On this episode, Sid discusses aligning organizations around the customer journey, data that drives efficiency, and keeping a focused eye on the impact of RevOps.
0:00
Welcome to Rise of RevOps, I'm mean phase on CEO of Caspian Studios and today
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we are
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joined by special guest, Sid, how are you?
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I'm doing great, how are you?
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Excited to have you on the show, excited to chat about RevOps at HubSpot and
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all the cool
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stuff that y'all are doing.
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So let's get into it, how did you get started in RevOps?
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So I started in RevOps during my time at AWS where I was over there for about
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three and
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half years and I was leading our field sales operations organization there.
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And then about a year ago, I joined HubSpot to build out the RevOps team here
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across marketing
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sales and customer success.
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Yeah, exciting.
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And we're going to dive into how you're doing that at HubSpot, which is super
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exciting.
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What's your definition of RevOps?
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Yeah, that's a great question.
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I think there are so many definitions out there and it's an evolving
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organization and
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construct.
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The way I think about it is connected go to market.
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What are the capabilities required from systems, data, people, process
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standpoint that allow
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you to take a really truly connected go to market approach across your customer
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journey.
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So that's my definition.
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And I think the framework generally fits into that.
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I love that connected go to market.
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That's very succinct.
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There's a marketer in there.
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You said I can just tell.
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So with that connected go to market, what does that look like at HubSpot?
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What's like the scope?
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I mean, we all know everyone knows how to swap.
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But like, what's the size and the scope of what you're dealing with from a Rev
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Ops perspective?
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Yeah, RevOps, what it is today is multiple different functions that make up the
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RevOps
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stack.
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I'll call it starts with go to market strategy and operations.
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So what I lead is a team called functional go to market strategy and operations
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within
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RevOps that aligns with our marketing sales and customer success teams on
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everything from
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in year to mid term type of planning on and strategy to in your execution of
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that plan.
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It also includes enablement.
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So for our field reps and frontline managers, how do we make sure they're
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highly successful
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and ramped up and ready to go from day one data systems?
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And then we also have a longer term strategy function that thinks three to five
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years out,
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but then connects with our in your execution.
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So that's how we define RevOps at HubSpot today.
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I love it.
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And within that team, obviously pretty big remit to have that strategy side,
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the very
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far looking stuff in and amongst the day to day stuff, which is pretty exciting
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You think that's a little unique to your organization or is that something that
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you think is going
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to be more popular here soon?
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Yeah, I think there's some core elements that you just start to see that you
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need in a RevOps
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function.
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You think longer term to see what does your total addressable market look like?
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How are you going to go after it and pivot your go to market model if needed to
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go after
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it in the most efficient and effective way possible?
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So I do think there's always going to be some element of how do you look out in
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the horizon
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and see what's the opportunity?
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How do you go get it?
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And then an element of how do you plan to go capitalize on that opportunity and
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what
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is the execution that's underneath it?
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So that's the way we organize it here.
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I think you'll see more and more organizations come to realize that these are
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some of the
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critical elements of the strategy and planning side, but then you still need to
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underpin them
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with great data and a strong foundation there along with a systems and
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automation framework
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that helps drive that productivity and efficiency.
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Any key learnings in the first year in the role?
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Yeah, key learning would be to really orient your go to market organization
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around a common
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customer journey and align each of those different phases to what does a Nord
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Star look like?
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What does customer success look like at each of those different phases?
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So we talk about attract, engage, and delight and how do you then think about
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the role of
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marketing sales and customer success across the customer journeys?
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You're thinking about it from a customer in as opposed to a function or hub
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spot out and
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creating just a shared understanding of what that journey looks like across
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each of the
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different teams.
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So just have that you reduce the friction and you have seamless customer
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experience across
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and tend.
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All right, let's get to our first segment here, Rev Obstacles.
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We talked about the tough parts of RevOps.
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What's one of the hardest problems that you faced in the last six months and
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they kind
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of detailed a bit of one there already?
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Data is one of those areas that can always continue to evolve and getting very
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clear on
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definitions.
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How are you going to architect your data foundation to support scale?
