On this episode, Jamie believes that revenue operations have been around for a long time, but we haven’t always called it “RevOps.” He describes how investing in your RevOps team will result in a great ROI, and how to focus on what really matters when building your bottom line.
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[MUSIC]
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Welcome to Rise of RevOps.
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This episode features an interview with Jamie Anderson,
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Chief Revenue Officer of Imburse.
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Imburse is the global leader of
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spend optimization with
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expense, travel management, and payment solutions.
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Jamie believes that revenue operations have been around for a long time,
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but we haven't always called it RevOps.
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Today, he'll describe how investing in your RevOps team will
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result in a great ROI and how to focus on what really
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matters when building your bottom line.
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Welcome to Rise of RevOps.
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I'm Ian Faison, CEO of CastMean Studios.
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Today, we are joined by a special guest, Jamie.
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How are you?
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I'm doing great, Ian. Great to be here. Thank you.
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Great to have you, excited to have you on the show.
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My brother's name is Jamie because my grandfather was Scottish.
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It's all familiar here today on Rise of RevOps.
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I should I guess Ian as well is a very Scottish name.
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Oh, indeed.
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Yeah, exactly. My grandfather grew up in Glasgow.
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Well, we're not just talking about Scotland, a wonderful place.
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We're also talking about revenue.
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We're talking about RevOps and all the cool stuff that you're doing at Imburse.
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Zoom out here. Tell me a little bit about what it means to be
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Chief Revenue Officer of Imburse.
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Well, it means that everything to do with revenue across the business,
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whether it's new business bookings,
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whether it's existing customers, cross-sell, up-sell, professional services,
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retention, then it all falls under my remit.
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We look at it quite scientifically at times with all the tools that are
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available.
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We look for trends. We try and spot things that look right.
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We try and look at things that perhaps aren't where they should be
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and take corrective action.
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I think just the array of tools and the maturity,
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a lot of the tools in the market today helps us do that.
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How do you view RevOps as a Chief Revenue Officer?
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That's a very, very open and philosophical question.
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Yeah.
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It's amazing.
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I think that if I go back to my days at Seabull Systems over 20 years ago now,
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and I look at moving from there to SAP,
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I saw two businesses which were very, very focused on running the numbers
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and had incredibly strong discipline installed,
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and still rather than people to pay attention to those things.
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Now, the tools that we use to get to the numbers,
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but a lot less sophisticated today,
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certainly did not have artificial intelligence built into them.
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But we did notice enough in trends
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that enable us to accurately predict
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where we thought we would land as revenue teams.
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So there's definitely been around a long time.
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We probably just didn't call it RevOps.
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There certainly wasn't RevOps teams.
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That's for sure.
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Then tell us a little bit about Inverse and who you sell to.
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Well, Inverse is a leading travel and expense management company.
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So we're probably most known for expense management.
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And really our goal is to simplify TNE for everyone.
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Something that over the years creates a great deal of pain
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for people on the road and sellers.
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We make it super easy for people to obviously log expense receipts
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for businesses to ratify, reconcile expenses
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across the business, categorize them correctly.
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And there's really three big buckets to spend.
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You have your spend, which falls into that TNE.
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You have your departmental spend,
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and you also have the spend that would typically be associated
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with invoice purchasing.
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And Inverse gives you incredible visibility into all of that
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and enables you to manage it in a very, very simple fashion.
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And we also have cards which support that spend as well.
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So there's a very, very strong cards business within there,
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which simplifies again for the traveler or the employee.
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They spend.
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And then how do you think about RevOps specifically at Inverse?
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How do you think about how it affects both the sales side,
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the customer success side, and of course marketing?
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Well, first of all, it gives us real strong insights
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into how the business is performing.
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I think just giving us that visibility into our pipeline trends.
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So we have several different businesses.
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We basically serve 18,000 customers globally as a company.
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So being able to see the patterns where those customers,
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and particularly from a customer success perspective,
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where those customers are using the technology,
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where we can actually see how they're engaging with us.
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If we're creating opportunities to support that engagement,
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and so for things like retention and cross-sell and upsell,
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we have that visibility in the business.
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And similarly, as we look at what constitutes our ideal customer profile,
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I think it enables us to look at the pipeline in each of those areas
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and accurately predict outcomes for the business as well.
