On this episode, we talk to Volney about creating an even playing field across your go-to-market teams, the blocking and tackling of selling, and enhancing your sales velocity.
0:00
Welcome to Rise of RevOps.
0:07
I'm your face on CEO of Caspian Studios and today we are joined by a special
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guest,
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Bolny, how are you?
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I'm good, thanks.
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Excited to have you on the show, excited to chat.
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RevOps, excited to chat about templify and everything in between.
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So let's get into our rev opening.
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How did you get started in RevOps?
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The whole first half of my career, actually two-thirds I spent in sales enable
0:29
ment.
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Actually, a long time ago.
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But I was fortunate to join Salesforce.com about 12 years ago and saw that CRM
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and Assistant
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Administration around CRM was becoming a huge thing.
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And I think even back then none of us really saw how far sales ops was going to
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go, much
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less the idea of RevOps and focusing on all the go-to-market channels.
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So I made the transition into sales ops at the time.
0:57
And I loved it because back in the sales enablement days of the time, it was
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really mostly known
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as sales training.
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And there wasn't a lot of strategy involved.
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There was a lot of just responding to what was believed to be needed in the
1:09
organization
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and go off and try to do it.
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The great thing about morphing into sales ops and now RevOps is that in a Rev
1:17
Ops role, you
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have the opportunity to do the analysis and find what some of the productivity
1:21
challenges
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are.
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And then if you have an enablement background, you actually have the ability to
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go drive
1:28
the needed change through the organization.
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So you can do the assessment and the analysis as well as provide the remedy all
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from the
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same focus area.
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Yeah.
1:37
And what's your definition of RevOps?
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I've been doing this a while.
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And when I think about it, let's just go back 20 years.
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RevOps was a finance person who was good at territories and sales compensation.
1:48
That's pretty much what RevOps was.
1:49
It was a finance role.
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Then CRM came along and the whole idea of being system administration for your
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CRM environment
1:57
morphed into sales ops.
2:00
And it was all about managing your, keeping the lights on and making the sales
2:04
systems
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work.
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And that was all great.
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But as the tech stack grew and got more sophisticated, it became not being just
2:10
keeping
2:11
the lights on.
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Those are table stakes.
2:13
You've got to do that.
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But because you have access to all the data and all the reporting and all the
2:18
analysis,
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the role has morphed into making sure that all the go-to-market channels are
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operating
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smoothly and fluidly.
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And so that we can derive insights out of all the data across all the go-to-
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market functions
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so that you can do all your growth planning and make recommendations to the
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executive
2:35
team about where to make their investments and what changes to make on a yearly
2:39
basis.
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So it's gone from keeping the lights on to literally being the true north of
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the guidance
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to the organization.
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And tell us about your role at Amplify.
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I'm excited about being in RevOps professional.
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And I'm super excited about being at Amplify.
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What we do if people aren't aware is we're the next-end document generation
2:58
platform.
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We make it so that people with knowledge don't have to struggle with how to
3:02
build the presentation
3:03
decks and simply focus their knowledge.
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And the decks pretty much build themselves.
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And I know that sounds a little bit nirvana, but it's not too far from the
3:13
truth.
3:13
So it's an exciting opportunity at a company that has a chance to really
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transform how
3:18
enterprises message and communicate.
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I was asked to come to Amplify to lead the RevOps function, which was exciting
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to me
3:24
because there was already a lot of folks on the ground doing really excellent
3:28
work.
3:29
And what they needed was somebody with a little bit longer term vision.
3:33
Somebody had seen the movies before and could look around corners and help lead
3:37
the function
3:37
to provide more of that and insightful guidance to the executive team.
3:43
Yeah, and obviously this is something that feels like table stakes for a
3:47
startup of Amplify's
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size now, right?
3:50
That didn't used to be the case, but now it is if you want to create a high-
3:53
performing
3:53
machine.
3:54
Absolutely.
3:55
I think a lot of startups, they wanted to be the lean startup and they didn't
3:59
want to
3:59
over-invest in support resources.
4:01
And they wanted sales to go out and make stuff happen.
4:04
And eventually the support would follow along behind it.
4:07
I think a lot of SaaS companies have realized how important it is to have an
4:13
operational
4:14
machine supporting the sales effort because consistency across the team, access
4:20
to data
4:21
and insights, as well as as much as we try to maybe hold back on the
4:25
proliferation of
4:27
the tools and the tech stack.
4:29
It's just so important to have people there with some experience that can build
4:33
with a
4:33
strategy as opposed to simply responding to requests in the organization
4:38
without really
4:38
knowing what direction to take the entire thing.
4:42
So I'm excited to see that companies are investing more in ops earlier and are
4:47
willing
4:48
to aim at more experienced and frankly more expensive resources.
4:52
To use a simple example, in fact, a handful of years ago, the growth at all
4:56
costs start
4:56
up and you just expand to 100 salespeople.
4:59
You're like, we invested heavily in sales and we'll do the rev-op stuff later
5:03
and they're
5:03
all 2% less productive because you never had the sales ops function and it's
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like, imagine
5:09
if that whole time you had a machine that was actually being optimized rather
5:13
than just
5:14
being run that way.
5:15
And it's so obvious in retrospect, but I don't think we really thought that way
5:18
, you
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know, 5, 10 years.
5:19
And also there's a transition point.
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Let's say you're in between zero and 10 million in ARR.
5:24
Yeah.
5:25
If you're thoughtful, you probably think, well, once we're hiring more than one
5:29
or two people
5:30
a month, we need some sales enablement.
