Asia Corbett & Ian Faison

Systems to Success


On this episode, Asia discusses the importance of internalizing RevOps frameworks, the strategy behind her techstack, and why developing your management style is a gamechanger.



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[MUSIC]

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Welcome to Rise of RevOps.

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I'm the Phasile CEO of Caspian Studios, and today we are joined by a special

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guest,

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Hijia, how are you?

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>> I'm great, how are you?

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>> Doing wonderful, so excited to have you on the show,

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talking about revops, talking about the cool stuff that you all have going on

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at Bread Financial and everything in between.

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So first off, tell us a little bit about Bread Financial.

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>> Yeah, so we're a FinTech company.

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We have, I primarily support the organization that's our by now pay later

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product.

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So I think like Clara and I after pay a firm and

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the larger Bread Financial suite is like in banking.

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>> Awesome, and tell us a little bit about your role in revops.

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>> Yeah, so I'm one of two senior revenue operations managers on the team.

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We are currently a team of five, which is awesome because I've been on smaller

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teams in the last couple of years.

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So it's kind of cool to be on a team again.

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I'm primarily responsible for supporting sales, our solutions team and

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marketing.

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Then our other senior manager supports success and partnership.

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So we really do cover like the full revenue flywheel,

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all of the core revenue generating departments.

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It's a mix of project management, process improvement.

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I do some systems, stuff and reporting, building a lot of reports and dash

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boards.

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>> You've been in the field for a little while, how would you define revops?

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>> Revops is, it's the discipline that supports the business processes,

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the systems, the data insights reporting,

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and enablement that power your revenue generating teams, all of them.

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So it's not just sales, it's not just marketing.

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It's whatever your teams are, we have sales marketing solutions, partnerships,

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success, all of those teams are revenue generating functions.

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They impact our revenue generation.

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So our team is really supporting all of the underlying foundation that

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allows them to do their jobs.

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>> And so do you think your revops team is different from other folks?

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How does it stack up?

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How does it compare to other revops or go to market teams?

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>> Yeah.

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So I've been in operations for a long time and different operational roles.

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Some of them, business operations, some of them are specialized like sales ops.

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And what I've noticed over the years, even in more mature organizations,

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the way that operations teams run is,

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they're still like we can improve the way that we operate as a team,

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the revenue operations teams.

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And so we kind of have adopted sort of a agile product or

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approach to revenue operations and how our team works.

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So for example, we have a sprint cadence.

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It's how we're organizing our work and

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trying to lean into project management principles.

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Because lots of things that we're working on to have stakeholders from

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different departments and a lot of moving pieces and dependencies.

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And so those are important things to include in your practice.

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So I think there's a couple of other people who appears in the community I've

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talked to that are doing some sprints and they're using agile frameworks.

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But I think that is still not the norm.

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A lot of teams are still trying to figure that out, especially teams of one.

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And I came from that side of things too, or is in series A, small companies

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where

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I'm a team of one and I'm like, okay, what do I, how do I manage being in

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revenue operations, even as a team of one, right?

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>> Yeah, and so I'm curious, you came into this role as a senior revenue

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operations manager, what were those first 90 days like,

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how did you come into a, what was your mindset like, what did you do,

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what did you not do?

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>> Yeah, it was funny that you say that, because I actually had a plan

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of what I wanted to kind of do.

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A lot of the first 90 days of learning, you have to learn your company and

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the go-to-market motions, just kind of the high level stuff,

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how everything is organized, stakeholders you'll be working with.

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But we were finishing like a merge and the bread financial and

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the startup arm that I joined merged into one company.

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And so there, we're going through this whole brand transformation.

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I joined like at the tail end of that.

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So instead of getting to do my proper rev ops onboarding,

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I kind of got quickly thrown into a lot of things.

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We did like an email client migration,

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which impacted the entire company, not just our team, but

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there are a lot of, with sales and marketing, email is

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core part of your business processes.

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So there were lots of things that we had to work on and

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jump in on that had nothing to do with me, my onboarding and me thinking,

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okay, well, let's get operating cadence is set up.

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Let's get our PM tool set up.

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Those were things that I was kind of thinking about doing in the first 90 days.

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Didn't get around to doing until later, because we're going through that whole

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sort of company wide merge.

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But a little bit post 90 days, getting our sprint framework established,

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that was big, building out some sets of dashboards,

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I mean, doing an analysis on what we have and what we can keep and

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what needs to be built new.