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Obviously, it's like the name of the game as a CRO
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is being able to predict and forecast effectively,
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which in uncertain times like we've had over the past year,
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is that, well, really the past three years,
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has been even more difficult.
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So it's like if you're relying on a functional layer of data
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that is bad, then your predictions compoundly get bad.
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Whereas if you're able to have that sort of like the market texture in place,
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and your revenue architecture in place, and all that stuff,
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and you can actually make decisions based off of what is signal,
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what is noise, then it all gets a little bit easier.
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It's not easy, but easier.
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Yeah, I mean, look, expanding on that a little bit in.
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When I think about it, I think I said, there's key industries
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where we have success and where we understand the success rate.
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So some industries, for example,
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conversion rates are going to be 50% and above, realistically 50%.
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There's some industries where it's a bit more competitive,
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and maybe 20% or 30% on average.
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What the insights enable us to do is to then go and teach to those industries,
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and almost segment those industries by customer size.
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So for example, if you take legal,
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there's SMB, the small medium size legal firms,
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there's mid-size legal firms, and there's enterprise legal firms.
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So the wind rates will differ again between those customer segments.
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So we understand that the revenue operations gives us the insight into that.
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And it enables us to do two or three things even better.
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One of those things is obviously, yes, predict the outcome based on the sales
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stage
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and the weighty pipeline that you have in each of those industries.
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We also know the deal of velocity and when deals should close,
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you have your sales methodology baked into sales force that says,
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well, if it's a stage five opportunity, then it's got a 90% chance to close,
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but this isn't an ICP.
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We typically win against this competition more than any other.
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Again, it enables us to be better to predict in the outcome.
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So that's number one.
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Number two, when we think about building pipeline as well,
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the insights that we're getting from when we do win
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tells us that we should focus more on doing that
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unless or chasing down business that we don't often win,
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which is a waste of everybody's time and marketing dollars.
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Frankly, can you give an example that I know you can't get like super
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in detail to the examples, but can you give an example of something that like,
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you know, one of those signals that says like, hey, we're, we're, you know,
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spending too much to try to acquire a certain type of account.
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It's difficult to do it without, you know, giving too much away.
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Give me secrets.
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Given the secrets.
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So I say, but let's just say, let's like, what this says for a little bit.
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There are certain segments, as I said, and there's certain.
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And so for example, let me give you a great example.
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Before I came to the business, I looked at performance across
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all the segments I mentioned.
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And what I like to do is, you know, if you take a basic SMBE,
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mid-market enterprise, right?
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Now, let's take the SMBE segment.
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It's a segment which is largely driven by a lot of inbound activity, right?
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So you're spending a lot of money on marketing to drive eyeballs to your site
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to potentially convert, you know, through, you know, your online tools,
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which enable you to do self-driven demos or whatever happens to be.
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But you drive a lot of traffic.
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And there's a lot of money typically goes into doing things like Google AdWords
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and doing your SEO.
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Taking something like SMBE holistically as one segment,
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without then breaking it down into subsegments based on either,
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you know, the size of the company by employee size,
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or maybe it's by revenue or however you want to do it.
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And what I discovered was that the majority of the visitors that then
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registered,
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they created leads and all the rest of it on the site were for very, very small
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companies, right?
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And we've also got an SMBE sales team as well.
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Where the highest conversion was was higher up in SMBE.
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So the highest subsegment of SMBE created profitable business,
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enabled us to cross-sell as opposed to the business,
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which was being largely driven by SEO and,
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and like, you know, paying for your Google AdWords and that type of thing.
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That was driving very low levels of ARR return, but high volumes of touch.
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And at the end of the day, the conversion wasn't great.
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So then that enables you as a revenue leader to say, why are we doing that?
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Why are we spending X millions driving eyeballs there when actually if we flip
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this
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and move maybe slightly away from that level of inbound and invest more in out
11:39
bound,
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driving activity based on thought leadership or whatever else, you know, with
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some real campaigns,
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then we have higher wind rates and the higher propensity to win.
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And you're engaging with people that actually look in and solve a problem,
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as opposed to people that might be kicking tires and potentially may buy
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something from you.
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But what should propensity to cross-sell to them?
