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Don't weaken a CRO who excels at leadership and sales by forcing them to become a data analyst. Pair them with a strong RevOps or finance specialist. This '1+1=3' combo lets the CRO focus on their core strengths while ensuring data is used effectively to drive decisions.
Veteran CRO Carlos Delatorre prioritizes opportunities with complex products requiring a sophisticated sales motion. This environment allows him to leverage his expertise in building teams that can translate technical features into business value, create demand, and navigate internal customer politics, thereby making the market bigger.
The CRO, not product marketing, is closest to the customer and knows what they will buy. The product roadmap should be a collaborative effort driven by the CRO, who can directly tie feature delivery to ICP expansion and revenue forecasts. This creates accountability and predictable growth.
The CRO's average tenure is now a mere 18 months, making them an unstable ally for RevOps. To ensure job security and drive impact, RevOps leaders should instead align with the CFO, who has a 7-year tenure, by pitching initiatives with undeniable ROI.
Don't dilute a CRO's value—leadership, hiring, and customer-facing skills—by bogging them down with data analysis. Supplement their strengths with a dedicated RevOps person who manages the data, allowing the CRO to focus on high-leverage activities.
To transition from working 'in the business' to 'on the business,' Snowflake's CRO was told his hands-on, 'deal hound' approach wouldn't work at scale. The solution was to hire other capable 'drivers,' trust them to do their jobs, and hold them accountable. If a leader has to do their team's job, it's a problem with the team member.
A common failure mode for new CROs is attempting to create the sales playbook in isolation. Core pillars like ICP and value proposition are company-level decisions. The CRO's role is to be interdependent, facilitating this cross-functional creation process, not dictating it.
Having a CRO oversee both sales and marketing provides the CEO with a single person accountable for revenue. This structure prevents the common scenario where marketing hits its pipeline goal but sales misses its revenue target. It consolidates ownership of pipeline generation and closing under one leader.
To avoid unproductive, subjective disagreements, the CEO and CRO must center their interactions on shared, objective data. This data-first approach fosters alignment and ensures conversations are focused on performance, not personal opinions.
By 2028, the top CROs will be systems-first thinkers, not just human-capacity managers. They will likely come from technical backgrounds like growth, RevOps, or GTM engineering, not traditional sales paths. Their core skill will be designing an integrated GTM system that blends AI-native approaches with classic enterprise sales.
A CMO or VP can't single-handedly overhaul a company's data infrastructure. Successful change agents find a partner, typically in RevOps, who has the technical ownership to navigate the CRM and data systems. Approaching this person with curiosity, not directives, is key to gaining their buy-in.