How do you structure a sales advisory board for a $20M ARR company — who to invite, how often to meet, what to share?
Direct Answer
Invite 6–8 senior operators from $50M+ ARR companies—2 ex-VPs of Sales, 1 sitting CRO in an adjacent vertical, 1 independent board director, 1 GTM/RevOps leader, 1–2 founder-CEOs who scaled past you. Meet quarterly for 2 hours with a 72h async pre-read, plus 1 in-person sprint day per year.
Share exact ARR, NRR, CAC payback, hiring plan, and 2–3 unsolved strategic problems. Compensate $50–150K equity vesting 24 months with a 12-month cliff—median 0.10–0.25% per Carta's 2024 advisor equity benchmark. Paper it on a Founder Institute FAST agreement with three specific edits below.
Why a Custom Board (vs. Cheaper Alternatives) at $20M ARR
| Option | Annual cost (cash + equity) | Strength | Weakness |
|---|---|---|---|
| Custom advisory board (this answer) | $200–500K equity + ~$40K cash | Hand-picked, deep, owns your problems | Real time investment to run |
| Pavilion CRO peer group only | $5–10K/seat | Breadth across 30+ companies | No depth, no veto, no ownership |
| Fractional CRO | $20–35K/mo | Operating bandwidth | Conflict with full-time CRO hire later |
| Investor-only advice | $0 | Free | Conflicted on valuation, churn pressure |
Membership (6–8 People, Curated for Argument)
- 2 ex-VPs of Sales from $100M+ ARR companies (source via Pavilion executive talent plus warm intros from existing investors)
- 1 sitting CRO in an adjacent vertical—same revenue dynamics, different buyer, so they're not conflicted on customer overlap
- 1 independent board director with Series C–IPO scaling reps
- 1 GTM/RevOps leader who lives in the data, not the slide deck
- 1–2 founder-CEOs who scaled past $50M—they hold psychological safety on the hardest calls
Rotate one domain expert each quarter per the SaaStr advisor playbook. Minimum 12-month commitment; productive advisors stay 3+ years. See [q162 on the founder-to-VP-Sales transition](/knowledge/q162), [q1541 on whether an AE seat is still a career bet](/knowledge/q1541), and [q1971 on small-business governance instincts that don't translate up-market](/knowledge/q1971).
90-Day Sourcing & Onboarding Timeline
- Days 1–14: Write the problem statement (3 strategic problems for the next 12 months). This is the recruiting brief.
- Days 15–45: 30 warm intros from investors, current board, and Pavilion network. 12 first calls. Score on the rubric below.
- Days 45–75: 8 second calls (deeper, 90 min, with a real strategic question on the table). Pick 6.
- Days 75–90: Sign FAST agreements, equity grants approved by the board, calendar-blocked Q1 meeting, distribute the First Round Review onboarding kit style 1-pager.
Selection Scorecard (1–5)
| Criterion | Weight | What you're testing |
|---|---|---|
| Operator pattern depth at $50M+ | 30% | Have they personally lived 18–24 months ahead of you? |
| Argument willingness | 25% | Will they tell you you're wrong on a Tuesday? |
| Network density | 20% | Hires + intros within 30 days |
| Time honesty | 15% | Realistic about quarterly + ad-hoc availability |
| Conflict surface | 10% | Competitor adjacency, fund affiliations, paid consulting |
Equity & Cash Grid ($20M ARR, Series B/C)
| Role | Equity | Cash retainer | Vesting |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier-A operator (2x exit) | 0.20–0.25% | $0 | 24mo, 12mo cliff |
| Sitting CRO / adjacent | 0.10–0.15% | $0–$15K/yr | 24mo, 12mo cliff |
| Domain rotator (1q) | 0.02–0.05% | $5–10K | 12mo, 3mo cliff |
FAST Agreement — Three Edits That Matter
- Non-compete carveout scoped to named direct competitors, 12 months post-termination, with clawback on unvested equity.