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Is this an area that I think is a continual process of evolution and
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improvement?
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So we're spending a lot of time thinking about what's the first party data that
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we need to
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really efficiently and effectively run the business.
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In addition to what's the third party data that we need to go supplement our
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first party
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data with to really have an end to end view of that customer experience and
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that journey
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from end to end.
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And how we can be more effective in our interactions and engagements with our
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prospects and customers.
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That's been a big area of focus for us over the past six months or so.
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Yeah, it seems with HubSpot having so many customers, so many different sort of
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products
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and products using all that stuff that the difference between sales and up
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sales and all
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that stuff is potentially endlessly complex.
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How do you think about making sense of all the complexity?
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Yeah, I think it goes back to really thinking about that end to end customer
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journey.
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So if you really trace a prospect through to the point where they become a
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customer and
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then from the point of sale to the post sales and retention and loyalty side,
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it's really
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thinking about that customer as a relationship, the prospect that turns into a
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customer as
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a relationship that doesn't end with the sale.
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It's really about making sure they're getting activated, they're using the
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product, are they
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getting the ROI that we anticipated they would get when they signed on with Hub
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Spot?
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And it's really thinking about it as a customer for life as opposed to
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different transaction
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along the customer journey.
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So that's our philosophy.
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It's why we also think about our customer journey as a closed loop as opposed
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to a funnel.
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We don't use the funnel.
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We think of it as a flywheel that's very much about attracting and engaging and
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delighting
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our customers.
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And if they're happy, there's word of mouth, they're going to talk to other
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potential customers
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about it.
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And that's what we're going to do is to make sure that they're experiencing
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their experience
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in communities and other forums to get the flywheel continuing to spend.
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I'm curious, how do you balance supporting so many departments with sales
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marketing and
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CS and that fixed pie that we all feel in RevOps where there's a lot of mouse
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to feed
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and only so much bandwidth?
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Yeah, that's a great question.
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First thing I'll say is ruthless prioritization.
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It's really around what's going to drive impact for the customer experience or
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what's going
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to drive impact for the customer.
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And then we have a team that is called the flywheel analytics and planning team
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And that is really thinking about what are those horizontals that cut across
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marketing
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sales and customer success that can be done in the future.
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And then we have a team that is called the flywheel analytics and planning team
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And that is really thinking about what are those horizontals that cut across
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marketing
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and customer success that can be done in a more efficient way or need to be
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done in a
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more connected and collaborative way so you have an integrated plan or you have
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an integrated set of compensation models between sales and customer success.
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So balancing that horizontal connective tissue with functional depth.
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So there's going to be certain things that only are relevant for marketing, for
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example, for sales because of the nature of those functions.
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But looking at where are their commonalities and similarities and where do they
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need to
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be talking and engaging with the other functions much more deliberately and
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intentionally and identifying those points just gives us a model where we can be highly
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efficient,
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but also be able to go really deep where we need to at a functional level.
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Is there any sort of revoops moment or a mistake that you see other rev ops
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leaders
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making pretty common?
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I think it's easy to make a change that seems fairly minor in one part of the
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organization call it customer success, but not fully think through what are the implications
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to the other pillars like sales and marketing and to the customer experience.
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So I think it's really important in a connected go-to-market model and the job
8:38
of rev ops
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candidates to be thinking about the end-to-end customer experience and what are
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the ripple effects
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of making a change in any one part of that engine on the rest of the
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organization.
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Could be simple things like how you're incenting different parts of the
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organization and what are
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the unintended effects or impacts on other parts of the organization.
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And is that the aggregate behavior that you're trying to drive or did you solve
9:00
one thing and then create another challenge somewhere else.
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So just thinking holistically really about that customer experience and then
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how does this go-to-market engine show up holistically to go support that.
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Any other thoughts on rev obstacles or obstacles that they see people making?
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Yeah, I think the other area is just really thinking hard about where to
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automate as opposed
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to where to have humans involved.
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And I think it's easy to look at a challenge or a problem and throw more people
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at it.
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And sometimes you just need to in order to figure out what a more scalable and
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extensible solution is, but also knowing when to go ahead.
