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RevOps

How to Build a RevOps Strategy From Scratch

Pankaj Sharma
Pankaj Sharma CEO, Tech Striker
Published May 16, 2026
Blog How to Build a RevOps...
Quick Summary

Most businesses have a revenue problem that looks like a sales problem or a marketing problem but is actually a systems problem. RevOps fixes it by aligning your sales, marketing, and customer success teams around shared data, shared processes, and shared goals. This guide walks through exactly how to build a RevOps strategy from scratch, even if you are starting with no formal structure in place.

"We had a marketing team generating leads, a sales team closing deals, and a customer success team retaining accounts. None of them were using the same data, none of them agreed on what a qualified lead looked like, and nobody could tell us what our actual revenue forecast was. That is not a people problem. That is a systems problem."

B2B SaaS founder, during a Tech Striker RevOps audit

Revenue Operations is not a job title or a department. It is a operating model that brings your sales, marketing, and customer success functions under a single strategic framework with shared data, shared technology, and shared accountability for revenue outcomes. When it works, your pipeline is predictable, your handoffs are clean, and every team is pulling in the same direction. When it does not exist, you get the situation above: three teams working hard in three different directions and a leadership team that cannot forecast with confidence.

Building a RevOps strategy from scratch does not require a dedicated RevOps hire on day one. It requires a clear sequence of decisions and implementations that most businesses can work through in 90 to 120 days with the right framework. This guide gives you that framework. If you want to understand the full case for why RevOps matters before diving into the build, our post on what RevOps actually is covers the foundations in detail.

19%
faster revenue growth reported by companies with aligned sales and marketing operations
36%
higher customer retention rates at companies with a formal RevOps function in place
3x
more likely to exceed revenue targets when sales, marketing, and CS share a single source of data truth
28%
reduction in sales cycle length reported after implementing a structured RevOps framework

Signs Your Business Needs a RevOps Strategy Now

Most businesses do not decide to build a RevOps strategy because they read an article about it. They decide because something is visibly broken and they cannot figure out exactly where the break is. These six symptoms are the most common signals that a RevOps strategy is the missing piece. If your business has three or more of them, the problem is structural and no amount of hiring or campaign spending will fix it without addressing the underlying system first.

Revenue Is Unpredictable Quarter to Quarter

Your pipeline looks healthy but deals slip, forecasts miss, and nobody can explain why with confidence. Unpredictable revenue is almost always a data and process problem, not a sales talent problem. Without a shared system tracking every stage of the buyer journey, forecasting is guesswork dressed up as a spreadsheet.

Sales and Marketing Blame Each Other

Marketing says they are delivering leads. Sales says the leads are not qualified. Neither team has a shared definition of what a qualified lead actually looks like, and there is no agreed handoff process between them. This conflict is one of the clearest signs that RevOps infrastructure is missing entirely.

Your CRM Data Is Unreliable or Incomplete

Contacts are duplicated, deal stages mean different things to different reps, and the data you pull for reporting tells a different story depending on who pulls it. Dirty CRM data is both a symptom of missing RevOps and a cause of further problems. It makes every decision downstream less reliable. Our guide on why CRM data goes wrong covers this pattern in detail.

Customer Handoffs Between Teams Are Messy

When a deal closes, the information that sales gathered during the process does not reliably make it to customer success. The new customer has to repeat themselves. Onboarding is inconsistent. Early churn happens because the promise made during the sale does not match the experience delivered after it. Clean handoffs require a shared system and a shared process that RevOps provides.

Your Tech Stack Has Grown Without a Plan

You have a CRM, a marketing platform, a customer success tool, a prospecting tool, and several integrations holding them together with varying degrees of reliability. Each tool was bought to solve a specific problem. Nobody owns the stack as a whole, nobody audits it regularly, and the total monthly cost is significantly higher than the value being extracted from it.

Nobody Agrees on Which Metrics Matter

Marketing reports on traffic and leads. Sales reports on pipeline and close rates. Customer success reports on NPS and renewal rates. Leadership cannot connect these metrics into a single view of revenue performance. When every team is measuring different things, you cannot diagnose problems accurately or allocate resources where they will have the most impact.

What a RevOps Strategy Actually Covers

Before building anything, it helps to understand what a RevOps strategy is made of. Most businesses underestimate the scope and try to solve it with a single tool purchase or a single hire. RevOps covers four interconnected areas. Each one has to be addressed for the overall system to work. If you want to understand how a proper RevOps function is structured end to end, our service page covers the full framework we use with clients.