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Again, it's low.
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So it's those type of insights I think that important.
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I think this gets at a really important piece, which is like, even the term SMB
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is probably one
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of the silliest things in business.
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I think that there's a bunch of different pieces in here that is why I think
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RevOps
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like endlessly fascinating and whether you define this stuff as more of, you
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know,
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whose job it is on the revenue chain to figure this out is your own decision.
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But this like strategic part of revenue ops, which is, okay, these are all of
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the segments
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that we're going after.
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Yeah.
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Like, is a 10-person company and a 100-person company, should they be
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categorized in the same
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group? It's like maybe, maybe not.
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But like, it's a silly thing to say that like we set these arbitrary sort of,
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okay, well, a 2,500-person company is mid-market, but enterprise is 5,000.
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You're like, how do you even quantify that?
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And then someone who's just raised a bunch of money, if they just raised 250
13:05
million,
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they spend like there's someone who is XYZ, but they have a higher propensity
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to churn
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potentially or what, you know, all of those things.
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I'm just curious how you think about those type of things.
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I think that's why it's really important to have an industry focused and
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specialization,
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because it differs massively.
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The first time ever came across this EAN was,
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there were many, many years ago now, over 10 years ago, when I was working at
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SAP,
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we acquired this amazing company called Hybros to give us an e-commerce
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capability.
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And what we discovered was that the SAP model that they'd set up like this, you
13:43
know,
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SMBE, mid-market general business, large enterprise, all that type of thing,
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the way in which they defined that didn't necessarily work for e-commerce,
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because you could have
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a 40-person company generating 300 million, 400 million dollars of revenue
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through the online store.
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Right. But how do you categorize that?
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You know, when you're looking at things differently.
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Similarly, you know, if we look at things and we say,
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"Sebi segment by employee count," right, which some companies do as well, right
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, you say,
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"Well, 0 to 50 employees, 50 to 50 to 5500," you start doing that.
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And you use that as a measure of a company's spend.
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As soon as you're going to construction, you're going to find that's absolutely
14:34
bonkers,
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because you know, you can have a construction company of, you know, 50 to 100
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people spending
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several millions, you know, on materials and purchasing, you know, through
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cards or invoice and,
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you know, it breaks the model. So you've got to find and understand those
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anomalies.
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And I think also having strong revenue operations enables you to do that, to
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see those anomalies.
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And then sometimes it sparks, sometimes it sparks a new campaign,
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or a new idea about how you go to market. Okay.
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Let's get to our next segment, Rev Obstacles, where we talk about the tough
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parts of RevOps.
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Zoom in and hear on client experience. What do you think makes a horrible
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client experience?
15:21
One which is pretty unengaging, right? One which feels incredibly scripted.
15:27
One where the customer can't pick up the phone and speak to someone,
15:34
I think doesn't make for a necessarily great customer experience. And everybody
15:39
's looking
15:40
for something different. Maybe people define customer experience in different
15:45
ways.
15:46
I think you have to be available when the customer needs you, whether that's by
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digital channels,
15:51
or physically, if they want to pick up the phone and speak to you.
15:55
How do you think about the role of RevOps supporting both sales, customer
16:04
success, and marketing?
16:05
We can sort of touch on that a little bit earlier. But as the CRO is sort of
16:10
deciding
16:10
where they spend their time the most, we call it sort of like the three-headed
16:16
hydra that everybody wants to get RevOps resources to support their efforts.
16:22
How do you sort of
16:23
help decide that? So we do have marketing operations, and we have revenue
16:29
operations that support
16:31
definitely sales and customer success. I think the key to all is we're going
16:38
through this process
16:39
right now. I think the key to all is agreeing together what the priorities are.
16:44
And that is
16:45
what the go-to-market priorities are, what the key messages that we want you to
16:48
live are,
16:49
making sure that the marketing and sales programs and campaigns support the go-
16:55
to-market with the
16:56
right content and the right execution. And that way everybody's working towards
17:03
a shared goal.
17:04
One of the things I think that has always caused tension between marketing and
17:10
sales is this notion
17:12
of attribution. Where did the lead come from? The reality is customers touch in
17:21
multiple ways now.