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If you're solving the same problem multiple times over and over through manual
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processes,
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having a framework on when do you go automate that or when do you go prototype
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that be a
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more scalable and efficient approach, I think is going to be prudent,
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especially in the
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market environment that we're currently in right now.
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All right, let's get to our next segment, the tool shed.
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We're talking tool spreadsheets metrics, just like everyone's favorite tool.
9:59
Qualified, no B2B tool shed is complete without qualified.
10:02
Go to qualified.com to learn more.
10:05
Check them out.
10:07
Said what's in your tool shed, what are the softwares, the tools dashboards
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with systems
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are you spending the most time in?
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Yeah, we are HubSpot, we're CRM.
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So we run our business on HubSpot.
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And HubSpot is a CRM platform, but to has a provides that end to end connected
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go to
10:25
market approach through a marketing hub, a sales hub and a service hub to
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really go across that customer journey.
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So we do use that and we run our business on HubSpot.
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We use Looker as our BI tool that sits on top of HubSpot and our other data
10:40
platforms
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to get us the insights and analytics on top of that.
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We use conversational intelligence to go look at what are our customers saying
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and how do we get insight into patterns and trends that are happening across the
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number of customer and prospect calls and what are the patterns and trends that are
10:58
emerging where we could do something proactively to go either address areas that are
11:03
challenging or conversely capitalize on new opportunities that are out there.
11:07
And then we're evaluating just what is our broader technology stack look like
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and where
11:12
are there opportunities to add area and new capabilities are going to improve,
11:18
as I said,
11:18
either the customer experience or the rep experience make it more productive
11:22
and efficient. And what are the metrics that matter to you?
11:24
What do you stare at all day and try to optimize?
11:26
Yeah, we looked at, if I go from the beginning of the customer journey, from a
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tracked, engaged in delight at the attract level, we're looking at things like awareness
11:34
looking at our media properties and how are those impressions driving content
11:39
leads and signups for our solution, then ultimately leading into creating demand for
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our sales team.
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So those are some of the metrics we'll look at through demand.
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And then from a sales perspective, we'll look at sales velocity, we'll look at
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ASPs
11:54
and win rates for high volume, high transaction business, we focus on SMB.
11:58
So those are pretty important, relevant metrics there.
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And then on the post-sale side, really looking at, are we activating customers
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quickly,
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helping them get time to value as efficiently and effectively as possible,
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helping them meet their use case.
12:13
So how does our usage and adoption look like?
12:16
And then all the way leading through to renewal and expansion.
12:19
So those are some of the higher level metrics.
12:21
And then each of those will have a couple of double and triple clicks into them
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Yeah, can you give me an example of one of those that you do need to always
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double click into
12:29
and make sure that you're not feeding some incorrect information into the
12:33
system there?
12:33
Yeah, I think a really important one is demand creation or deal creation.
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It's really looking at what does it take to create a deal?
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And how do you really go look at what are all the sources of pipeline?
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And what does the rep need to create on their own versus what's going to come
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from marketing
12:52
or from partners?
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It's taking a really aggregate but deeper view into all sources of pipeline and
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how a rep
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is going to create a book of business to go progress and close.
13:06
That's one I would say is really you could keep double clicking on that one.
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I'd love to because it's such a hard one to judge back in the day we said 13
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impressions equal sale, right?
13:15
That was the old adage.
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Now it's, I don't know what it is, but it's a whole lot more than that.
13:20
And what is an impression?
13:22
How do you weight those things?
13:23
All of that stuff?
13:24
Yeah, curious to your process there.
13:25
Yeah, and you could look at each of those different sources of pipeline and
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then go look at what do you want that relative mix to be?
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And then go trace the chain all the way up to say, okay, if I want X percent of
13:38
this pipeline to be generated by a rep, what am I doing as an organization, as
13:45
a RevOps organization, to make that rep highly efficient and productive
13:49
in creating that pipeline.
13:50
So it goes back to having a point of view of you starting all the way with
13:54
total addressable market.
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What is the total addressable market for the company or for the solution in
14:00
that particular geography or segment?
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And then within that really understanding how many accounts within that hatch
14:08
are actual customers?