5:32
And so what do we do?
5:33
We go find maybe a great SDR, somebody who's really passionate and likes
5:37
helping people
5:38
who wants to transition into sales enablement.
5:41
And the trouble is the job can quickly get bigger than that person can actually
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bring.
5:47
Same thing happens on the system side.
5:50
Sometimes salespeople or SDRs realize that the systems are pretty cool and they
5:53
'd like
5:54
to kind of, they volunteer to go do it and someone says, sure.
5:57
And the next thing you know, you have people very early in their careers
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responsible for
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your system environment and your enablement.
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And it can be a great thing, but there is a transition point probably around 10
6:08
million
6:08
in ARR where you have to think more seriously about the experience you have in
6:13
those roles.
6:14
Tell me about your RevOps team.
6:16
How do you organize it?
6:17
How do you like to organize RevOps teams and how have you done it in the past?
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Yeah.
6:21
And I have to admit, I've changed a little bit.
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Originally my bias was all around sales.
6:26
And the sales ops function was always very focused on everything having to do
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with the
6:30
sales machine.
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So it always got the preference and always got even though marketing and
6:34
marketing ops
6:34
is certainly important.
6:36
It's the gas that fuels the engine and sales is the car that converts all that
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gas into
6:41
energy and revenue.
6:43
And so I was always very biased about reporting to sales because I wanted to be
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dynamic and
6:47
I wanted to have a great relationship with the sales leader.
6:51
I templified it's different.
6:52
We report into the finance organization and I have actually found it to allow
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me to be
6:58
more even handed and more like Switzerland than I found when I was reporting to
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sales.
7:05
In fact, when I was reporting to sales, the relationship with finance could
7:09
sometimes
7:09
see natural enemies.
7:10
But the reality is if you do things well, then it could be a real productive
7:14
relationship.
7:15
So we report to finance, but we still do, as you might expect, we've still got
7:21
a lot
7:21
of focus on the marketing ops side and also on the CS ops.
7:25
So in terms of how we're organized on the team, it doesn't really matter where
7:30
we report.
7:31
We have really strong relationships with each of the go-to-market functions and
7:35
we work
7:35
really hard to make sure that they collaborate smoothly.
7:38
Yeah.
7:39
And that's I think why we've seen this function even be spun out in its own
7:42
thing entirely
7:43
and to not report to sales, marketing or customer success and to just be its
7:47
own thing because
7:49
we've seen it.
7:50
We've talked to a number of leaders that view it that way.
7:53
It's its own function entirely or reporting into the COO or however you think
7:56
about ops
7:57
because it is holistic life cycle revenue now.
8:02
And especially as times change in different things matter, retention matters
8:06
more than
8:06
ever in this exact moment rather than net new logos and things like that.
8:10
Those are the sort of things where if you have a rev ops team reporting to
8:14
sales or reporting
8:15
under marketing or you have functional leaders within all of those, but it's
8:18
not have that
8:19
one view then it gets really siloed.
8:21
And then you can't pivot the organization at all.
8:23
It's absolutely true.
8:25
I think a lot of organizations have hybrid situation where they might own the
8:29
sales stack
8:30
but not necessarily own the marketing stack or the CS stack.
8:34
In our case it's two thirds but not all three of them.
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But what's important is not so much the reporting relationships.
8:41
There's got to be somebody driving a go-to-market meeting of some meeting of
8:45
the minds in a
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regular communication.
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And I think that easily falls in the lap of the sales ops or the rev ops leader
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so that
8:54
we can balance the requirement on the marketing side to build quality pipe and
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the requirement
8:59
on the sales side to execute well against that pipe.
9:03
As long as things are going well, it's really not a difficult job.
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But in most companies that are growing, there's challenges.
9:09
And so what I think is essential regardless of how you're organized is you
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create that
9:16
environment that playing field for all the functions to collaborate and talk.
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And as long as there's an interest in growth and learning and fixing problems
9:25
instead of
9:26
pointing fingers, you get what you need.
9:28
It might be easier if they all reported to the same place but it isn't in my
9:32
mind essential
9:32
today.
9:33
Anything else that's unique about your rev bopzorg?
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Yeah, I'm blessed to have a strong analytics team.
9:40
We have several people whose focus is to gain the insights out of the system.
9:44
And as a result, we are able to do deep analysis with all the go-to-market
9:50
functions and provide
9:51
them with that insight and also make recommended solutions.
9:55
So instead of reporting the news, we're writing the news.
9:58
What I'm most proud of is that because our analytic function is so mature,
10:03
there's really
10:04
nobody in the organization who challenges the quality of our data.
10:07
So that when we go to meetings, no one ever argues about is the data right and
10:11
whose data
10:11
is better.
10:12
I'm actually able to bring the challenges or the gaps that we see and talk
10:16
about recommended
10:17
solutions.
10:18
And my team is seen as leaders in this area.
10:22
And it's great because it's what really we're here to do.
10:25
And usually we spend so much time just trying to keep the lights on that hard
10:28
to be strategic
10:29
or proactive.
10:30
I know you've been in the role for a little while now, but I'm curious to those
10:34
first
10:34
six months.
10:35
Any lessons or experience that you had in the first six months that led to some
10:39
particular
10:40
lessons learned?
10:41
Yeah, sure.
10:42
You know, if you've done similar size companies for a while, you see common
10:45
things and you
10:46
take certain things for granted.