17:22
So what people tend to measure is the last touch. And they say, "Well, that
17:28
belongs to me because
17:29
we touched it last. The customer came to an event, and it was that event that
17:34
we closed the customer
17:35
without realizing that, "You know what, guys, we're all in this together." And
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as long as everybody's
17:41
touching the customer and giving the customer delivering value through that
17:46
experience every
17:47
touch point, we achieve a shared outcome. I think it's fine to measure what all
17:51
those touches are.
17:53
But I think if everybody's joined up and understands the priorities, then we're
17:58
working to the same
17:59
goal. And it shouldn't be as draconian as measuring that last touch attribution
18:05
, which can be very
18:06
misleading. I love that. Can you go into that just a little bit further?
18:10
Because that
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last... I think that this is something... I think it's like one of the things
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that C.R.O.s and CMOs get
18:16
wrong the absolute most is fighting for last touch attribution, which is in the
18:22
current buying
18:22
climate such a silly proposition anyways. It's so complex now, especially
18:27
before they even start
18:28
the buying process that this idea of last touch seems a bit archaic. Here's the
18:34
reality to it.
18:35
The idea of friction and tension is counter-productive to the outcome. Sales
18:42
can't exist without marketing.
18:43
Marketing can't exist without sales, right? Because sales is the ultimate
18:49
purpose of marketing.
18:50
And marketing supports sales and its endeavors. So to me, I think that any type
18:59
of conflict is
19:00
entirely counter-intuitive and counter-productive to the outcome. Listen, there
19:05
are reasons if you
19:08
have sat down together, if you've used the data that you possess as a company,
19:14
to very clearly
19:16
identify your ICP, whether it's multiple ICPs or whether it's a particular
19:21
geography that you can
19:22
penetrate with your product or whatever it happens to be. Once you've
19:25
identified that
19:26
priority and you go after it together, you're absolutely right. There are
19:30
multiple touches.
19:31
There are things that drive people towards the brand of the brand message. So
19:34
having a very,
19:35
very strong purpose and being able to articulate that purpose, whether it's
19:40
something like,
19:41
"Hey, we want to eliminate the expense report." It just wanted to become a
19:46
thing in the past.
19:47
We're going to simplify travel and expense management for every traveler and
19:50
every company.
19:52
Whether it's something as simple as that as a call to action, you need to make
19:56
sure that every
19:57
piece of marketing material and everything that you do stands behind that
20:01
message. Because over time,
20:03
that's the hook that's going to bring people back again and again. And then
20:10
when they come
20:11
and they're engaged and they get value from that engagement and that's critical
20:16
, that you're able
20:17
to articulate the corporate value that you bring to them. It's not about speeds
20:22
and feeds and
20:23
features and functions. Everybody's got that. But what is the unique value that
20:27
you bring
20:28
beyond the software? I'll give you an example. One of the things about
20:33
embarsed is 18,000 customers globally in 25 industries, over that period of
20:39
time that embarsed
20:40
has been going, we've built a network, a really strong community of experts who
20:45
share insights
20:48
and tips and ideas. Now, as part of the sales process, what I want to do is I
20:54
want to expose that
20:55
to the buyer. I want to bring them into that before they buy. Now,
21:00
it's marketing that are running those events that are bringing people together.
21:05
And,
21:06
does that mean that marketing one to business? Not necessarily if the customer
21:13
turned up at the
21:13
event, but it's been a process. And it's been a customer driven process. It's a
21:18
customer's chosen
21:19
to engage with us at each intersection of that journey. And they've landed here
21:26
and they've
21:26
now have all the information and need to make a decision. And I want to go with
21:31
embarsed.
21:32
I love it. You're passionate about authentic leadership and obviously, having
21:39
strong leadership
21:40
in your CRO, in your CMO, in your VP of customer success, or however you're
21:45
functioned there.
21:46
And of course, having strong leadership in your RevOps leader are all super
21:52
important.
21:52
How do you think that those leaders can be better? It can be more cohesive?
21:57
Maybe I'm oversimplifying it. But there's a lot of years and a few gray years,
22:03
but
22:03
going into this statement, I think it all stems from communication. I think you
22:08
have to have a
22:09
consistent cadence of communication as a leader, which reinforces what's
22:14
important to the business
22:16
and by omission what's not important, because that gets people really focused
22:23
on what matters.
