and check
17:38
them out we love qualified they're the
17:39
very best and they're the perfect tool
17:43
for any rev ops leader
17:45
Stephanie what is in your tool shed
17:47
what do you feel like are the essential
17:49
tools needed to drive change?
17:51
for change it's to me it's not a physical
17:55
tool or a software
17:56
for me it's really more of a skill set
17:58
in order to be successful i think in
18:00
helping companies pivot
18:02
you really need to have a learner my set
18:04
because every company is going to have
18:06
its own unique set of
18:08
circumstances goals history that you have
18:11
to work through or unravel
18:13
so having that learner mindset allows
18:15
you to really understand current state
18:17
so everyone might have clarity on the
18:19
future state but you really need to know
18:20
where you're coming from what you're
18:22
working with what resources you have
18:23
what challenges
18:25
is inherently already baked in based on
18:27
decisions that's been made maybe years
18:29
ago
18:30
right to really create a true plan that's
18:33
going to allow the company to pivot
18:35
and bridge the gap between where they
18:36
want to be when where they are today
18:38
are there certain metrics that like matter
18:41
to you in change like certain things
18:43
that you're tracking really closely
18:44
yep i think it goes back to change
18:48
takes time right so anything that is
18:50
going to take a few quarters a few years
18:53
you're going to want to make sure you
18:54
have those interim success metrics
18:56
whether that means that you've
18:58
effectively changed a particular
19:00
business process or a cadence
19:02
an operating cadence that your sales
19:04
what your partner team might be running
19:06
right or you've put in a new system in
19:09
place
19:10
whatever those interim success metrics
19:12
to really show that hey we're now
19:13
actually reestablishing the foundations
19:16
around our operational framework and
19:18
our infrastructure to facilitate the pivot
19:20
is super important to measure
19:22
i think the other thing again is adoption
19:24
right so if you're trying to sell a new
19:26
product right how many
19:28
you don't wait until you see the bookings
19:30
come from those new products you really
19:31
need to understand adoption
19:33
early on adoption right how many people
19:35
are are able to
19:37
talk about the product do the first call
19:39
deck on the product how many people
19:41
are now creating pipeline on that
19:43
product right all of these small
19:44
stepping stones that really show you
19:46
like are people going
19:47
advancing along that change journey
19:49
that we all know we have to go on
19:51
sticking to pipeline
19:53
is there anything that you've
19:56
noticed and it could be more recent
19:58
or in previous companies when you found
20:00
something in the pipeline that wasn't
20:02
working and then you fixed it
20:04
i think and this is not
20:07
particular to any company i think most
20:09
transformations go through a state
20:12
stage where they that clarity on the
20:14
priority and what's most important
20:16
that one thing that is most important
20:18
to the company
20:19
is not there and the alignment on that
20:21
one particular thing is not there
20:23
but the understanding of that that the
20:26
company lacks that alignment across all
20:29
the different function
20:30
is not necessarily well understood and i
20:33
think to me
20:34
transformation can't start until you have
20:36
that clarity in alignment
20:38
so before and often this is where
20:41
Revos can play a super strategic role
20:43
right and really trying to bring
20:45
together all the different pieces whether
20:47
that is the finance function the IT
20:50
function your product function to really
20:52
make sure that they see and understand
20:54
what the entire company is hearing from
20:57
those leaders do they actually hear
20:59
that there is alignment coming from
21:01
tops down on what is the most important
21:03
thing for the company to achieve in this
21:05
pivot and that isn't clear i think it's
21:08
RevOps a part of Revos responsibility to
21:11
really help bring those pieces together
21:13
and provide that clarity okay let's get
21:16
into our final segment quick hits
21:18
these are quick questions quick answers
21:21
quick hits step number one what is the
21:26
coolest animal
21:28
i think opossums are really cool which i
21:31
know is
21:31
probably not an answer you've heard before
21:33
on this but they i don't know if
21:36
everyone knows this but there's a
21:38
protein that we've been able to extract
21:40
from opossums that basically we've used
21:42
to create a bunch of antivenom that save
21:44
like thousands of lives at this point
21:46
dang that's pretty sweet i love pretty
21:48
much all forms of like biomimicry and
21:51
stuff like that that or whatever it's
21:52
called is a biomimic no that's only
21:54
different whatever the thing is where
21:56
basically animals have already figured out
21:58
how to do all sorts of crazy cool stuff
22:00
and then we just borrow it but i did not
22:03
know about possums creating antivenom
22:05
so shut up all the possums out there
22:07
all right what about your biggest
22:10
RevOps misconception i think one that is
22:13
near and dear to my heart is because
22:15
we're going through our fiscal year
22:17
planning and transition soon often
22:19
misconception from the field that RevOps
22:22
sets quotas and comp and commissions
22:26
all in a box maybe we're just like
22:28
spinning a wheel to set your numbers
22:30
but in reality it's done in collaboration
22:33
with all the leadership team it's done
22:35
in collaboration with our CFO and the
22:38
finance organization to really make sure
22:40
all our metrics line up right that from
22:42
the bookings through the quota to how
22:44
then we inset people to achieve those
22:46
quotas is all part of a bigger strategy
22:50
what about RevOps prediction for 2023
22:55
think of prediction for me is that the
22:57
the importance of RevOps i think is just
22:59
going to continue to like deepen and
23:01
increase for all companies because we're
23:04
so critical i think in helping
23:06
organizations kind of continually
23:07
evolve and reach their growth aspirations
23:10
and especially with the market changing
23:12
and i think we're pivot for many
23:14
companies with the market dynamics
23:16
i think RevOps is really going to be
23:17
super strategic and helping navigate
23:20
through the changes that's coming in
23:21
the next in some cases already hit us
23:23
becoming in in the next few months if you
23:26
could have one superpower what would it
23:28
be i would love the ability to stop time
23:31
so if you think of Harry Potter and her
23:33
main granger and she's got the little
23:35
machine that allows her to basically
23:37
create more time that would be amazing
23:38
if you like i always have so much to do
23:40
and never enough time to do it
23:42
time-turner time-turner i feel like though
23:45
if you start messing around with a time-turner
23:48
look out but it's your superpower so i
23:50
feel like you'd be okay
23:52
what advice would you have for someone who's
23:54
newly leading a RevOps team?
23:57
i would tell anyone newly leading that
24:00
treat all feedback as a gift and i mean
24:02
that both on giving feedback as well as
24:05
receiving feedback and i always think of
24:08
feedback if someone's willing to give me
24:09
feedback it's because they have information
24:11
for me on how i can be better at my job
24:14
and for me i would want anyone who has that
24:17
information to give it to me so i can
24:19
continually improve so if you have that
24:21
information as a new leader i know
24:23
sometimes giving that feedback can get
24:25
uncomfortable but if you're coming from a
24:27
place we're really telling someone how
24:29
you have information that's going to help
24:31
them improve and help them be better
24:33
like don't be shy about giving it
24:35
all right Stephanie that is it that's all
24:38
we got for today it's been wonderful
24:39
having you on the show for our listeners
24:42
you can go to octa.com to learn more
24:44
about all the cool stuff that they have
24:46
going on
24:47
any final thoughts anything to plug?
24:49
yep thank you so much i enjoyed all the
24:51
different aspects of rev ops and look
24:54
forward to breaking here indeed thanks again
25:02
you