10:48
I think I took data hygiene, Salesforce hygiene a little bit for granted when I
10:51
got there
10:52
and realized we have a lot of work to do to get basic things so that we can
10:56
analyze our
10:57
pipe and particularly our forecast.
11:00
Also certain practices around order management just aren't necessarily
11:06
universal.
11:07
So some things that I thought were basic and just always in play needed to be
11:12
built.
11:13
The great thing though is everybody that I talked to, especially when I was
11:17
being recruited,
11:18
said please come in and challenge us.
11:20
We know that we need the expertise of somebody who's been doing this a while
11:24
and has seen
11:24
the movie before.
11:26
Please challenge what we're doing.
11:27
And I've found that the company is very good at reacting to recommendations to
11:32
improve process
11:34
and quality and overall growth.
11:35
We've done a lot of work to improve the data hygiene and we're making progress
11:39
there.
11:39
And certainly our forecast is when we first started, there was maybe seven or
11:43
eight different
11:44
managers and literally seven or eight different ways of talking about forecasts
11:47
when I arrived.
11:48
And we now have an alignment and a standard methodology and it works remarkably
11:52
better.
11:53
If I could say that.
11:54
All right, let's get into our next segment.
11:56
Rev obstacles.
11:57
Where we talk about the tough parts of RevOps.
12:00
Any specific problem that you've faced in the last six months?
12:03
Yeah, I think a lot of companies are facing similar headwinds and in terms of
12:08
getting
12:09
new customers.
12:10
And as a result, the emphasis on pipeline is tremendous.
12:14
And so what we struggled with was first of all, making sure that our ICP was
12:20
accurate,
12:21
that we had a well-defined ICP and we were able to target it.
12:25
We put a lot of energy into that and we accomplished that and felt pretty good
12:29
about it.
12:29
And then we realized we're so spread across different industries and verticals
12:33
that we're
12:34
not able to develop a lot of domain expertise inside the company.
12:37
So we did a ton of analysis to figure out where are we most effective?
12:41
Where do we have the shortest sales cycles?
12:43
Where do we have the biggest return and the biggest net retention?
12:46
We did rigorous analysis in that area and pivoted the organization from the
12:50
territories,
12:51
the talk tracks, the messaging, the personas that we focus on, the enablement.
12:56
We did a lot to make a pivot and it seemed like it wouldn't be that hard at
12:59
first, but
12:59
it turned out to be actually pretty hard.
13:02
We made that change so that we could make sure that the pipeline is so
13:07
incredibly valuable
13:08
in times like this and challenging economic times.
13:11
You can't afford to clear cut.
13:12
You have to make sure that you make the most of the pipeline that you have.
13:16
So I think we did a lot to improve our focus in that area.
13:20
The other thing that we discovered was we just had, maybe this was part of the
13:24
previous
13:24
problem, but we had very high loss rates, close loss rates in our earliest
13:29
sales stages.
13:30
My perception was we had a lot of variability in how we handled those initial
13:35
conversations
13:36
and how the SDRs did hand off to the AEs and how the initial discovery was
13:39
going.
13:40
So rather than focus on sales execution and med pick and all the things that we
13:46
do in
13:46
mid-sales cycle, negotiating, we focused really hard on that early stage sales
13:51
process so
13:52
that we could define it very clearly, have very well established exit criteria
13:56
for each
13:57
of those early stage one, stage two situations so that we could start measuring
14:01
what's working
14:02
or what's not working.
14:03
The first thing that you mentioned almost sounded more like a marketing or a
14:06
positioning
14:07
problem than you would say is a RevOps problem.
14:09
Very strategic conversation, right?
14:11
Yeah, it's a RevOps problem if there's not enough pipe because our job is to
14:15
drive not
14:15
only quality pipe that sells execution against that pipe.
14:19
And when you have high quality pipe and enough of it and you've got great sales
14:24
execution,
14:25
your job is pretty easy.
14:26
All you do is go hire more salespeople and spend more on marketing, but it's
14:29
never that
14:29
easy, right?
14:30
We did have to look at where's the focus because we can collaborate closely
14:34
with marketing.
14:36
It wasn't about finger pointing.
14:37
It was about saying how do we get more focus and how do we narrow the comp, how
14:43
challenging
14:44
this issue is because we're an emerging enterprise product.
14:47
A lot of companies don't know they need something like templify yet.
14:51
For sure.
14:52
And imagine I've managed sales kick offs my whole career.
14:55
I have had times where I've had 50 product managers building content for 30
15:00
breakout sessions
15:01
or more.
15:02
How hard is it to get even product managers who are good content people?
15:06
How hard does it get them to get them all to align around a single template in
15:10
a way
15:10
that's smooth and easy for the entire organization?
15:13
Imagine if you're responsible for all that content and how easy it would be to
15:17
ensure
15:17
that all the content came together with the same template, with the same
15:21
imagery, everything
15:22
that you try to accomplish manually when you don't have a tool like this.
15:26
And yet there are rev obstacles that you face?
15:28
Addressed forecast, certainly.
15:30
We're fortunate in that we don't have a lot of competitors.
15:33
So we don't get deals all the way down to the finish line and then lose them to
15:36
a competitor
15:37
that outsells us.
15:39
The main thing we need to do is get a lot better at our sales execution.
15:43
The changes I talked about at the early part of the sales cycle, the precision
15:47
and consistency
15:48
in stages one and two, we need to now extend that deeper into the sales cycle
15:52
so that all
15:52
the reps are doing deeper discovery, making the business case, finding the
15:57
economic buyer
15:58
and making sure that we've got a compelling business case that we're attaching
16:01
to the
16:01
largest problems in the organization and getting more than one person to care.
