How do you build a RevOps team from scratch?
Direct Answer
Hire a systems person first — not a strategist. At roughly $3M ARR, bring in one Salesforce admin or RevOps generalist ($95K–$130K base) whose entire mandate is to make the CRM trustworthy. At $10M, add a Sales Ops analyst and split into Systems and Analytics.
By $30M, you build out functional pods — Sales Ops, Marketing Ops, CS Ops, Systems, Analytics — reporting to a VP RevOps ($250K–$320K OTE). The single biggest mistake is reversing this order: hiring a Director of RevOps before anyone has cleaned the data they're supposed to operate on.
TL;DR
- First hire at $3M ARR is a hands-on Salesforce admin or RevOps generalist, not a strategist.
- Comp benchmarks: generalist $95K–$130K base, manager $140K–$170K, director $180K–$220K, VP $250K–$320K OTE.
- Hire in this order through $30M ARR: Generalist → Analyst → Marketing Ops → Manager → CS Ops → Director/VP.
- The #1 failure is hiring a strategist before a systems person; the #2 is burying RevOps under a CRO who only cares about quota.
- At Series C, the mature org has five pods (Systems, Analytics, Sales Ops, Marketing Ops, CS Ops) reporting to a VP RevOps who reports to the CFO or COO — not the CRO.
The First Hire (and the trap)
Almost every founder I have watched build this function makes the same wrong move: they read a Pavilion thread, get excited about "revenue strategy," and hire a Director-level RevOps person from a Series D company for $190K. Six months later that person is furious because they cannot pull a clean pipeline report — the stage definitions are mush, opportunity owners are wrong, and three reps are still working in HubSpot while the rest moved to Salesforce a year ago.
The director quits, the founder concludes RevOps was a waste, and the function gets dismantled.
The first hire is a builder, not a thinker. You want a senior Salesforce administrator — ideally someone who has been a #2 on a real RevOps team at a Series B or C company and is ready to own one — or a RevOps generalist with three to six years of operating experience in B2B SaaS.
They should be able to write a SOQL query, build a flow without breaking validation rules, run a forecast call without a deck, configure a CPQ rule, and tell the CRO "no, that field already exists, here it is." Comp in the U.S. For this role in 2026 is $95K–$130K base, $110K–$155K OTE, with a small variable tied to system uptime and forecast accuracy.
Give them ninety days with a single deliverable: a trustworthy pipeline. Stage definitions documented, required fields enforced, owner hygiene above 98%, dashboards that match what the CRO says in the QBR. Until that exists, no one on the team can do anything useful, including the strategist you were about to hire.
The Sequence Through $30M ARR
Here is the actual ladder, built around revenue milestones rather than headcount targets, because RevOps complexity scales with deal volume and tech-stack sprawl, not seat count.
$3M ARR — Hire 1: RevOps Generalist. Profile above. They report to the CRO or, ideally, to the COO/CFO. If you can get them reporting outside of sales, do it; it preserves their ability to push back on bad pipeline calls. Base $95K–$130K.
$10M ARR — Hires 2 and 3: Sales Ops Analyst + Marketing Ops Specialist. The Sales Ops Analyst owns forecasting, territory design, comp plan calc, and weekly pipeline inspection ($85K–$115K base). The Marketing Ops Specialist owns the MAP (Marketo, HubSpot, Pardot), lead routing, attribution, and the MQL-to-SQL handoff ($90K–$120K base).
Without this hire, demand-gen spend is unaccountable; ICONIQ's 2025 GTM benchmarks show companies without dedicated MOps have CAC payback periods 30–40% worse than peers.
$20M ARR — Hires 4 and 5: RevOps Manager + CS Ops Analyst. Promote the original generalist into the Manager seat ($140K–$170K base, $170K–$210K OTE) or hire externally if they are not ready. Add a CS Ops Analyst ($85K–$110K) the moment your NRR matters to investors — usually right around Series B.
They own health scoring, renewal forecasting, expansion playbooks, and the Gainsight or Catalyst instance.
$30M ARR — Hire 6: VP RevOps. OTE $250K–$320K, equity 0.15–0.4%. This is the person who runs annual planning, owns the GTM tech stack budget ($1M–$3M at this stage), partners with Finance on the revenue plan, and sits in the executive staff meeting. Hire from a $100M+ ARR company where they were a Director, not from a $30M company where they were already the VP — you want someone who has seen the next stage.
A note on geography: comp ranges above are SF/NYC. Subtract 15–20% for Austin/Denver, 25–30% for second-tier U.S. Metros, 40–55% for LATAM/EMEA remote. Pavilion's 2025 RevOps comp report and Bowery Capital's operator benchmarks both confirm these spreads.
Common Failure Modes
1. Strategist before systems person. Covered above. Symptom: senior hire churns inside a year, founder loses faith in the function.
2. RevOps reporting into the CRO. This works until it doesn't. The moment the CRO needs to spin a bad quarter, RevOps gets pressure to soften the forecast or hide pipeline rot.
Best practice — endorsed by Bessemer's State of the Cloud and most public-company orgs — is RevOps reporting to the CFO, COO, or CEO once the company crosses $20M ARR. Bowery Capital's CMO/CRO study found companies with independent RevOps reporting hit plan 22% more often.
3. Hiring consultants instead of FTEs in year one. Big-four or boutique consultants will happily charge you $300K to "stand up RevOps." You get a deck, a Salesforce reorg that breaks three integrations, and no one left to operate it. Use consultants for one-time migrations only. Build the muscle in-house.
4. No analytics seat until too late. Founders confuse "BI" (Looker, Tableau) with "RevOps analytics." They are different jobs. A dedicated Sales/RevOps Analyst who lives in the CRM data and owns weekly forecast calls is non-negotiable past $10M ARR. Without one, the CRO's forecast is a vibe.
Frequently Asked Questions
When should a startup hire its first RevOps person? When you cross $2M–$3M ARR or hit roughly 8–10 quota-carrying reps, whichever comes first. Before that, the founder and head of sales can run it in a spreadsheet.
Should RevOps report to Sales, Marketing, or Finance? Finance or COO once you cross $20M ARR. Below that, reporting to the CRO is acceptable if the CRO is data-mature. Reporting to Marketing is almost never right.
How big should the RevOps team be at $50M ARR? Roughly 8–12 people across five pods, or about 1 RevOps headcount per $4M–$6M in ARR. OpenView's SaaS benchmarks consistently put the median at 1.8% of total headcount.
Sources
- Pavilion, "2025 RevOps Compensation Report" — base and OTE benchmarks by level.
- Bowery Capital, "CMO and CRO Operating Benchmarks 2025" — reporting structure data.
- OpenView Partners, "2025 SaaS Benchmarks Report" — RevOps headcount ratios.
- ICONIQ Growth, "Topline Growth and Efficiency 2025" — CAC payback and MOps impact.
- Bessemer Venture Partners, "State of the Cloud 2026" — go-to-market efficiency benchmarks.
- SaaStr, "The First RevOps Hire" by Jason Lemkin — founder-stage guidance.
- RevOps Co-op, "2025 Salary and Hiring Survey" — community comp data by geography.
- Gartner, "Revenue Operations Maturity Model 2025" — pod structure and reporting evolution.