RevOps vs Sales Ops: what's the actual difference?
Direct Answer
Sales Ops is a subset of RevOps — period. Sales Ops runs the sales team's territories, comp plans, forecasts, and CRM hygiene; RevOps runs the entire revenue motion across Marketing, Sales, and Customer Success as one unified data, systems, and process layer. If you're hiring someone to "do RevOps" but they only touch the sales floor, you've hired a Sales Ops manager with an inflated title.
1. The Real Difference — Sales Ops Is a Subset of RevOps
Sales Ops is a function that emerged in the 1970s out of Xerox and IBM to support the sales floor: territory carving, quota setting, sales comp design, pipeline hygiene, and CRM administration. Its customer is the VP of Sales. Its scope ends at the handoff from SDR to AE to CSM.
RevOps, by contrast, is a structural response to a fundamentally different problem — that in modern B2B SaaS, revenue is created by Marketing generating pipeline, Sales closing it, and Customer Success expanding and retaining it, and that those three motions share a single data model, a single funnel, and a single forecast.
RevOps owns that shared layer.
Forrester's 2026 B2B Revenue Operations research found that roughly 75% of high-growth B2B SaaS companies (defined as $50M+ ARR growing 40%+ YoY) now operate a unified RevOps function reporting to a CRO or directly to the CEO, up from 26% in 2019. Pavilion's 2025 RevOps Benchmark Survey of 1,200+ RevOps leaders puts the median RevOps team at 6.4 people for companies in the $30-100M ARR band, with Sales Ops as one named pod inside that team.
Practitioners like Rosalyn Santa Elena (The RevOps Collective), Cara Hogan (formerly Lattice, now advising several Series C SaaS), and Jeff Ignacio (Upkeep, GTM Partners) have been arguing the same point publicly since 2021: if your "RevOps" leader can't influence marketing attribution or CS retention, you don't have RevOps, you have Sales Ops with new business cards.
The cleanest way to see the gap is to look at what each function actually touches.
| Dimension | Sales Ops | RevOps |
|---|---|---|
| Scope | Sales team only | Marketing + Sales + CS |
| Reports to | VP Sales / CRO | CRO or CEO |
| Owns CRM | Yes (sales objects) | Yes (full data model) |
| Owns MAP (Marketo/HubSpot) | No | Yes |
| Owns CS tools (Gainsight/Catalyst/Vitally) | No | Yes |
| Forecasting | Sales pipeline only | Full revenue (new + expansion + retention) |
| Comp design | Sales reps | All GTM comp (incl. CSMs, BDRs, AMs) |
| Owns attribution | No | Yes (Bizible, Dreamdata, HockeyStack) |
| Owns data warehouse | No | Yes (Snowflake, BigQuery, Databricks) |
2. When Each Title Makes Sense — Stage-Based Decision Logic
The right answer depends almost entirely on ARR and GTM complexity. Below $5M ARR, you don't need RevOps — you need one excellent Salesforce admin who can also build dashboards and write SQL. That's Sales Ops, full stop, and the stack is usually HubSpot Sales Hub or Salesforce Starter plus a BI tool like Mode or Hex.
Trying to install RevOps at this stage produces title inflation and a person who has nothing to do for half their week.
Between $5M and $30M ARR, the math flips. You now have a marketing function generating measurable pipeline, a CS function with a renewal book, and a sales team that's outgrown spreadsheets. This is the right moment to hire a RevOps lead — typically a Director of RevOps coming out of a peer SaaS company at $50-100M — and fold the existing Sales Ops headcount under them.
The stack expands: HubSpot Ops Hub or Salesforce Enterprise, Outreach or Salesloft, Gong, Clay for enrichment, Default or Chili Piper for routing, and the start of a real warehouse (often a Fivetran-to-Snowflake setup with Hightouch or Census for reverse ETL into the CRM).
Above $30M ARR, RevOps becomes a 5-15 person org with named sub-leads. Notion's RevOps team (described publicly by Olivia Bottyan and others) is structured around four pods: Systems, Analytics, GTM Strategy, and Enablement Ops. Ramp's RevOps under Geoff Charles famously runs lean but invests heavily in tooling like dbt and Hex.