22:25
When I think about the leadership, it's about being able to provide clear
22:30
direction to people,
22:31
to be able to articulate, as I said, the things that are important.
22:36
If you're having challenges, or if someone who's listening is having trouble
22:40
hitting targets,
22:42
how do you start to identify the challenges with hitting targets and how do you
22:47
come up with a
22:47
credible plan? Well, I think a business, you're looking for the patterns. For
22:53
example,
22:54
you can see pretty quickly, you can drop it down to a team level. Under
23:00
performance tends not to
23:02
happen in every segment, in every quarter, all at the same time. It tends to
23:09
happen in pockets.
23:10
What you're looking for is you're looking to see within those individual
23:16
pockets whether it's
23:21
a geographical thing, whether it's to do with not having enough sellers on the
23:28
street,
23:29
which it can be, so they can actually meet the demand that's coming in.
23:35
Sometimes it can be a
23:37
leadership issue. In one area, we are now giving you an example of, look, if
23:42
you look at a team
23:42
and you have a team of eight sellers and six sellers are underperforming, and
23:50
it's been
23:50
consistent over two or three quarters, it's likely you've got a leadership
23:54
problem,
23:55
as opposed to if you look at a team with those two individuals underperform,
24:00
and they underperform consistently over a few quarters, it's probably an
24:03
individual thing,
24:04
and you're looking at potential performance improvement plans and that type of
24:09
thing.
24:09
As leaders, as a business, you're looking at, first of all, you're looking at
24:16
those insights,
24:17
and you're looking to spot those trends. I think having a keen eye on the data
24:21
is really, really
24:22
important. About an individual level, I think you start asking yourself things
24:27
about your territory.
24:28
Is it the right territory? I'm a set up for success. As long as you can prove
24:34
that you're doing
24:35
the cadences consistently and you're executing against the plan, as long as you
24:42
're doing those
24:43
things, I think you can have a sensible conversation with your manager about
24:47
where you may need help.
24:48
Maybe you're just in a territory that's really tough right now. Maybe you've
24:54
got an industry
24:55
that has pulled back from buying because of some macroeconomic pressures that
24:59
affect in that industry.
25:00
Maybe you need a fresh impetus of marketing support. I think there's a bunch of
25:07
things you can look
25:08
to, but as a seller, I think, look, you should always find a way to build your
25:15
own pipeline
25:17
prospect effectively. If that's a challenge, I think you speak to your manager,
25:23
but you're going to see what support the business can give. That's why the
25:26
manager is there to lift
25:28
you up, to be frank. I don't know if you have the answer to this one off the
25:32
top of your head here,
25:32
but what's one of the best things that you spend money on over the past year or
25:36
so?
25:38
That's ROI. Best ROI. That's a really good question. The best ROI so far has
25:45
been additions that we've
25:46
made to the revenue operations team by far, and that's been investing in people
25:51
that have brought
25:53
a stronger focus on sales cadence and delivering what I would call kind of like
26:00
not marketing
26:02
campaigns, but sales plays. Something that's a lot more agile than building out
26:06
a big campaign.
26:07
We recently invested in bringing in a team who consistently monitor the sales
26:15
pipeline
26:16
and look for gaps in pipeline and work with the sales leaders in something we
26:22
established called
26:23
demand generation councils for every single theater that we have. The demand
26:28
generation
26:28
councils and the team and revenue opposite run that basically bring together
26:33
our partner leaders,
26:35
our marketing leaders, our SDRs, and our sales leaders in each of the theaters
26:40
and say,
26:41
here's where pipeline is strong and looking three and four quarters out, here's
26:46
where pipeline is
26:47
development. Marketing, this is what we need from you, but sellers, here's
26:52
where you can take
26:53
accountability and drive this. To me, it's very much process improvements that
26:58
we've made
26:58
and bringing in the right people have driven that transformation to certainly
27:03
help us measure things,
27:04
but they're never the answer themselves. To me, it's always been about people,
27:10
process,
27:10
and then technology. To get the right people, establish the right process and
27:15
the right cadencies,
27:16
and then use the technology to implement, reinforce, and measure.