16:05
And of course, operating with a good mutual plan that is an actual working
16:09
document, those
16:10
are all things that we need to do more consistently.
16:13
And so I'm going to put a lot of focus this year in making sure that we have
16:16
that level
16:17
of sophistication in our sales methodology.
16:21
The other thing is we've been good at sales and marketing, but unfortunately
16:24
our customer
16:25
organization hasn't had the benefit of all the analysis and data mining that we
16:29
've done
16:30
for the other team.
16:31
So we're going to put a major focus into that this year as well.
16:34
We are fortunate not only do we not tend to lose deals to a competitor late in
16:38
the sales
16:39
cycle, but our product is very sticky.
16:41
So right now the growth that we're experiencing is from our customer
16:44
organization.
16:45
And so we need to double down to make sure that they're getting as much support
16:49
as the
16:49
new logo team and the marketing teams have had in the past.
16:52
Cool.
16:53
Do you have a Revueps moment or a mistake that you made?
16:56
Not at this company.
16:57
No.
16:58
I've been here just about a year.
16:59
So far we haven't made any big mistakes.
17:01
We haven't stopped sales.
17:03
We haven't done anything to throw a wrench into the mix, not that I haven't in
17:08
the past.
17:08
I've certainly probably the biggest mistakes I've made is too quickly and not
17:13
thoroughly
17:14
implementing new tools into the stack.
17:16
You toss something in there.
17:18
You think everyone will embrace it and adopt it very quickly.
17:21
Next thing you know, no one knows how to use it, what it's for, why we're even
17:24
doing
17:25
it.
17:26
And you can create not only waste money and waste time and implementation, but
17:31
you can
17:31
also create the tea around the stack.
17:33
You mentioned balancing sales and marketing and now that you report to finance
17:37
how you
17:38
balance that is probably a very different type of relationship.
17:42
Any other piece of advice or lessons on how to balance the, for a lot of people
17:45
it's the
17:46
three headed Hydra of sales marketing and CS, but in your case balancing sales
17:50
and marketing
17:51
demand for getting a little piece of only in the team.
17:54
We've been fortunate.
17:55
We've been able to assign specific individuals to each one of the functions and
17:59
make sure
18:00
that everybody is getting some of our focus.
18:04
Now at certain times of the year, like we just came through the end of the year
18:07
and right
18:08
now a lot of rev ops teams are building the compensation plans for the
18:11
organization and
18:12
that tends to be extremely cycle consuming.
18:16
Also budget planning and demand planning, growth planning and target settings
18:20
for the
18:21
organization is very consuming.
18:23
And so at certain times of the year, we just know that we can't be as
18:27
responsive to the
18:28
go to market functions as we'd like to be, but we do try to contain those areas
18:34
so that
18:35
once all the budget planning and we're well into the new fiscal year, we could
18:39
go back
18:39
and put our focus where it needs to be with the go to market functions.
18:43
All right, let's get into our next segment.
18:48
The tool shed where we're talking tools, spreadsheets, metrics, just like
18:52
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18:53
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18:55
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19:02
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19:10
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19:12
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19:13
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19:16
If it's especially in the marketing stack in the sales stack where we've got
19:20
gone, we've
19:20
got everything we can put together to help sales teams.
19:23
I mentioned boost up, which is our new forecasting tool.
19:27
Claire is very popular and it's a great tool.
19:29
It's very powerful.
19:30
I found this one to be a little bit more lightweight, easier to implement and
19:34
easier
19:34
to get the sales leaders to adopt.
19:36
Right now it's in transformational in terms of our transparency and our
19:41
visibility into
19:42
our pipe.
19:43
We're able to forecast quite accurately by the end of the first month of each
19:48
quarter
19:49
based on the changes that we've made.
19:51
I'm not saying that boost up is the only tool that can do that, but I am saying
19:54
that putting
19:54
the right methodology is worth every penny.
19:57
A couple of comments about that.
19:58
It's funny.
19:59
I've seen, I know myself, I've worked for sales later once who as we were
20:04
implementing
20:05
forecasting software, he asked me to build a spreadsheet that he could use in
20:09
the meantime.
20:10
The trouble is people get so enamored with their spreadsheets that they can't
20:13
let them
20:13
go even when they've got a great platform that can replace it for them.
20:17
I think if the forecasting tools are facing any headwinds, it's simply that
20:21
because a
20:22
lot of RevOps people built their careers on their ability to build spreadsheets
20:26
that
20:27
sales leaders can use for certainty in their and to de-risk their pipelines.
20:33
I find that pretty interesting.
20:34
I also noticed now one of the things that's been great for us is, and we're a
20:37
little behind
20:38
the curve on this, but we just recently, I would say within the last six months
20:42
, I've
20:43
gotten pretty good with Power BI and have been able to shift a lot of the
20:47
organization away
20:48
from Salesforce reports and really look at it in a more dynamic way through
20:53
Power BI.
20:54
Most people react to it in a very positive way, but they cling to what they
20:57
know and
20:58
stick with their spreadsheets and stick with their Salesforce reports.
21:01
We have to get out of the business of saying yes to the people that are always
21:04
asking for
21:04
a new reporter, a new dashboard and trying to point them to Power BI, which is
21:08
just so
21:09
much more powerful.
21:10
Yeah, can you explain for our listeners who don't know about Power BI because
21:14
there's
21:14
an interesting point there?