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My boss has been there for three years, so she's built a pretty good foundation

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like especially around Salesforce, which is our CRM and our source of truth.

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So there's a lot of, there are a lot of things established already.

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So then there's a process improvement element that we're thinking about,

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okay, how can we optimize?

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How can we iterate? How can we grow?

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So those were things I was thinking about in the first 90 days, but really,

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it was a lot of chaos because of company stuff that was outside of our team's

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control.

6:38

Okay, let's get to our first segment, Rev Obstacles.

6:45

We talk about all those tough parts of RevOps.

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What's the hardest RevOps problem you've had to face in the last six months?

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Systems integrations, I think.

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It's challenging in the go-to-market tech ecosystem when you have lots of tools

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in your tech stack.

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And you have to manage all of these integrations and

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make sure that data is standardized,

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flowing into different places at the right time, the right place for the right

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people.

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And then helping other teams also understand that.

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That's been a challenge in my entire career.

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That's a challenge everywhere I've gone.

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And it's like, well, you can't just add another tool to the tech stack.

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You have to think about, do we really need a tool?

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Are there tools that also have that functionality where we can consolidate a

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little bit more?

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Because what happens is you got to monitor all those integrations and

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make sure that nothing's breaking like tub spot and sales force, for example,

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is a really classic one.

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If one of the forms that we change doesn't get updated in another landing page,

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leads don't get routed.

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And that's actually a problem we're fixing right now.

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So we have an email alert send a queue and like, okay,

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these are not getting assigned, why not?

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And you got to go into the systems and see a sales force issue or a hub spot

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issue.

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So and that takes time and only a few people on the team can do that.

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So it's like, how can we make that better?

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Yeah, I'm curious, like, how do you balance supporting so many departments with

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sales,

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marketing, customer success and it's a little bit different at your,

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but supporting all the different revenue functions when there's many mouths to

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feed.

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Oh gosh, I mean, it's a challenge for sure.

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Prioritization is really important by having a that process on your team,

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but also the senior leaders, like the revenue leadership needs to have goals.

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And you have to understand how all the work that you're doing is aligning to

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those goals,

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even if you don't have, like, even if you're not using an OKR framework,

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specifically or a goal framework, having like, OK, in Q3, we're going to do X,

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Y and Z.

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So how is all the work that's bubbling up from all the departments

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align to that and driving those initiatives?

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And if they're not, you have to say, hey, you realize this thing that you're

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asking

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me for, it doesn't align with those things.

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That's really important because otherwise it's hard to say, hey, I can't do

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this

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because it's going to not it's going to negatively impact these initiatives

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that we're doing.

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On the sides where your team is smaller or your team of one, that like sort of

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the PM part

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of it, the project management side of things is going to be really important

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because I was able to organize all my work in the tool and sort of build out a

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roadmap

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or things that I would be delivering.

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So and I would do it for a year and then break it down by the quarter.

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And then with understanding that, of course, things can change, but like, here

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's sort of the plan.

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So there's a section for sales stuff.

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There's a section for marketing and there's a section for CS.

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And then you can see kind of how all the projects, you know, overlap or where

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they might cross.

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And it's then you can take that to the department and say, hey, here's all of

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your initiatives.

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But guess what?

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These also touch these other departments.

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Here's all of the things that we're working on.

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I'm I'm where we're working on.

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And something is just like, don't get done ultimately, even on a big team,

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things aren't always going to get done.

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So we're doing now similar and it helps that there's a little bit more.

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There are a few more people to spread the work around, but I'll put in my stuff

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into our tool,

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which we're using is called nifty.

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And I'll categorize it as sales or marketing or solutions or whatever and put

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it into the we have a sprint planning meeting every Monday.

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And we kind of go through the backlog, move things around.

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Or like, is it still going to be released in this sprint?

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If not, we'll move it and then we sort of manage it that way.

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We are working on building out a more formalized intake process.

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So when people have requests of our team, they can submit a form and then that

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will like go into a queue.

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That's how I've done it in the past.

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Our stakeholders have a form and they can say, I need a new field in sales for

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us or I need a data, mass data change or I want to.

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I want a new sales tool and it goes into a form and it goes into a queue and

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then it gets prioritized that way.

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Love it.

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Have you had a revoops moment in the past year?

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Yeah.