27:21
It's something I've been thinking about a lot because we're going through a
27:25
tech overhaul
27:26
here at Caspian. Without that base knowledge and without the people that can
27:32
figure out
27:34
what is happening in the data, you can never go as fast as you want to go, and
27:42
you can't really
27:43
do anything. I love that that's the best ROI thing is building out a rev-up
27:47
scene. Obviously,
27:49
self-serving for us on this podcast, but it is so true. It's like, how could
27:52
you even do
27:53
your job without it? Look, I'm a huge exponent of using science, using the data
28:04
and spot in the patterns in the data because, look, data is great. It doesn't
28:12
really lie.
28:15
What it does is it either dispels a theory or a thesis that you may have or it
28:21
supports it.
28:22
That's the science part. Sorry, the art part is, hey, I've got an idea. I think
28:29
we should do this.
28:30
Everybody gets super pumped about it and everybody's really excited, but if the
28:35
data does validate
28:36
that kind of emotional, artistic impulse, then you don't do it. You have to be
28:44
very disciplined
28:44
about it. I do think it's a perfect blend of those things.
28:48
Let's get to our next segment, the tool shed. We're talking tool spreadsheets
28:54
metrics just
28:55
like everyone's favorite tool, qualified. No B2B tool shed is complete without
28:59
qualified.
29:00
Go to qualified.com right now and check them out. You can sell right from your
29:04
website. Somebody
29:05
goes through website, turn that thing on, close deals, go to qualified.com.
29:10
There are best friends
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in the whole world and we love them dearly. Go to qualified.com and check them
29:15
out.
29:15
Jamie, what is in your tool shed? How do you think about technology and tools
29:22
and data?
29:23
Absolutely required. First of all, you can do it without it. We're now
29:29
processing so much data
29:30
in real time that the insights we're looking to get are immediate. I'll give
29:37
you a little example.
29:38
So if you look at some of our rev-op stack and I think we've got too much, a
29:45
factor of the fact
29:46
that the market itself is convoluted and there are so many different tools. Now
29:54
everybody's
29:54
trying to eat each other's lunch a little bit. You probably see this in.
29:57
Whether you've got
29:59
gong or chorus, whether you've got a visa, insight squared or clarry, whether
30:09
you've got sales
30:10
loft, high spot and all of this stuff is in your rev-op stack. So we've got
30:16
some of these tools.
30:18
And now everybody's trying to get into each other's landscape. Conversational
30:26
AI
30:27
is a huge thing as well. And deliver on real time insights from calls, how
30:33
often were the
30:34
competitors mentioned? Does this create a risk? It's using that discord deals.
30:39
All that's going on
30:40
right now. So we've got every tool you could possibly imagine in a revenue
30:46
operation stack.
30:48
I'm looking for the person that's going to come out with a first sweet,
30:50
true integrated suite that's going to challenge that. I'd be interested to talk
30:55
to them.
30:55
Couldn't agree more. Yeah, you've talked about this idea of maybe we're getting
30:59
a little lazy with
31:00
AI. How do you think that that is going on? I have spoken about that. You're
31:07
right. The notion of AI
31:08
is fantastic. AI is a great way to gut check and sense check a forecast.
31:15
Now it's not trying to tell you lies, an artificial intelligence engine. It's
31:22
trying to interpret
31:24
lots and lots of data in real time as things happen. For example, if you say
31:29
something like
31:30
Clary, it's AI engine. It prides itself on its ability to be predictive and
31:37
accurate.
31:38
Now I don't want it for that. I want it to show me where my risks are. I want
31:46
it to show me when
31:48
I'm my leaders. It's a little over the skis that Colin Warden Clary says, I'm
31:53
going to use that
31:54
to really drive in and interrogate what that sales leader's rolling up. By the
32:01
way, if that
32:02
sales leader is ahead of Clary, I want that sales leader he went. I don't want
32:06
Clary he went.
32:07
Right. Secondly, if my sales leader is calling under what Clary's calling, then
32:15
I want to know
32:16
what they're holding back. I'm speaking to sales leader and go, are you low
32:19
balling me here? Why is
32:21
Clary calling you at say 5.5 million, but you're only rolling up 4.5. You're
32:26
not confident in the
32:27
call. Why is Clary more confident? Because it's looking at your historical
32:30
performance,
32:31
it's looking at data and it says you can do better. It's great for that
32:35
conversation.
