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What are the first 90 days of a new Chief Revenue Officer?

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What are the first 90 days of a new Chief Revenue Officer? — Knowledge Library (Pulse RevOps)
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Direct Answer

The first 90 days of a new CRO has three phases: (1) Days 1-30 — listen + audit (no major changes), (2) Days 31-60 — diagnose + commit (3-5 strategic priorities), (3) Days 61-90 — execute first moves (hire/cut, comp, ICP, process). Pavilion's 2027 GTM Benchmarks find that CROs who follow this 30-60-90 cadence have 78% 24-month retention, vs CROs who make major changes in the first 30 days who have 41% 24-month retention — driven mostly by trust destruction from premature reorgs.

The math operators miss: new CROs are evaluated on Q1-Q2 results and feel pressure to make visible moves fast. But the first-quarter wins from premature moves are typically borrowed from the next quarter's pipeline — and the long-term damage from a botched early decision costs more than the short-term credit gained.

flowchart LR A[Day 1] --> B[Days 1-30: Listen + Audit] B --> C[Days 31-60: Diagnose + Commit] C --> D[Days 61-90: Execute First Moves] D --> E[Day 90+: Sustainable Cadence] style B fill:#fff4cc,stroke:#b8860b style E fill:#d4edda,stroke:#155724

1. Days 1-30 — Listen + Audit

1.1 People audit

Total: 35-50 hours of 1:1s in 30 days.

1.2 Data audit

1.3 Process audit

1.4 The 30-day report

End of month 1: written 5-page memo to CEO + board chair summarizing: what works, what doesn't, what's strategic vs tactical, what needs deeper analysis. No commitments yet.

2. Days 31-60 — Diagnose + Commit

2.1 Diagnostic framework

Map findings to 5 axes:

2.2 The 3-5 priorities

Pick 3-5 strategic priorities for the year. Common patterns:

Not 12 priorities. Pavilion 2026: new CROs who pick 8+ priorities deliver on fewer than half; those who pick 3-5 deliver on 80%+.

2.3 The 60-day commitments

End of month 2: second memo to CEO + board with named 3-5 priorities + commitments + risks. This becomes the de-facto plan for next 12 months.

3. Days 61-90 — Execute First Moves

3.1 The first hire/cut decision

Almost every new CRO finds 1-2 underperformers to cut and 1-2 critical hires to make. Move within Day 61-90 window for both.

Pavilion 2026: delaying hire/cut beyond Day 120 destroys CRO credibility with both CEO and team.

3.2 The comp + quota refresh

If new fiscal year is approaching, comp + quota changes go live in days 61-90. If mid-year, wait for natural cycle.

3.3 The process change

Pick one process change for first 90 days: new deal-review format, MEDDIC enforcement, multi-thread requirement. Not three changes; one.

3.4 The 90-day communication

End of month 3: all-hands sharing what was learned, what's changing, what's not. Transparency is the trust-building tool.

flowchart TD A[Day 1-30 Listen] --> B[Day 31-60 Diagnose] B --> C[Day 61-90 Execute] C --> D[Day 90 All-Hands] D --> E[Quarter 2 Steady-State Cadence] style D fill:#cce5ff,stroke:#004085 style E fill:#d4edda,stroke:#155724

4. The Five First-90-Day Failure Modes

4.1 Premature reorg

Reorging in week 2 destroys trust before you've earned the right. Wait until Day 60+.

4.2 Comp changes in Q2-Q3

Changing comp mid-year triggers attrition spike. Hold for natural cycle unless catastrophic.

4.3 Bringing former-company team

Mass-hiring from prior company in first 90 days looks like cronyism even when justified. Limit to 1-2 critical hires early.

4.4 No CEO alignment

CRO + CEO must align on 3-5 priorities by Day 60. Without explicit alignment, future conflict guaranteed.

4.5 Public criticism of prior CRO

Even when justified, never publicly criticize predecessor. Builds a culture where you'll be criticized next.

5. The Tooling for 90-Day Diagnostic

5.1 Data analysis

5.2 1:1 note management

5.3 Communication

6. The Operating Cadence Day 91+

6.1 Weekly

Pipeline review with managers (60 min). 1:1 with each direct report (30 min). CFO sync (30 min).

6.2 Monthly

Operating review with CEO (90 min). Cross-functional GTM staff (60 min). 1:1 with top 3 reps per region (30 min each).

6.3 Quarterly

Board prep. Comp + quota check. Cohort analysis. Strategic priority reviews.

6.4 Annual

Comp plan reset. Hiring plan. Strategic motion review. Board offsite.

FAQ

Q: When can I make my first major change? A: Day 61. Earlier is premature; later is too slow.

Q: Should I bring my own VP of Sales? A: Usually no in first 90 days. Re-evaluate at Day 120-180. Bringing your VP in Week 2 looks like cronyism.

Q: What if Q1 is already a miss? A: Don't try to save it. Focus on diagnosis. Q1 misses early in tenure are forgiven if Q2-Q3 trajectory is clear.

Q: How do I deal with a difficult board member? A: 1:1 in first 30 days. Build the relationship before you need it.

Q: Should I keep my predecessor's RevOps lead? A: Default: yes, for at least 6 months. Institutional knowledge is irreplaceable; replace only if performance issues.

Q: When should I be visible to customers? A: First 30 days for top 10 customers (listen). After Day 60, become more visible (strategic).

Sources

7. The Pre-Start Preparation

7.1 Between offer + start

If you have 2-6 weeks before start: request access to non-confidential data (board decks, RevOps dashboards, comp plans). Pre-read.

7.2 Talk to predecessor

Most predecessors will share their honest take if asked respectfully. 15-30 min coffee can save 30 days of diagnostic time.

7.3 Talk to executive recruiter

If you came via search, debrief with the recruiter post-acceptance. They know the unsaid concerns.

7.4 Build the relationship with CFO early

The CFO will be your most important partner. Pre-start lunch if possible; otherwise Day 1.

Bottom Line

**Days 1-30: listen + audit (no major changes). Days 31-60: diagnose + commit to 3-5 priorities. Days 61-90: execute first hire/cut, comp/quota, and one process change.

Day 90 all-hands with learning + changes.** CROs who follow this cadence have 78% 24-month retention; those who reorg in Week 2 have 41%. The first quarter isn't about winning Q1 — it's about earning the right to win Q2-Q4 and beyond.

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