21:16
I think most people don't have your credibility to say, "Hey, we're just, I
21:21
know that you want
21:22
another report or another spreadsheet, but like no."
21:27
Yeah, and so Power BI, if it's not clear, is people have probably heard of
21:32
Tableau.
21:33
It's very similar.
21:34
It's a visualization that sits on top of multiple data sources and able to
21:37
combine data from
21:38
across multiple systems and visualize them very clearly.
21:42
Yeah, I would say that saying no to people that are used to coming, first of
21:47
all, as
21:48
a RevOps team, I define us as we're a service organization.
21:51
People should be willing, should feel comfortable coming to us to make requests
21:55
There's a point earlier on in maybe the development of the company where there
21:59
's a tendency to
22:00
want to say yes to everybody.
22:01
You train everybody to come to you, to build dashboards and people get very
22:05
dependent on
22:06
it.
22:07
To make that pivot away is not very easy.
22:11
Not only are you not giving them what they're asking for, you're potentially
22:14
creating the
22:15
perception that you're not the service organization you used to be.
22:18
Fortunately, though, if you've got a visualization tool that like Power BI or
22:23
Tableau, that can
22:24
show them the greater, the more power that you can offer and the more
22:29
flexibility people
22:30
you can come around saying no, you have to learn how to do carefully sometimes.
22:36
What metrics matter to you?
22:37
Yeah, it's all about pipe creation for us.
22:39
We put a lot of energy and focus and money into building pipe and there's never
22:43
enough.
22:44
We've asked our sales reps to get more ambitious about creating our own
22:48
pipeline.
22:49
It's known across all my peers that AE generated opportunities close at a
22:54
higher rate than
22:55
SDR generated opportunities.
22:58
But that muscle tends to weaken when you've got a whole organization that's
23:02
building
23:03
pipeline for you.
23:04
It's hard work.
23:05
You put a lot of effort into it and it seems like not to return.
23:08
Plus, you can say, well, I'm a closing resource, not a sourcing resource.
23:12
I'm paid to be a closer, not a sorcerer.
23:15
But pipe creation is everything for us and quality pipe is also important to us
23:20
So getting the organization pivoted around building pipe.
23:24
I've worked in organizations before where the SDR team was just flawless.
23:29
They were incredibly efficient.
23:30
They were generating seven meetings per week.
23:33
And that turned into quality pipe that we were able to convert in a very
23:36
efficient way.
23:38
And when you get that machine working, it's just a thing of beauty.
23:41
That's where we're putting a lot of our focus.
23:43
The other area is, of course, this win rate.
23:45
Right now, our win rates, sadly, even though we don't lose competitors, are
23:50
really quite
23:51
low.
23:52
And it's largely because we're in emerging technology.
23:55
And I think a lot of people in a tech space are emerging technology.
23:58
So a lot of people will resonate with what I'm saying.
24:01
You tend to lose mostly to do nothing.
24:04
And so maybe they come around a year later when they've thought about you and
24:08
got more
24:08
people interested and maybe have a budget line item.
24:12
But anything that we can do to increase our win rates massively helps all of
24:17
our calculations.
24:19
We get so much more out of the resources that we put in place.
24:23
If we could double our win rate, it would tremendously change the dimension
24:28
that we're
24:29
working with.
24:30
We put a lot of focus on it, but it's not just win rate.
24:34
And I know there's, I'm sure most people are familiar with, sales velocity,
24:38
because you
24:38
look at hype creation, you look at win rate, but you also look at your average
24:43
sales price,
24:43
and you divide all that by the sales cycle length, and you get a value that's
24:49
very telling.
24:50
Because each of those values in the numerator, if you improve them, your
24:54
velocity number
24:55
improves.
24:56
If you can shorten the denominator, the sales cycle length, the velocity
25:00
improves.
25:01
So those are four critical elements that you can measure very easily.
25:06
And you can see the impact of making changes in any of them.
25:10
And you can measure across sales teams, you can measure across regions, and you
25:14
can even
25:15
measure the velocity of individual sales reps.
25:18
So I found it to be a very powerful tool because it combines a lot of the key S
25:22
aaS metrics
25:23
that we all focus on.
25:24
Yeah, can you just say it again real quick for the listeners to invest it?
25:28
Yeah.
25:29
Sir, so velocity is a value, and it doesn't matter what the value is, you just
25:33
care if
25:33
it goes up or down.
25:35
So it's the leads in your pipe.
25:37
So whatever the size of the pipe is for that region or that person, times the
25:41
average sales
25:42
price, ASP, times the win rate, your close rate or win rate depending on which
25:48
one you
25:48
want to measure.
25:50
So those three variables multiplied divided by your sales cycle length, and you
25:55
will get
25:56
a dollar value.
25:57
And once you establish a baseline of that value, as those variables in the
26:02
numerator
26:03
and the denominator improve, your velocity number will improve.
26:08
And once again, it takes a few quarters to get a baseline that you can compare
26:11
against
26:12
and know what it's telling you.
26:13
But once you've done it and you've done the work to be able to access that
26:16
number, it's
26:17
a very powerful metric.
26:19
Awesome.
26:20
I love it.
26:21
Check out your sales velocity.
26:23
What about some blind spots?
26:25
What do you wish you could measure better?
26:27
What do you wish you had some metrics for?
26:30
Oh, really what I wish I could measure is really the sales activity and across
26:35
the team
26:35
and how consistent we're being or how inconsistent we're being.
26:38
I don't yet have a mechanism to do that.