32:37
I wouldn't look at what Clary gave me at the beginning of the quarter and go,
32:40
well, that's how
32:41
my quarter is going to go. That's what I'm going to manage to. Absolutely not.
32:45
But I think it's a
32:47
great tool to enable you to interpret and challenge the patterns that it sees
32:52
in the data.
32:54
Any other thoughts on data or metrics or anything like that?
32:58
There's lots of metrics. I used to work for someone that said,
33:05
hey, everything that matters can be measured, but not everything that is
33:10
measured matters.
33:11
That's when they were talking about a place we used to work together.
33:15
What matters to me is, look, what matters to me is things like
33:20
our managers reps focused on their full rolling quarter pipeline.
33:29
Are they taking a long-term view of the business? I don't know how many
33:34
businesses
33:35
can a lot from quarter to quarter, not quite known where they're going to be
33:40
one quarter out.
33:41
And to me, that's very, very scary. We've got all the tools in the world, but
33:46
you can still come
33:47
across a business and speak to someone else. It's a CRO and a grow Jamie. It's
33:51
unbelievable.
33:52
I came to this business x months ago and they couldn't tell me where they
33:58
thought they were
33:59
going to land next quarter. And that's frightening. And by the way, it's not
34:04
uncommon.
34:04
I hear this more and more. So I think we've got to be careful that
34:08
tools don't make us lazy, that we focus on always as leaders. What is our four
34:13
rolling quarter
34:14
on weighted pipeline? Is it sufficient? Is it 3x? Is it 4x? Is it sufficient to
34:20
meet
34:21
revenue goals? And is our two rolling quarter, our current quarter plus one
34:26
weighted pipeline
34:28
sufficient to actually meet the not the near-term, short-term priorities,
34:32
revenue priorities of the
34:34
business? Those things matter to me. Okay, let's get to our final segment,
34:39
quick hits, quick questions
34:41
and quick answers, quick hits. Jamie, are you ready? Yeah, I'm ready. Best
34:46
places traveled recently.
34:48
The outer hebrides. Best meal you've had in the last month. Oh, I had some
34:54
fantastic tacos
34:56
last night. They were really amazing. Where was that? I can actually look at it
35:00
from my tail window.
35:01
I can't read the name of the place. I'll send you a note later. It's very, very
35:06
good.
35:07
Perfect. Do you have a favorite hobby? Yeah, I love running. Love running.
35:14
Do you have a RevOps prediction for us? RevOps prediction. That someone will
35:19
build an all-encompassing,
35:21
all-in-one sweet, fully integrated with CRM and you'll never need to go
35:24
anywhere else.
35:25
What advice would you have for a new CRO who is trying to figure out how to run
35:33
their team?
35:35
Meet everyone. Spend half an hour getting to know everybody in the business.
35:40
What motivates
35:42
them, what excites them and ask them if there was one problem that you could
35:46
solve in this business
35:48
today and wave a magic wand and make go away? What would that problem be? I
35:51
love it. Jamie,
35:52
it's been absolutely awesome having you on the show. For listeners, you can go
35:57
to embers.com to
35:58
learn more about them, to check out their marketing, their RevOps, all that
36:02
stuff. Go to embers.com
36:05
and then go talk to your finance folks. Figure out how you're doing all of your
36:12
expense reimbursements,
36:13
all that stuff. Go to embers.com. Control your expenses, streamline payments
36:18
and reclaim your
36:20
weekend. Jamie, any final thoughts? Anything to plug here? Visit Scotland. Yes.
36:26
One of the best
36:28
places I've been in my entire life. It was absolutely incredible. The hairy
36:33
ginger coos of Scotland.
36:35
And listen, in the world's largest arts festival happens in Edinburgh every
36:40
year, as well the Edinburgh
36:41
Festival. And it's a true arts festival. It's everything in art. It's on right
36:47
now. It's the
36:49
biggest one in the world. Oh, cool. I didn't know that. That's awesome. Jamie,
36:53
thanks again. We
36:54
really appreciate it. Now you're in the middle of travels for making time with
36:58
us and we'll talk soon.
37:01
You're welcome. Thanks for taking care.
37:08
[Music]
37:17
[ Silence ]