Gong's own RevOps team uses Gong itself plus Clari for forecasting and Salesforce as system of record. The pattern is consistent: at scale, Sales Ops, Marketing Ops, and CS Ops all live as pods inside RevOps, not as peers to it.
| Stage | ARR | Function name | Headcount | First hire profile |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seed | <$2M | None / founder-led | 0 | — |
| Series A | $2-10M | Sales Ops | 1 | Salesforce admin + analyst |
| Series B | $10-30M | RevOps | 2-4 | RevOps lead from peer SaaS |
| Series C | $30-100M | RevOps org | 5-10 | VP RevOps + 3 pod leads |
| Series D+ | $100M+ | RevOps org | 10-25 | VP/SVP RevOps + 4-5 pods |
3. The 3 Biggest Mistakes Companies Make
Mistake 1: Renaming Sales Ops to RevOps without expanding scope. This is the single most common failure mode and it happens at roughly half of the Series B companies I see. The CRO reads a Pavilion post, decides RevOps sounds more modern, and changes the title on the existing Sales Ops manager's LinkedIn.
Marketing Ops still reports to the CMO. CS Ops doesn't exist or sits under the VP of CS. The "RevOps" leader has zero authority over the data model that produces marketing attribution or CS health scores.
Six months later, the forecast is still wrong, marketing and sales are still fighting about lead quality, and the company concludes that "RevOps doesn't work." It worked fine; you just didn't actually do it.
Mistake 2: Putting RevOps under the VP of Sales. RevOps under a sales leader becomes sales support by gravity — every prioritization conversation ends with "what does sales need this quarter," and marketing and CS get the leftovers. The function loses its cross-functional credibility within two quarters.
The right reporting line is CRO (if you have a true CRO who owns all three motions) or CFO (a surprisingly common and effective pattern at companies like Datadog and Snowflake where the CFO owns GTM analytics). Reporting to the CEO works at sub-$50M scale.
Mistake 3: Hiring RevOps too late. Once you're past $30M ARR with a fragmented data model — three CRMs from acquisitions, a marketing team running in HubSpot while sales lives in Salesforce, CS data stuck in Gainsight with no warehouse sync — the retrofit cost is brutal. ZoomInfo's well-documented RevOps build under CEO Henry Schuck involved a multi-year warehouse migration, a full rebuild of the lead-to-cash data model, and the hiring of a 20+ person RevOps team.
Companies that hire a RevOps lead at $10M ARR and let them architect the stack before the mess sets in spend a fraction of that.
FAQ
Q: Can a small company just hire a "RevOps" person instead of Sales Ops? A: Only if they genuinely own marketing ops, sales ops, and CS ops from day one — which at sub-$5M ARR is rare because those functions barely exist yet. If they're really just running Salesforce and building sales dashboards, call it Sales Ops and pay the market rate.
Inflated titles cost you on the next hire when a real RevOps leader sees the org chart.
Q: Should RevOps own forecasting? A: Yes, and not just sales pipeline forecasting — the full revenue forecast including new logo, expansion, and gross retention. Clari, BoostUp, and increasingly Gong Forecast are the standard tools, and the RevOps team is the one running them.
Sales leaders provide commit numbers; RevOps owns the methodology, the data, and the board-facing number.
Q: Does RevOps replace Sales Enablement? A: No. Enablement is content, training, certification, and rep ramp — closer to L&D than to operations. RevOps is process, systems, and data.
They're peer functions under the CRO. Tools like Highspot, Seismic, and Mindtickle live in Enablement; tools like Salesforce, Clari, and the warehouse live in RevOps. Conflating them is a hiring mistake.
Sources
- Forrester / SiriusDecisions B2B Revenue Operations research 2024-2026
- Pavilion 2025 RevOps Benchmark Survey (1,200+ leaders)
- Gartner Sales Operations and RevTech Magic Quadrant 2025
- LinkedIn Economic Graph: RevOps job-title growth 2020-2026
- ZoomInfo S-1 and annual reports (RevOps function described)
- Lattice, Gong, Notion, Ramp engineering and ops blogs
- Salesforce State of Sales Report 2025
- HubSpot RevOps Benchmark Report 2026
- The RevOps Collective (Rosalyn Santa Elena) public writing 2023-2026