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How many are prospects?
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And then what motion are you going to go after to activate the prospects and
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then go continue to engage with your installed base?
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So it's really taking a starting with TAM or total addressable market and then
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double clicking all the way down to how do you make it easy for the rep to
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figure out where to prioritize their time and looking at high propensity
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accounts, so leveraging ML models to look at high propensity accounts.
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Where is there the best fit?
14:37
Where is the intent exist?
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And then from there really making sure whatever time they're spending on
14:44
prospecting is going to be the most highly efficient and effective use of time,
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so I think it's been the rest of the time on progressing and closing those
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opportunities that they've identified.
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Does that make sense?
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Absolutely. And I love that stuff.
14:54
That is like so fun to me looking at that because someone who was a salesperson
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sitting there on in the number going on accounts like it was so brutal when you
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knew in your heart, like these 20 accounts.
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My boss says I need to call them and I know they buy in.
15:11
I know that they're just not the right prospect for us.
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And that's the sort of stuff where goodness when rev option can come in and say
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, Hey, you know what, those 20 accounts, they're definitely not.
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We should not be calling those as many times because they don't have a high
15:24
propensity to buy.
15:25
Those are the things that really help sales.
15:28
That's exactly it.
15:29
It's just how do we leverage the data and all the just the advances in AI ML to
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be more intelligent about where to go spend that time and continue to learn
15:39
from it.
15:39
Never going to get it perfect, but you can just keep iterating and getting
15:43
smarter about it.
15:43
Curious about metrics as it relates to churn.
15:47
I don't know if you feel a call it churn or what you call it, but as a customer
15:50
success function and figuring that out.
15:52
Obviously, that's the name of the game in addition to upsell or across sell.
15:57
And I'm curious, how do you think about that in any metrics or special double
16:01
click into those metrics that matter to you?
16:03
Yeah, that's a great question. We think of it as retention, right?
16:06
We think of it as retention from a dollar perspective and also from a customer
16:11
perspective.
16:12
Sure.
16:13
And then looking at what are the actions and behaviors that lead to higher
16:19
retention.
16:20
And then if you have a higher retention, what are the leading indicators that
16:25
signal that the customer is ready for expanding that footprint and going going
16:29
broader with either more seats for an existing solution or expanding to another
16:34
hub.
16:34
I mentioned we have multiple different hubs.
16:36
It's it on top of an integrated CRM platform.
16:39
So that's how we think about it is really more the behaviors of a happy
16:44
satisfied healthy customer.
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And then how do we use that to go look at the broader portfolio of what
16:50
customers are coming up for renewal that are part of our broader install base
16:54
and driving proactive engagement with them across those different motions.
16:58
Any insights so it makes a happy customer in the numbers.
17:02
It's always helpful.
17:03
Yeah, it's adoption and getting value.
17:06
It's making sure that it sounds right, but it really is did the value
17:11
proposition that the customer believed they would get when they sign.
17:15
Are they getting it?
17:16
Are they getting it in a short period of time?
17:19
And is it frictionless and seamless from that experience?
17:23
And I think we really spent a lot of time thinking about how do we make that
17:28
experience from them becoming a customer to getting immediate and ongoing value
17:33
We spent a lot of time thinking about that and really educating them.
17:37
We have a lot of capabilities out there community or network or academy around
17:42
helping them learn from other customers around best practices others that might
17:48
be in their industry trying to solve specific use cases.
17:51
So we're there are partners are there in the ecosystem as well as other
17:55
customers.
17:56
So it's really trying to give our customers multiple different ways of learning
18:03
and engaging and interacting on how to get the most.
18:06
Out of their solution, as I mentioned earlier, just really making it an ongoing
18:11
relationship versus something that's transactional.
18:14
I love that.
18:15
That's great.
18:16
Any blind spots that you wish can measure better?
18:19
Yeah, I think it goes back to what's the best way a rep can spend their time.
18:25
What's the mix of prospecting time or closing a deal or progressing a deal
18:30
working with partners.
18:32
I think really understanding an optimal mix of time in a day for a given model.
18:38
It'd be really interesting thing to understand.