The Four Pillars of a RevOps Strategy
Pillar What It Covers What Breaks Without It
Data
Single source of truth for contacts, accounts, pipeline, and revenue across all teams
Forecasting, attribution, and reporting all produce different answers depending on who runs them
Process
Documented, agreed workflows for lead handling, pipeline stages, handoffs, and renewals
Every rep and every team does it differently, making performance impossible to diagnose or improve
Technology
A connected, audited tech stack where every tool serves a defined purpose and integrates cleanly
Data lives in silos, manual work fills the gaps, and monthly spend grows without proportional value
Reporting
Shared dashboards that give every team and leadership a consistent view of revenue performance
Decisions are made on incomplete data, problems are diagnosed late, and budget goes to the wrong places

How to Build Your RevOps Strategy Step by Step

Work through these six steps in order. Each one builds on the previous. Most businesses try to start with technology and skip the first two steps entirely, which is why their RevOps implementations fail to produce the results they expected. The sequence matters as much as the individual actions. For help building a B2B marketing strategy that connects to your RevOps framework, that guide covers the marketing side of the same system.

01

Audit Your Current Revenue Process End to End

Before building anything new, map what you currently have. Document every step from first marketing touchpoint through to closed deal and post-sale onboarding. Identify where handoffs happen, where data is captured, where it is lost, and where the process varies between individuals or teams. This audit will surface the specific breaks in your current system and give you a clear list of what needs to be fixed before you add any new tools or processes on top. Most businesses discover three to five critical gaps they were not aware of during this step alone.

Start Here
02

Define Your Shared Definitions and Stage Criteria

Get sales, marketing, and customer success in a room and agree on four things: what a Marketing Qualified Lead looks like, what a Sales Qualified Lead looks like, what each pipeline stage means and what criteria move a deal from one stage to the next, and what a successful customer handoff from sales to CS includes. Document these definitions formally and make them the single agreed standard across all teams. This sounds simple but most businesses have never done it explicitly, and the absence of these shared definitions is the root cause of most sales and marketing misalignment.

Alignment
03

Clean Your CRM and Establish Data Standards

A RevOps strategy built on dirty data will fail. Before implementing any new processes or reporting, audit your CRM for duplicate contacts, incomplete records, outdated deal stages, and fields that nobody fills in consistently. Establish a set of required fields for every contact, company, and deal record. Define naming conventions for campaigns, deal stages, and lead sources. Assign data ownership so someone is accountable for keeping each section of the CRM clean. The best tool for this is whichever CRM your team will actually use consistently. Our HubSpot CRM implementation service includes a full data audit and standardisation as the first phase of every engagement.

Data Quality
04

Build Your Automation and Workflow Layer

Once your data is clean and your process is documented, you can start automating the repetitive parts of it. Lead routing from marketing to sales based on agreed MQL criteria. Deal stage updates triggered by contact behaviour. Handoff notifications from sales to customer success when a deal closes. Follow-up sequences for deals that have been sitting in a stage too long. Renewal alerts for customer success when contract dates approach. Automation should enforce your process, not replace it. Every workflow you build should map to a step that was already documented in your process audit. Our HubSpot workflow automation service builds this layer as a structured programme, not a collection of one-off Zaps.

Automation
05

Build Shared Reporting That Every Team Uses

Create a single reporting framework that gives leadership, sales, marketing, and customer success a consistent view of revenue performance. The core reports every RevOps setup needs are: pipeline by stage and by rep, lead volume and conversion rates by source, deal velocity and average sales cycle length, customer acquisition cost by channel, and net revenue retention. Build these reports in your CRM so they pull from the same data everyone else is working with. When every team looks at the same numbers in the same place, you eliminate the weekly debate about whose data is correct and start having conversations about what to actually do about it. Our HubSpot dashboards and reporting service builds this reporting layer as a standard deliverable.

Reporting
06

Establish a Cadence for Reviewing and Improving the System

RevOps is not a one-time implementation. It is an ongoing operating model that needs regular review to stay effective as your business changes. Set a monthly review cadence where you look at data quality, workflow performance, and pipeline health together as a cross-functional team. Set a quarterly review where you assess whether your tech stack still serves your needs, whether your defined processes still reflect how the business actually operates, and whether your reporting is answering the questions leadership is actually asking. The businesses that get the most from RevOps treat it as a continuous improvement programme, not a project with a finish line. Get in touch with our team if you want help building this cadence into your operation from day one.

Continuous Improvement

RevOps Implementation Checklist

Use this checklist to track your progress as you work through the build. Each item represents a concrete output, not a vague goal. If you cannot point to a specific document, dashboard, or workflow for each item, it is not done yet. Treat this as your 90-day implementation tracker.