26:41
I can listen to gong calls and I can get some evidence of certain things.
26:46
But I can't tell you with precision where we're losing ground, where we're
26:50
failing to
26:51
drive momentum.
26:52
I think momentum is a critical element of enterprise sales.
26:57
And when your company is run on a quarterly basis that tends to be, I don't
27:01
know, there's
27:02
that dead spot in the middle of the quarter where things just don't happen and
27:05
then they
27:05
accelerate.
27:06
So I think momentum is tremendous.
27:08
We've got MedPIC, which is an incredibly powerful qualification tool that if
27:13
used correctly
27:14
and effectively is very telling, but we haven't fully embraced the concepts.
27:19
Even though some of the salespeople are operating along the MedPIC lines, we're
27:23
not necessarily
27:23
capturing that information in Salesforce and therefore I can't come to any
27:27
conclusions
27:28
about it.
27:29
So back to what I said about Salesforce Hygiene, a lot of the blind spots I
27:33
have are simply
27:34
because I'm used to having greater data hygiene in Salesforce.
27:38
Sounds too that when you have a seasonality of a product, like we have this
27:42
with Caspian
27:42
where most people want to start a new podcast or video series at the beginning
27:46
of the year
27:47
or like, hey, let's at least get something in market at the end of Q1 or
27:51
beginning at
27:52
QQ, then you have the summer low and then it's like a bunch of people want to
27:55
start
27:55
in August, September after summer.
27:57
We want to hit that Q4 and have that.
27:59
So we have some definite seasonality for our customers.
28:03
And sometimes it feels like all the pushing in the world, all the discounts in
28:07
the world
28:07
are never going to solve the seasonality of that's just not when they buy.
28:11
I'm curious how you think about that.
28:14
I completely agree with you.
28:15
The artificial constraint of a given quarter, whether you're on a fiscal or a
28:20
calendar year,
28:22
your quarter ends doesn't mean anything to your customers.
28:25
And if anything, they're probably using that against you.
28:27
Yeah, I know I ignore it.
28:29
That's what I do.
28:30
I just ignore it.
28:31
If the nature of your product doesn't lend itself to compelling events, which I
28:34
think
28:35
all of us would like to think that we had compelling events that we could just
28:38
attach
28:38
to and have the problem to solve, failing an obvious compelling event and
28:45
dealing with
28:46
seasonality that you can't avoid.
28:48
To me, once again, it's about momentum.
28:50
The reps that sell to me are extremely good at understanding that I besides
28:56
their software
28:57
solution, I've got a lot of other stuff I'm actually responsible for, not just
29:01
helping
29:01
them sell more software.
29:03
And they're really good at understanding that and making sure that I don't lose
29:07
focus,
29:08
compelling way that doesn't irritate me, but is helping me along this journey
29:13
that we
29:13
said we were trying to accomplish together.
29:16
And I just think it takes relentless focus.
29:19
And I also think it takes, this is going to sound funny, but I think a lot of
29:23
selling
29:23
is just doing the blocking and tackling, which is following up when you said
29:27
you're going
29:27
to follow up at value every single time you engage, which is to say you've not
29:34
just taken
29:35
notes, but you turn them into insights that the customer can use.
29:38
If you're building an ROI case that's compelling and you're attaching to a
29:42
large problem that
29:43
you can get more people involved than just a single champion, if you're working
29:46
really
29:47
hard to do those things and you have truly developed a champion, as we all know
29:51
, if we
29:52
have a champion who wants us to win, they will work really hard to make you
29:56
both successful.
29:58
And I think oftentimes we refer to people that are friendly and responsive as
30:02
champions
30:02
and they may not be true champions.
30:04
So I think it's about being relentless in a respectful way and driving momentum
30:10
and not
30:11
allowing the rest of the customer's difficult world to derail their focus.
30:17
And I think that's all about blocking and tackling in sales execution.
30:20
And I think it's a bit of a lost art, to be honest, in some of the sales
30:25
organizations
30:26
that I've seen.
30:27
Yeah, I would agree with all that stuff.
30:29
And I think it's a really important thing for a RevOps person to know right now
30:32
, particularly
30:33
because one of the things I just did a bunch of predictions for 2023, because
30:36
why not?
30:37
But one of the things that I think is a focus is like, fight harder to win
30:41
deals.
30:41
And like, I would challenge the sales organization to say, are you really hard
30:47
fighting as hard
30:48
as you possibly can to win deals?
30:51
Not fighting hard as in sending more annoying emails to your point.
30:54
Are you leaving space for things to happen?
30:57
Are you creating more assets or are you creating more tools or better ROI
31:01
calculations or
31:02
getting them in touch with more customers that they can talk to or doing all
31:06
those sort
31:06
of things, getting them on your company podcast, doing the things like that
31:10
that can accelerate
31:11
the relationship and be like, no, trust me, they will have our back no matter
31:15
what.
31:15
And I think that's like a key part for going forward and RevOps can help the
31:19
sales marketing
31:20
teams with that.
31:21
Yeah.
31:22
And you all back on challenger sale concepts really clearly here.
31:25
I remember a time when I was trying to replace a data source, a data platform.
31:32
I was in a company and I know that leadership wanted me to not increase the
31:37
cost, just get
31:38
better tools, better quality.
31:39
And so I was just driven by this belief that anything that was going to
31:44
increase cost was
31:45
just unacceptable and just not possible.
31:49
And the sales rep did a great job of recognizing that's how I was struggling.
31:53
But he pushed me pretty hard.