11:52

So typically the best practice for making changes in sales force specifically

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is to go through sandbox environment, right?

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So you can test everything and then then put push it into production.

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And I did there were just there a few times where I just built directly in.

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Production and then I'm like, oh, yeah, should have should have done that in

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the sandbox first.

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As I was trying to be fast and I'm like, this one's a low, probably a low

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impact change.

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It gets just a new field.

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It's not connected to anything else, not connected to automation.

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But it didn't hit the sandbox refresh interval.

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So it didn't make it in the sandbox.

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So then the sandbox refresh and then it pushed changes back to production.

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So it overrope my changes.

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So I'm like, what should have gone to the sandbox?

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I've had also some in my previous positions where that hub spot, the sales

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force integration in the back end, there's this like sync sync health settings

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page that you probably should monitor because it'll tell you like how many

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records are affected by the sync errors.

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And when those records are affected, it means they're not pushing into sales

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force because it's a box and there's a big number and there's a small number.

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The big number is like the type of error.

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And then the small number is how many records are actually affected.

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So you might see a four and think, oh, the four is not a big deal.

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But underneath it says 10,000 records affected because these pick less values

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are not matching sales force.

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I mean, so it's 10,000 leads are getting pushed into sales force.

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If they might or, you know, the qualified ones aren't.

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And so I fixed that that time and it pushed.

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Yeah, about a thousand leads to sales force.

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Sales team was like, what are these?

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My boss was like, what are these?

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Are these leads?

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Were they qualified?

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Because that's revenue on the table.

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Because that sync error is kind of sitting there for a while.

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And so yeah, so it's like, oh, you know what we need.

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We need a data governance like framework and an audit cadence so that we're

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managing these things so that they don't fall through the cracks.

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But that's also hard to do in your team of one as well, because that's a heavy

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lift.

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Creating whole framework and and auditing your systems by yourself.

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But important.

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Yeah, that's pretty good.

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I like that.

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Yeah.

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All right, let's get to our next segment.

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The tool shed.

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We're talking tools, spreadsheets, metrics, just like everyone's favorite tool

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qualified.

14:42

No B2B tool shed is completely about qualified.

14:45

Go to qualified.com right now.

14:46

Check them out.

14:49

Asia.

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What's in your toolbox?

14:51

Tool shed.

14:53

Toolkit.

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Well, in my toolbox, my tool kit, sales force, CRM, HubSpot, marketing

15:02

automation platform, dial pad for dialer,

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insight squared for visualization data, Zoom for meetings.

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We're rolling out a CI for conversational intelligence.

15:22

Sales engagement platform groove.

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So I think like outside of the brands, the companies, the core pieces, you

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probably need CRM marketing automation.

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Sales engagement platforms are like the top and an enrichment tool because you

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need contact data, obviously.

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And so yeah, I think those are the top four.

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And I'm partial to sales force.

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I know that HubSpot is coming up and coming with their CRM functionality.

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So if you're a smaller company or you have less budget, like you could use that

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It's really about setting the tools up correctly to support business process

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and not the other way around buying the tool first because of the shiny

16:12

marketing, but not understanding if it's going to fit your use case or the

16:18

functionalities even there.

16:20

So I think those are the core, but like my favorite tool.

16:24

Yeah, that's what was going to be my next thing.

16:26

I was going to say, what's new?

16:27

What's what's the what can what can you not live without?

16:29

I can't live without, but I am living with that for right now is lean data.

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Oh, yeah.

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Yeah, that I mean, the three time user of lean data, I have self implemented it

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before like it's just the company is a revenue operations thought leader.

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Evan Lee is a thought leader in revenue operations.

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They I respect their like their ethos a lot and the product is good.

16:57

So there are lead routing.

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That's how like like kind of started out lead routing and lead to account

17:05

matching.

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And it's a sales force app.

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So unfortunately it doesn't work for other CRMs, but they have really.

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Increased like the functionality over the years.

17:20

There's so many really cool things that you can do.

17:23

I think that's probably not like outside of just lead to account matching.

17:26

You can do territory management.

17:28

They have a feature called the list analyzer.

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So you can check for duplicates before you upload a list.

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And I use that used that for when marketing would have events and then they're

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like, okay, here for the event, can you upload these as campaign members?

17:43

Like, okay, great.

17:44

Do these people exist already as leads and contacts?

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And then it gives you the sales force ID.