RevOps Strategy Build Checklist
Current revenue process mapped end to end with gaps identified
MQL and SQL definitions agreed and documented across sales and marketing
Pipeline stage criteria defined with entry and exit conditions for each stage
Sales to CS handoff checklist created and agreed by both teams
CRM duplicate contacts resolved and data standards documented
Required fields enforced for all contact, company, and deal records
Lead routing workflow built and tested end to end
Deal stage automation workflows active and monitored
Handoff notification workflows tested with both sales and CS teams
Core reporting dashboards live and accessible to all teams
Monthly cross-functional RevOps review meeting scheduled and recurring
Quarterly tech stack and process review added to leadership calendar

The businesses that implement RevOps successfully are not the ones with the biggest budgets or the most sophisticated tools. They are the ones that do the unglamorous work first: mapping their process, agreeing on definitions, and cleaning their data before touching any technology. The tool layer is the easy part. The alignment and discipline that makes the tools work is where the real work happens.

Key Takeaways
  • RevOps is not a tool or a job title. It is an operating model that aligns sales, marketing, and customer success around shared data, shared processes, and shared accountability for revenue outcomes.
  • The most common RevOps mistakes are starting with technology before fixing process, and trying to automate workflows before the underlying data is clean. Sequence matters more than speed.
  • Shared definitions of MQL, SQL, pipeline stages, and handoff criteria are the foundation of RevOps alignment. Most businesses have never agreed on these explicitly, and that absence is the root cause of most sales and marketing conflict.
  • Shared reporting that every team uses is the mechanism that keeps RevOps working over time. When everyone looks at the same numbers in the same place, the conversation shifts from whose data is right to what to do about it.
  • RevOps is a continuous improvement programme, not a project with a finish line. The monthly and quarterly review cadence is what separates businesses that sustain the gains from those that regress within six months of implementation.

Ready to Build a RevOps System That Actually Works?

Tech Striker designs and implements RevOps frameworks for B2B businesses that are ready to move beyond spreadsheets and siloed teams. We handle the process design, the CRM build, the automation layer, and the reporting, so your sales, marketing, and customer success teams finally work from the same playbook.

Revenue process audit and gap analysis
CRM data standardisation and pipeline setup
Lead routing, handoff, and deal automation workflows
Shared dashboards and monthly reporting cadence

Frequently Asked Questions

01
How long does it take to build a RevOps strategy from scratch?
Most businesses can work through the core RevOps build in 90 to 120 days if they follow a structured sequence. The process audit and alignment work typically takes two to four weeks. CRM cleanup and data standardisation takes another two to four weeks depending on the size and state of your database. The automation and reporting layer takes four to six weeks to build and test properly. The full system is rarely complete in less than 90 days when done correctly, but meaningful improvements in pipeline visibility and team alignment are usually visible within the first 30 days.
02
Do I need to hire a dedicated RevOps person to get started?
No. Many businesses successfully implement a RevOps framework without a dedicated RevOps hire by assigning ownership of the programme to an existing operations, sales, or marketing leader. A dedicated RevOps hire makes sense when your revenue team is above 15 to 20 people, when the complexity of your tech stack requires ongoing management, or when the volume of process improvement work exceeds what existing team members can handle alongside their primary roles. Starting with an external RevOps partner is often faster and more cost-effective than hiring before you have the foundation in place.
03
Which CRM works best for a RevOps setup?
The best CRM for RevOps is the one your team will actually use consistently. That said, HubSpot is the most commonly recommended platform for small to mid-market B2B businesses because it natively connects marketing, sales, and customer success data in a single system without requiring complex integrations. Salesforce is the stronger choice for enterprise businesses with complex data models, large sales teams, or deep customisation requirements. The CRM decision should follow your process design, not lead it. Define your process first, then choose the tool that best supports it.
04
What is the difference between RevOps and Sales Ops?
Sales Operations focuses specifically on supporting the sales team: pipeline management, forecasting, territory planning, compensation, and sales tool administration. Revenue Operations is a broader function that covers sales, marketing, and customer success under a single operating framework. RevOps owns the full customer lifecycle from first marketing touchpoint through to renewal, whereas Sales Ops typically starts at the point a lead enters the sales pipeline. Many businesses evolve from Sales Ops to RevOps as they grow and as the need for cross-functional alignment becomes more pressing.
05
How do I know if my RevOps strategy is working?
The clearest early indicators are improved forecast accuracy, shorter sales cycles, and fewer complaints from sales about lead quality. Over a six to twelve month horizon, the metrics that matter most are pipeline conversion rates at each stage, customer acquisition cost by channel, net revenue retention, and the time it takes to ramp new sales hires. If your RevOps strategy is working, these numbers should all be moving in the right direction. If they are not, the most common cause is that the process or data layer was not properly established before the automation and reporting layer was built on top of it.
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