31:55
He said, how can you allow a decision this big to be driven by that one
32:00
variable?
32:01
He needed to get me to think beyond the, oh, I've just got to solve for this
32:05
requirement
32:06
that I don't spend any more money.
32:08
The reality is building pipeline, the quality of the data in that pipeline was
32:11
an important
32:11
enough problem to rethink the spend and the strategy.
32:15
And he got me to think differently about how I approached the CEO and the sales
32:18
leader
32:19
about how we should fund this problem.
32:21
And I wouldn't have done that if the rep didn't grab me by the lapels and kind
32:24
of shake
32:25
me a little bit.
32:26
I would add one thing to this, to that conversation is when we talk about the
32:30
stuff that you just
32:31
said, the people who are not in the room or the people who are signing off on
32:35
the checks
32:35
or whatever are the people that really need to be influenced.
32:39
And that's where maybe the RevOps person needs to go to the marketing Oregon
32:43
say, hey, do
32:43
we have any campaigns that are targeting the bosses of this stuff?
32:48
I know there are three clicks above this and they're going to think about this
32:52
problem
32:52
for five minutes when they see that PO come across their desk.
32:56
But do we have any type of coverage here?
32:58
And the other thing I would add to that too is if your business doesn't really
33:01
have seasonality,
33:03
but your customers have seasonality because they need to hit their quarters,
33:07
which is,
33:07
hey, if you want to hit Q4, for us, it's like if you want it for a podcast
33:11
series, hey,
33:12
I know you don't want to start a podcast in the middle of summer, it takes 60
33:16
days to
33:17
get one live and 30 more days to get it into market and get to ROI.
33:22
If you want to crush Q4, we should start this thing in June.
33:26
That's just how the math looks, for example, for us.
33:29
And so there is pushing to that seasonality.
33:32
That is the language that a senior leader understands, is like, I don't want to
33:36
miss
33:36
Q4.
33:37
No, I agree.
33:39
And I just think that in addition to that air cover, the confidence and the
33:44
maturity
33:45
of the sales organization to understand that they need to take control of the
33:48
sales process
33:49
as much as the customer might want to prevent that.
33:52
When I look at the activity traffic and the email traffic and all the ins and
33:57
outs of
33:58
the typical deal, especially deals that slip, it's clear to me that we have
34:01
allowed the
34:02
customer to control the entire process.
34:05
And we have got to have the confidence and the willingness to sometimes push
34:09
through
34:09
what can be some resistance and just some people distracted by other problems
34:14
and the
34:14
things.
34:15
But I find that that willingness to drive momentum in a respectful way is
34:21
critical.
34:22
And the other thing I think I've seen so many times is especially in enterprise
34:26
deals as
34:27
deals that slip because of just what you and I talked about, which is customers
34:31
don't
34:31
care about the quarter end.
34:33
Their legal and procurement process is what it is and we can't generally
34:37
influence it.
34:38
All we can do is understand it and get out in front of it.
34:41
And I know I'm a bit of a broken record on this topic, but all those years ago
34:44
when I
34:45
worked at Salesforce, I think the most powerful tool that we use so
34:48
consistently was the mutual
34:50
action plan.
34:51
If you actually have a working document with a champion with a timeline and a
34:56
schedule
34:56
and a go live date, not the close date, but a go live date and how are we going
35:00
to get
35:01
there?
35:02
Regariously challenging every assumption in that mutual plan so that when we
35:07
ask the
35:07
champion how long is your legal process take and they say, oh, it's probably
35:10
going to be
35:11
three days, let's try and get like that.
35:13
Let's find out if it's two weeks because it probably is and deals that have a
35:16
working
35:16
mutual plan are the deals that aren't the ones that surprise you by slipping at
35:21
the
35:21
end of the period.
35:22
Yeah, the legal review definitely will take longer than three days.
35:26
That's for sure.
35:27
Obviously, you're super passionate about salespeople and about SDRs and all of
35:31
that.
35:31
I'm curious, what have you been doing?
35:32
What are you working on in the SDR world and how are you supporting those folks
35:36
I know you're doing a lot.
35:37
I have seen SDR organizations that are skilled discovery weapons.
35:43
They can take you through the sandalar painful from the application layer to
35:47
the business
35:48
impact to the personal impact and they're not afraid to do it.
35:50
They're good at it.
35:52
I've seen a lot of sales organizations that think, now they're there to ask
35:56
bent questions
35:57
and quickly introduce this prospect to an AE.
36:00
I have found that the SDRs that get good at discovery are the ones that turn
36:05
into excellent
36:06
salespeople and really hit the ground running.
36:08
Plus, we have higher quality pipe in the meantime.
36:11
Everything in the SKILLs, the SDRs and the DISCOVERY SKILLs and the STRs, I
36:14
think is huge.
36:16
Personally, I think it's a really tough time to be an SDR and I think that a
36:20
lot of companies
36:21
lose a ton of deals because of SDRs.
36:23
I just think, I know for me personally, for my friends who are executives, if
36:28
they fill
36:29
out a lead form or if they come to your website and they want to talk to
36:33
somebody right now
36:34
and they get put on with someone who's 22 years old or whatever, it's just it
36:39
is a struggle
36:40
and that's just a lot of times not who a senior leader wants to talk to.
36:44
There has to be some sort of, like you said, it's so important, there has to be
36:49
some sort
36:50
of really sharp formal training with those hopes living, marketing, or sales or
36:54
wherever
36:54
they live.