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So I don't have to go like find VLOOKUP match those to upload them.

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Do you need that ID to mass upload them?

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So there's that there's like if you use outreach, there's an outreach partner

18:04

integration that you can use

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lean data to trigger sequences versus the triggers and outreach, which are more

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limited.

18:11

Like with the like now I'm getting nerdy and technical, but the outreach

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triggers are a little bit more

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limited with the criteria that you can use to trigger stuff.

18:20

It's just like a smaller scope of things you can do, right?

18:24

So the automation is not as powerful on that side.

18:28

But lean data is and lean data sits inside sales force.

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So you can build it all in sales force and the routing, like you can have

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complex routing rules or round robin.

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There's like work load balancing.

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So you can say if someone has too many leads, like pass it to the next person,

18:46

you can set that up.

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Yeah, I mean, there's I can't say enough good things about mean data.

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And then other tool, I'm a huge Asana.

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I'm an Asana diehard.

19:00

Oh, yeah, we are too.

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That's how we build the show.

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Everything we do is.

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It's an Asana.

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Yeah.

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So like we're using nifty right now, which is fine.

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But I do really like Asana.

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And then I think another like, freebie for anyone who's in RevOps is Google She

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ets.

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We built a lot of things in Google Sheets.

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Like I built my next question.

19:27

Tell me about the spreadsheets.

19:28

Data dictionary in Google Sheets.

19:31

Like they're just very flexible and you can use them for a lot of different

19:36

things.

19:38

So we're doing like a commission calculations in our in our Google Sheets.

19:43

Right now we're doing forecasting in Google Sheets right now.

19:47

But we do do a lot of reporting in other places.

19:51

Like we have Looker.

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That's like all of the data.

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The RBI tool for all of our data and then Insights Grid is like go to market

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data.

20:01

So sales and marketing.

20:02

A little bit of success.

20:05

Data, but it's primarily used for sales and marketing right now.

20:09

And then of course we have a lot of Salesforce dashboards that we use.

20:13

We're getting really good at putting stuff into Salesforce and and Insights

20:20

squared, at least on the go to market side.

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I love this spreadsheets.

20:24

And so that's great.

20:25

Still my next question.

20:26

Do you have any blind spots that you wish you could measure better?

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I think this is a challenge for other RevOps practitioners and teams as well.

20:34

As like product or usage or for us, it's like financial data.

20:39

That doesn't get pushed into the CRM.

20:44

And so we're like have to go back and forth between Looker and Salesforce.

20:52

Like part of that's for commissions, part of it's for other like.

20:56

How are we doing or like we want to do redefine our territories or something?

21:02

Or if we want to do Tam analysis, it's kind of like.

21:04

Just very just drink it, not all tied together.

21:07

Um, so it makes that kind of analysis more challenging.

21:11

And the thing about like putting that on to the data team is that they're

21:19

farther

21:19

away from the business context than revenue operations is, you know?

21:24

So it's would be awesome if we could get some of that data into our Salesforce

21:32

environment and in other past companies too, it's been like product data.

21:38

Like we usage data, not everything should go into the CRM.

21:42

Like the CRM shouldn't be the CDP, but there could be key product data points

21:49

that can tie in with all the Salesforce information, your other go-to-market

21:53

information that you need.

21:56

Like that's I think key.

21:59

Yet it's interesting that you say that we were just having a conversation last

22:04

episode where we were talking about kind of matching the 30,000 foot view of

22:14

the

22:14

customer journey.

22:15

Yeah.

22:16

To RevOps and making sure that that's like on the exact same page so that Rev

22:21

Ops

22:21

knows like all the different pieces of the customer journey like really well so

22:26

that you can diagnose when there's issues like is this, you know, where's the

22:32

leak

22:32

and where's the actual water coming from versus where's like the water, you

22:36

know,

22:37

we were talking about like, you know, if it's, if it's the blueprint of the

22:39

house,

22:40

right? It's like, oh, it looks like we have a leak on the first floor, but in

22:44

reality, we have a leak on the third floor and you just can't see it, right?

22:48

Right.

22:49

Right.

22:49

That's another thing that I use a Google sheet for is the customer journey

22:54

template.

22:54

Yeah.

22:56

I have one.