- Confidentiality with tiered disclosure—explicit list of what's freely shareable (growth rate, NRR direction) vs. what is not (absolute ARR, customer names, comp by name).
- Indemnification + IP assignment—frameworks and written critiques belong to the company; the advisor is indemnified for good-faith advice.
Cadence & Preparation
Quarterly 2-hour Zoom + 1 annual in-person sprint day. 72h async pre-read: 1-page context doc with the three strategic questions you need argued. Rotate host timezones.
No voting power—advisory only. OpenView expansion-stage research shows boards meeting more than monthly produce decision fatigue and lower-quality input.
2-Hour Agenda Template
- 0:00–0:15 — Numbers (ARR, NRR, CAC payback, win rate vs. last quarter)
- 0:15–0:45 — Problem 1: deep-dive + advisor pushback
- 0:45–1:15 — Problem 2: deep-dive + advisor pushback
- 1:15–1:35 — Problem 3 or hot topic
- 1:35–1:50 — Hiring plan + retention risk callouts
- 1:50–2:00 — Action items, owners, 30-day check-in dates
What to Share (and What Not To)
Exact metrics, not directional. ARR, NRR, GRR, CAC payback, ACV, sales-cycle length, win rate—benchmark against the Bridge Group SaaS AE Report 2024 (median win rate 17%, ramp 5.3 months, quota attainment 53%) and the Bridge Group SDR Report.
Hiring plan, retention risks, comp benchmarks. Announce sales-leadership changes here first—see [q1485 on CRO replacement signals](/knowledge/q1485), [q1727 on Datadog's CRO retention model](/knowledge/q1727), and [q1890 on Salesforce defending against Stripe](/knowledge/q1890).
Regulatory caveat: if any advisor is a sitting executive at a public company, get securities counsel to bless the disclosure list—FCPA/Reg FD/insider-trading exposure can land on you, not just them.
Annual ROI Scorecard
| Metric | Target | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Hires sourced from advisor intros | ≥3/yr | Real network, not LinkedIn theater |
| "Saved" decisions (avoided pivots) | ≥2/yr | Veto power earned its keep |
| Benchmark deltas surfaced | ≥4/yr | Operator pattern depth working |
| Action items closed within 30d | ≥75% | Cadence discipline holding |
Off-Boarding Protocol (the part nobody publishes)
When an advisor is leaving—voluntarily or because they decayed—run a 30-min exit interview, capture the 3 frameworks they leave behind, settle unvested equity per the FAST clawback, and ask them to introduce one replacement candidate. This is how you compound the network instead of leaking it.
Bear Case — Three Documented Failure Modes
- Advisor capture (≈15% of programs by year 3). Advisors consulting to direct competitors route best practices both ways. Solution: FAST non-compete edit above + quarterly conflict-disclosure email; revoke unvested equity on breach.
- NDA leakage and signal escape (≈25% of cohorts). Sharing exact ARR with 8 people who each sit on 4–6 other boards means your numbers reach any acquirer in ≈30 hops. Solution: tiered disclosure—growth rate and NRR fully transparent; absolute ARR and customer names only when topic-relevant.
- Time decay (≈60% of seats by year 2). Advisors become rubber-stampers because they no longer have skin in the outcome. Solution: written annual renewal review with explicit "continue / part ways" decision; refresh 1–2 seats per year.
Anti-Patterns
Avoid rubber-stampers, asking advisors to source funding (kills candor instantly), skipping prep, rotating too fast, and undefined success metrics. Pair this private board with Pavilion CRO peer groups (12–15 CROs at your scale, monthly, $5–10K/yr per seat) for breadth.
Related: [q35 median win-rate benchmarks](/knowledge/q35), [q1517 on Pardot/Marketing Cloud consolidation](/knowledge/q1517), and [q1667 on ServiceNow CRO retention](/knowledge/q1667).
TAGS: sales-leadership, advisory-board, governance, scaling, benchmarking