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What is the CRO quarterly board-prep checklist in 2027?

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What is the CRO quarterly board-prep checklist in 2027? — Knowledge Library (Pulse RevOps)
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Direct Answer

A 2027 CRO quarterly board-prep checklist has six sections: (1) quarter-actual vs plan with bookings/ARR/NRR variance, (2) pipeline health for next 2 quarters at coverage 3.0-4.5x, (3) sales-team headcount + attainment distribution, (4) competitive picture moves and pricing pressure, (5) RevOps initiatives in flight, (6) the 2-3 strategic decisions you need from the board. Pavilion's 2027 GTM Benchmarks find that the average board deck has 47 slides; the most-effective CROs ship 15-22 slides with the rest as appendix — board attention concentrates on 6-8 charts, not 47.

The math operators miss: the board prep isn't a presentation — it's a decision-forcing document. Most CRO board decks recite numbers; effective ones surface 1-3 decisions the board can actually help with: hire/cut, pricing change, segment exit, M&A target, strategic re-org.

Forrester 2026: CROs who prep decision-forcing decks vs presentation decks see board-engagement scores 2.4x higher (Pavilion CRO survey 2026).

flowchart LR A[Board Prep] --> B[Quarter vs Plan] A --> C[Pipeline 2Q Forward] A --> D[Headcount + Attainment] A --> E[Competitive + Pricing] A --> F[RevOps Initiatives] A --> G[2-3 Strategic Decisions] G --> H[Decision-Forcing Document] style H fill:#d4edda,stroke:#155724

1. The Six Sections in Depth

1.1 Section 1 — Quarter actuals vs plan

Pavilion 2026 norm: 3-4 charts for this section. Not more.

1.2 Section 2 — Pipeline health forward

1.3 Section 3 — Headcount + attainment

1.4 Section 4 — Competitive + pricing

1.5 Section 5 — RevOps initiatives in flight

1.6 Section 6 — Strategic decisions

2. The Slide Architecture (15-22 slides)

2.1 Slide 1 — Executive summary

One slide. Quarter result vs plan, top 3 wins, top 3 risks, 1-line on strategic decisions sought.

2.2 Slides 2-5 — Actuals

Section 1 above. 3-4 slides max.

2.3 Slides 6-9 — Pipeline + forecast

Section 2. 3-4 slides.

2.4 Slides 10-12 — Team

Section 3. 2-3 slides.

2.5 Slides 13-14 — Market

Section 4. 1-2 slides.

2.6 Slides 15-17 — Initiatives + Decisions

Sections 5-6. 3-4 slides — the most important ones.

2.7 Appendix (slides 18+)

Backup detail, drill-downs, cohort analysis, RevOps deep-dives.

flowchart TD A[1 Exec Summary] --> B[3-4 Actuals] B --> C[3-4 Pipeline] C --> D[2-3 Team] D --> E[1-2 Market] E --> F[3-4 Initiatives + Decisions] F --> G[Appendix] style F fill:#d4edda,stroke:#155724

3. The Pre-Board Discipline

3.1 Two weeks before — draft

Draft the deck. CRO + RevOps lead + CFO partner reviews together.

3.2 One week before — pre-read

Send to board chair + lead investor for directional input. Captures questions early.

3.3 Two days before — finalize

Lock the deck. Don't change slides after this unless materially new data.

3.4 Day-of — readouts

Pre-board chats with 2-3 most engaged board members. 15-min calls aligning on questions.

3.5 Post-board — follow-up

Email summary of decisions made + commitments + next-quarter focus. Within 48 hours.

4. The Five Common Prep Mistakes

4.1 Too many slides

47 slides means no one focuses anywhere. 15-22 is the band.

4.2 No decision frames

Reciting numbers without forcing decisions wastes board time. Every deck should ask for something.

4.3 Surprises

Board surprised by missed quarter or unexpected hire request = trust erosion. Pre-brief board chair on bad news.

4.4 No competitive context

Boards want to know how you stack up vs market. Without competitive lens, they can't help you.

4.5 Vague RevOps initiatives

"Investing in better tooling" tells a board nothing. Name the tool, the cost, the expected ROI, the risk.

5. The Vendor + Tool Stack

5.1 Board deck templates

5.2 Data sources

5.3 AI-assisted prep

6. The CFO + CRO Joint Prep

6.1 Aligned numbers

CFO and CRO agree on actuals first. No board surprise of "the CFO says $X, the CRO says $Y."

6.2 Shared forecast confidence

Joint forecast with explicit confidence bands. Not "we'll hit it" — "we have 75% confidence at $42M, 90% at $39M."

6.3 Aligned strategic decisions

Board decisions affect both functions. Pre-align CRO + CFO recommendations.

6.4 Joint pre-board

CRO + CFO co-present for 30-60 minutes. Demonstrates aligned leadership.

FAQ

Q: How long should the deck be? A: 15-22 slides main deck, 20-40 slides appendix. Don't go above 25 in the live deck.

Q: Should we send the deck in advance? A: Yes, 48-72 hours before. Allows board to come with informed questions.

Q: What if I have to deliver bad news? A: Pre-brief the board chair 5-7 days before. Surprises are the only thing worse than bad news.

Q: How much time should CRO present vs Q&A? A: 50/50 split. A 90-minute board slot is 45 min presentation, 45 min discussion.

Q: Should the CRO present the entire deck? A: No — VP Sales or other leaders for sections. Demonstrates bench strength.

Q: How do we handle a difficult board member? A: 1:1 calls between board meetings. Surface concerns offline; address in the deck without naming.

Sources

7. The Annual Board Calendar Integration

7.1 Q1 board

Focus: prior-year wrap, new-year plan, hiring plan signoff.

7.2 Q2 board

Focus: Q1 actuals, hiring pace check, mid-year health.

7.3 Q3 board

Focus: H1 review, plan reset decisions, next-year planning kickoff.

7.4 Q4 board

Focus: full-year wrap, next-year plan approval, comp design signoff.

7.5 Off-cycle board meetings

Trigger for off-cycle: material miss, M&A consideration, executive change, fundraise prep. Pre-brief the chair always; don't surprise.

Bottom Line

**Build a 15-22 slide board deck across six sections — actuals, pipeline, team, market, initiatives, strategic decisions. Pre-brief the board chair 5-7 days before. Force 2-3 decisions in the deck.

Co-present with CFO on shared numbers. Send 48-72 hours in advance.** CROs who run decision-forcing board decks see 2.4x higher board engagement than those who run presentation decks. The board is a resource — use them by giving them something specific to decide.

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