18:40
It's I wouldn't say it's an area we've spent a ton of time on, but would be
18:44
very interesting.
18:45
And then conversely on the customer success side, where should a customer
18:50
success rep be spending their time to make sure our customers get maximum value
18:54
from their solution.
18:55
What are the sets of activities and what sort of ratio is should they be
19:00
spending that that time.
19:01
To maximize value on the end of the customers.
19:04
Anything cool that you're doing with data or any insights that you've got in
19:07
the past year, something that stood out.
19:09
Yeah, it's building really that I'll call it the fitment tent and propensity
19:15
engine to give us a real sense of what leads should a rep be prioritizing.
19:20
We're in in their broader territory or set of accounts.
19:24
Should they be spending time on just proactive prospecting. So really putting
19:30
the science underneath that and identifying what are the variables and data
19:35
points that give us the best sense of that prioritization.
19:38
Just I think is just a huge opportunity to take a lot of inefficiency and just
19:44
wasted cycles out of a reps day.
19:47
So it's something that we've been spending a lot of time on. And I think you
19:57
said it earlier, I don't think most reps do not enjoy prospecting, especially
19:58
when it's a an undifferentiated list that's without a prioritization.
19:58
So the easier you can make it and the more curated that list can be.
20:04
You certainly have time savings, but you also create a higher likelihood that
20:08
those deals are going to progress and have higher win rates and ultimately turn
20:12
into revenue and then ultimately commissions for the reps.
20:15
So that's why I think there's so many positive benefits from getting that right
20:20
and being more data driven in that approach.
20:22
Let's go to our next segment. Quick hits. Quick questions and quick answers.
20:27
Sit. Are you ready?
20:29
I'm ready. Let's do it.
20:31
All right. If you could make any animal any size, what animal would it be and
20:38
how big would it be?
20:40
I think it would be an elephant that could be the size of a domestic pet. So
20:44
something that would fit in my house like a dog.
20:47
Dog sized elephant.
20:50
Exactly.
20:51
Do you think there's misconceptions about rev ops or perhaps biggest
20:56
misconception?
20:56
Yeah, there are a lot of misconceptions, but it's an evolving field. I think
21:02
the biggest misconception is that it's sales ops part two and it couldn't be
21:06
farther from the truth than that.
21:07
So it's really a horizontal connected go to market approach, as I mentioned
21:12
before, touches marketing customer success as well.
21:14
Do you have a favorite movie character all time?
21:17
First, Bueller.
21:18
Ooh, that's a good one. What about a rev ops prediction for next year?
21:22
I don't know if it's a rev ops prediction for next year, but it's a rev ops
21:26
prediction is that rev ops becomes a C-suite role.
21:30
Couldn't agree more. What would be one piece of advice you would have for
21:38
someone who is newly leading a rev ops team?
21:39
I would say focus and alignment. It's to not be really clear on what you're
21:45
trying to achieve and making sure that the entire go to market team is aligned
21:50
to those areas before trying to tackle things in silos.
21:54
Last question here, Sid, I'm curious you work in a large rev ops organization
22:00
for someone who is in a smaller rev ops organization, you know, a couple person
22:04
shop.
22:04
Any advice that you would give to those folks who are lean and mean?
22:08
Yeah, I think it's, I would really say start with establishing a strong data
22:12
foundation.
22:13
It's one of those areas that is harder to do later once your business starts to
22:18
grow and scale and the complexity, the variety, the velocity of your data
22:22
starts to really take care of your data.
22:23
Really take off, easier to get that decide earlier on what that's going to look
22:28
like and start building it from the ground up.
22:30
It'll make it a lot more efficient later.
22:31
Awesome. Sid, thanks so much for listeners. Obviously, you can check out Hub
22:36
Spot.com to learn more about HubSpot and all the amazing stuff that they do.
22:40
And for any other stuff, you can check out Sid on LinkedIn or wherever else.
22:45
Sid, any final thoughts?
22:46
No, just thanks for listening and excited to share more with you about the rev
22:51
ops journey ahead.
22:52
Awesome. Thanks for watching.
22:54
[Music]
23:01
(upbeat music)