36:55
There has to be some sort of really sharp stuff that you're doing because I
36:58
think you can
36:59
just personally, I think you can burn a lot of good will.
37:04
You can and I'll acknowledge I've had a lot of really bad conversations with S
37:08
DRs in the
37:09
past.
37:10
I have occasionally come across really good ones and I tell you I'm so
37:13
impressed when
37:14
I come across an SDR that has a grasp of the opportunity and knows how to talk
37:19
and knows
37:19
how to ask a good question, get an answer back and then do something with that
37:24
answer
37:24
instead of just going to the next question.
37:27
They don't have to have all the business acumen in the world if they're
37:30
comfortable
37:31
and I understand how to ask questions and how to deal with the answers in a
37:35
smooth way.
37:36
If an SDR can do that for me, I will make their life so much easier.
37:41
I will play the part of a prospect, an interested prospect.
37:45
I'll give them what they're looking for and I get excited because I'm happy
37:48
because it
37:49
looks like this is a salesperson.
37:50
This is a person who's going to turn into a great salesperson someday.
37:53
I love it.
37:54
All right.
37:55
Let's get to our final segment.
37:58
Quick hits.
37:59
These are quick questions and quick answers.
38:02
If you could make any animal any size, what animal would it be and what size
38:06
would it
38:06
be?
38:07
Dog, I guess even bigger dogs I think would be pretty cool because dogs are
38:12
generally
38:13
friendly and not terrifying.
38:15
So they could be as large and as powerful as wolves but not as dangerous.
38:19
I think that would be entertaining.
38:21
Huge dog.
38:22
I love it.
38:23
It's a great answer.
38:24
Any rev-ops misconception you want to clear up?
38:27
Oh, we've talked about some of it.
38:28
I think the idea that we're just there to keep the lights on and keep the sales
38:32
machine
38:32
moving and be the report monkeys, I think that one needs to go away as rev-ops
38:36
evolves
38:37
and we deliver more value and insight to the organization.
38:41
If someone was to play you in the movie of your life, who are you selecting for
38:47
the actor?
38:48
Oh, man.
38:49
Matt Damon.
38:50
But he can't buy a zoo or he can in fact buy a zoo.
38:54
He could buy a zoo.
38:55
I would probably actually do that.
38:57
That's really funny that you bring that up.
38:58
Yeah.
38:59
Matt Damon.
39:00
More for the Jason Bourne character than for the buying a zoo character.
39:05
Sure.
39:06
Yeah.
39:07
Best advice for someone who is newly leading a rev-ops team?
39:11
Most people will be under-resourced probably.
39:13
They won't be fortunate to have the...
39:15
And I'm not saying I've got tons of resources but I do have enough people to
39:18
focus on each
39:19
go-to-market function.
39:21
I would say don't let your people get siloed.
39:24
A person who's a great admin may want to have nothing to do with sales
39:27
compensation but
39:28
the fact is if they don't go down that path, it will be very limiting for them.
39:33
And if they want to grow as a rev-ops person, they have to have as broad a
39:37
portfolio as
39:38
they possibly can.
39:39
So allow the team members to share responsibilities.
39:43
Another example is don't allow somebody to become an expert at reporting and
39:46
have that
39:47
be what they do.
39:48
It's great to have that capability but try to build a way to spread that
39:52
capability across
39:53
the rest of the team so that you've got a bunch of generalists and not people
39:57
that
39:57
are focused on area and then you're in trouble when any of them take vacation
40:02
or leave.
40:03
This has been absolutely wonderful having you on the show, Voni.
40:06
I took a ton of notes.
40:07
We'll link them up in the show notes here.
40:09
Thanks so much for sharing all this stuff.
40:11
And then for our listeners, go to templified.com especially if you're in
40:15
marketing and sales,
40:16
branding comms, H-R-I-T.
40:19
Everybody needs to templified, go to templified.com.
40:21
Any final thoughts?
40:22
Anything to plug?
40:23
A couple of shout outs.
40:24
First of all, anybody listening to this is probably familiar with Modern Sales
40:28
Bros.
40:28
It's an online community that has great signal to noise ratio.
40:34
And the operators of that site are relentless about not allowing vendors to
40:40
come in and
40:40
pitch their products every time someone like me asks a question.
40:43
So it makes a great flow of information.
40:47
Sometimes it's very technical.
40:49
Sometimes it's very high level and conceptual.
40:52
It's great.
40:53
I think if you're early in your career, you'll learn so much just by seeing the
40:56
questions
40:57
and answers that may or may not apply to your own world.
41:00
But it's a tremendous resource for any ops professional.
41:04
Another one that I would love to point out if I might, which is an entity
41:08
called Sassy
41:08
Sales Management.
41:10
This is run by Matt Cameron and it's a bunch of classes for sales professionals
41:14
that assume
41:15
that you have made a transition.
41:17
Let's say your sales rep has become a manager.
41:19
That's the classic example of we can give people new experience in how to be a
41:22
manager
41:23
when they're early on their sales and leadership careers.
41:25
I in fact support Matt with a class for Relops people who are early in their
41:30
career.
41:31
They just joined RevOps and they want to figure out how can I grow in my career
41:34
and not get
41:34
pigeonholed.
41:35
Those are two entities that I feel really strongly about and would just love to
41:38
be able
41:39
to give a shout out to them.
41:40
Awesome and we'll link them up here in the show notes.
41:43
Boni, thanks again.
41:44
We really appreciate it and take care.
41:46
Likewise again, thanks.
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[Music]
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[Music]
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(upbeat music)