22:56

But, but so anyway, it's interesting that you say that the product information

23:01

kind of feeding back into, because it's such a great point that when,

23:06

especially like if you're, you know, constantly deploying and product is

23:11

changing something and you don't necessarily know about it, that reporting

23:15

that stuff back into CRM might, might never happen unless you have some sort of

23:21

you know, push or automation.

23:23

Yeah.

23:25

It was, it was a very manual process to go into, um, you could do one or two

23:32

things like the, the AM, the account manager or CSM could either log into the

23:37

platform and manually click through each account and look on the account

23:42

landing

23:42

page in the platform, which is extremely inefficient, not scalable or go into

23:47

amplitude, but amplitude is really built for like product managers.

23:52

It's, and product people, it's not built for the AMs and CSMs.

23:57

And it doesn't have a good integration with Salesforce.

24:00

Yeah.

24:01

We were like going back and forth with engineering about, okay, we need to push

24:05

some, we need to write some information back to Salesforce.

24:08

Um, should we do it in house with our engineering team, like write the script

24:14

and use API, we could go buy a middleware slash integrator tool.

24:19

Then we could use that in the entire ecosystem with, you know, our marketing

24:23

automation and all the other tools.

24:25

Um, so yeah, that's a, that's a pretty big gap.

24:28

And we're like talking strategically in about how to, to bridge that gap now.

24:35

As well.

24:37

And yeah, there are spreadsheets, stuff, tips, ideas.

24:42

Oh, um, there's a, there's a couple of plug-in or,

24:49

Chrome extensions, um, one of the G sheet connectors.

24:53

So you can connect Salesforce and Google sheets.

24:55

Uh, that's pretty cool.

24:57

And there's another one that's called zapx.

25:00

So those are two like Salesforce Google sheet Chrome extensions that I'm like

25:06

playing

25:07

around with.

25:08

Anything else that you're doing with data or anything that's like surprised you

25:14

So this PM tool that we're using, the reporting in the tools and that great.

25:19

So why I've done is I export a CSV and put it into Google sheet, um, so that we

25:27

can

25:27

show like what kind of work we're doing.

25:29

Um, and it's broken out by the rev ops pillars.

25:33

So process, process strategy, um, systems, which is like Salesforce hubspot.

25:41

Or one of our go to market tools, anything that's like a configuration or

25:46

automation.

25:46

New, uh, new tools, stand up and implementation.

25:51

That's all in the systems category, um, reporting, and then, uh, enablement.

25:58

So, and then by department, so we're able to see, like I just throw it into a

26:02

pivot

26:02

table and put charts on it so that it's easy to communicate to a senior

26:06

leadership.

26:06

Like, Hey, our team in this last sprint, 50% of what we delivered was systems

26:13

based, 30% was process based, you know, 20% was, uh, enablement.

26:19

So they're able to see that very easily.

26:21

Like, Oh, this is what rev ops is doing.

26:23

And then there's a category down from the, the pillars.

26:27

And it's like, was this built a report and dashboard or was it, uh, a new

26:34

feature

26:34

quest or was it a business process change?

26:37

Was it an automation?

26:38

Like there's more, a little bit more granularity.

26:41

So if we wanted to pivot that as well.

26:43

Um, and then so it's by each sprint, right?

26:47

So every month, what is the breakdown of the work and which department is it

26:52

for?

26:52

Like right now it's mostly sales, but that could change.

26:55

That's cool.

26:57

Um, and then we have data around our, our territories, which are vertical based

27:02

Um, so the next kind of interesting thing that we'll be doing is looking, um,

27:08

as

27:08

we're like further, you know, solidifying our ICP and all that stuff is looking

27:16

at,

27:16

is checking in looker to see which verticals perform best.

27:20

Um, over time, that's the next kind of maybe big analysis project that's on my

27:25

mind.

27:25

All right.

27:26

Let's get to our quick hits.

27:30

Questions of quick answers.

27:32

Boil.

27:33

I'm ready.

27:34

Let's go.

27:35

Number one, if you could make any animal any size, what animal would it be?

27:41

And what size?

27:42

Whoa.

27:44

Oh my gosh.

27:45

Um, hmm.

27:50

I know this is supposed to be quick.

27:53

Oh, that's all right.

27:54

It's a question.

27:55

Any animal.

27:58

Um,

28:00

it'd be kind of cool to have something to put in my pocket.

28:03

Maybe like a mini elephant.

28:05

I know.

28:07

A mini elephant pocket size elephant.

28:09

I wouldn't like it.

