Should RevOps Report to the CEO, CRO, or CFO?
Pick the reporting line that maximizes authority across sales, marketing, CS, and finance—backed by clear decision rights and shared KPIs.
Direct Answer
Put RevOps where revenue accountability and cross-functional authority are strongest. In growth-focused organizations with complex pipelines, reporting to the CRO aligns strategy, data, and execution. In transformation or company-wide change, a CEO line can break silos. If pricing, margin, and forecasting discipline are top goals, CFO can work—provided GTM leaders share governance. Choose based on mandate, scope, and the decision rights RevOps needs to change processes across sales, marketing, and CS.
What Good Looks Like
Do and Don’t
Do | Don’t | Why |
---|---|---|
Give RevOps clear decision rights | Treat RevOps as tooling admins | Change management stalls without authority |
Tie goals to shared revenue KPIs | Split teams on siloed metrics | Misaligned incentives hurt pipeline health |
Create a GTM governance council | Rely on ad-hoc escalation | Faster prioritization and fewer rework loops |
Fund data quality as a program | One-time cleanup only | Sustainable insights require ongoing care |
Publish a RACI and roadmap | Keep priorities implicit | Transparency accelerates adoption |
Decision Matrix: CEO vs CRO vs CFO
Option | Best for | Pros | Cons | TPG POV |
---|---|---|---|---|
CEO | Enterprise change, major silo busting | Broad mandate; cross-org authority | Competes for CEO attention; GTM distance | Use when re-architecting data/process company-wide |
CRO | Pipeline growth, GTM alignment | Direct line to revenue; faster decisions | Needs finance partnership for margins/forecast | Default for growth-focused firms |
CFO | Margin, pricing, forecasting rigor | Strong analytics and control | Risk of GTM misalignment without council | Works if GTM leaders co-own roadmap |
Expanded Explanation
The “best” RevOps home depends on what the organization needs most in the next 12–24 months. If your priority is pipeline efficiency, conversion velocity, and coordinated plays across marketing, sales, and customer success, a CRO reporting line typically provides the tightest alignment between strategy and execution.
When the company is re-architecting its operating model or requires enterprise-wide change (data foundations, pricing model shifts, territory redesign), a CEO line can provide the air cover to break long-standing silos. If forecasting accuracy, margin discipline, and commercial analytics are the main gaps, CFO can be effective—but only when GTM leaders co-own the roadmap and RevOps retains authority over processes, data definitions, and tech stack changes.
TPG POV: The Pedowitz Group has implemented RevOps operating models across industries; our playbooks emphasize decision rights, shared KPIs, and data integrity so structure serves strategy—not the other way around.
FAQ
Growth-stage and enterprise GTM complexity favor CRO; finance-led structures fit margin and forecast priorities.
It can for early-stage firms, but ensure authority extends to sales/CS processes and data to avoid tool-centric bias.
Use a GTM council with a published RACI, quarterly roadmap, and tie-break rules owned by the executive sponsor.
Data definitions, lifecycle stages, routing, territory logic, forecasting process, tech stack governance, and reporting.
Track pipeline coverage, stage conversion, cycle time, forecast accuracy, win rate, and stakeholder NPS for RevOps.