28:11

Yeah.

28:11

Like a, like a doxon sized elephant.

28:15

Oh, yeah.

28:16

Little baby.

28:17

Yeah.

28:18

Elephants are good luck in my culture.

28:20

There you go.

28:22

I feel like, yeah, they're, um, perfectly pocket size if we just had more of

28:28

them. Um, yeah.

28:29

Right.

28:29

Exactly.

28:30

Do you have a favorite movie character of all time?

28:34

Oh, maybe you like.

28:38

Mm.

28:40

Man, like I watched so many movies, but I don't remember, like not a lot of

28:46

them are super

28:46

memorable.

28:47

Huge Harry Potter fan also read the books.

28:49

So.

28:51

Yeah, Harry Potter, um, watch the Matrix trilogy.

28:55

Trinity was my favorite character from that.

28:58

Um, I also really liked to learn the rings.

29:01

All three of my faves as well.

29:04

Yeah.

29:05

Okay.

29:06

I got to three.

29:07

What is one skill set that rev ops leaders should invest in improving.

29:13

Project management process management skills, hands down, become the best PM

29:20

that you can.

29:21

If you could have one super power, what would it be?

29:24

I wish I could fly.

29:27

Is there a rev ops misconception that's out there that you want to clear up?

29:33

I believe this is still a misconception because I see it all the time.

29:36

Revenue operations is sales operations rebranded and that centralized

29:42

operations

29:42

doesn't work, but it does revenue operations is all you support the core

29:49

revenue generating

29:50

departments.

29:51

That is includes marketing and it includes wholesale, CS, whatever account

29:55

management,

29:56

whatever that side is, whoever's responsible for upsells, cross cells and renew

29:59

als.

30:00

That team that should also be included in the revenue operations wheelhouse.

30:08

Do you have a rev ops prediction for the future?

30:12

I see companies starting to really.

30:15

Internalize the rev ops framework.

30:22

So that's the important piece, right?

30:24

The process, the systems, the insights, the enablement, that's the pillars.

30:28

And you have to have those and understand those and the leadership has to be

30:33

bought

30:33

into those, those pillars that support all of the revenue generating functions.

30:38

If not, you're not setting your team up or your organization up for success.

30:42

But I see this future moving that way.

30:47

Final question.

30:50

What is your best advice for someone newly leading a rev ops team?

30:55

Newly leading.

30:57

Yeah.

31:00

So I would say that like people management skills are really important.

31:04

Cause managing processes and like managing stakeholders, that's completely

31:12

different from having to actually manage direct reports.

31:16

And companies don't always give you that training.

31:20

Yeah.

31:20

So understanding like that people work differently and people have different

31:28

skill

31:28

sets and sometimes sometimes you have people who need a little bit more.

31:33

And holding than others, or need a little bit more attention.

31:39

That's like normal.

31:41

I mean, it's part of the people are you're, you'll have a range of people on

31:47

your team.

31:47

And the more that you can try to understand, you know, like what drives them

31:51

and like how they work and how they communicate, the better you'll be at

31:55

getting

31:55

them to do stuff.

31:56

Cause I've had to manage people before.

31:58

And that's something I had to realize.

32:00

I'm like, yeah.

32:01

Oh, I see people are adults and they will do their jobs, but you just have to

32:07

understand them a little bit more.

32:09

So like leadership style sort of define developing your leadership and people

32:16

management style for leading a team is important.

32:19

And then the other part is like the operating the framework as much as you can.

32:26

Get your team on like a sprint cadence.

32:29

That's a way to manage the work, right?

32:31

So that you can like manage that, but then also report it up to the

32:38

organization

32:39

and say, here's what my team is doing.

32:40

Cause that's, that's a thing that gets asked a lot.

32:43

Well, you don't know what RevOps does.

32:45

Well, here it is.

32:47

Here's our roadmap.

32:48

Here's our, our sprint release schedule.

32:50

Here's what we're going to deliver.

32:51

I love it.

32:54

Asia, that's it.

32:56

That's all we got for today.

32:57

Any, any final thoughts?

32:59

Anything to plug?

32:59

Um, oh, plugs.

33:03

Oh my gosh.

33:04

Uh, I, I mean, I'm a huge advocate for people getting into revenue

33:09

operations and empowering people in that sense too.

33:12

So like, I'm always open to.

33:15

questions or people want to reach out to me.