

This editorial appeared in the July 24th, 2025, issue of the Topline newsletter.
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RevOps promised to be the brains of go‑to‑market. 73% of companies have already pinned a VP or C‑level badge on someone in the role, yet half of those same executives still describe the team as a reactive help desk. The title is granted but the execution is missing.
Last year I came across T‑shirt advertised by The RevOps Co‑op: “I would agree with you, but then we’d both be wrong.” It’s more than just another item in their rather extensive merch store. It’s a confession. If stakeholders disagree with RevOps, RevOps assumes that the stakeholder is stupid.
The reality is that RevOps is not in a good place. There is a growing dissonance between RevOps operators and their counterparts, and signals are mounting that trust in RevOps is eroding. Roles are disappearing, layoffs are hitting hard, and GTM Engineering roles are eating up headcount budget. RevOps leaders need to begin addressing their credibility crisis if they want to have a seat at the table.
I offer this view as founder of a boutique RevOps agency for high‑growth startups, former VP RevOps at a tech unicorn, and retired seller with seven years carrying my own quota.
The criticism is strikingly consistent from growth‑stage founders to Fortune‑500 chiefs against RevOps teams:
Most RevOps operators have never carried a bag, so their “insights” can feel academic when deals are on the line. SaaS leaders swap stories about paying for six different point solutions because RevOps kept adding tools “the CRM already does,” creating what one startup CRO calls “tool‑fatigue tax.”
RevOps is supposed to be the truth engine of the revenue org, yet the numbers say we’re in a credibility crisis.
50% of CROs say their CRM data is “high confidence,” but 80% of RevOps leads rate the same data as “poor.”
In one Slack channel, RevOps is flagging duplicate accounts and sand‑castle pipeline stages; in another, Sales is celebrating a “lock” quarter on data RevOps swears is broken. When half the leadership team believes the map is accurate and the other half insists it’s upside‑down, the only thing everyone can agree on is to ignore the map.
Less than 20% of sales orgs hit 75%+ forecast accuracy.
Finance already hair‑cuts the forecast because last quarter came in light. Reps already second-guess the comp calculator because last year their accelerators misfired. Each error teaches people to add their own margin of error, so even when RevOps is right, nobody bets the quarter on it.
90% of sales leaders don’t trust their comp plans. Meanwhile, 75% of reps think they’re paid wrong.
If sellers and leaders are unhappy with their pay, motivation wanes. Whether or not a company can capture this on a dashboard, the reality is that poor compensation practices drive poor performance.
89% of executives say RevOps lacks clear strategic goals.
You can deploy the cleanest Salesforce schema on the planet, but if the CRO thinks it’s a black box, it is a black box. Trust is the gating factor for every RevOps initiative, and if you lose it, even the best process redesign won’t land.
These aren’t isolated grumbles. They’re the perception backdrop against which budget decisions are made. When the function charged with efficiency is viewed as bureaucratic overhead, head‑count lines are the first to go, no matter how clean the data model looks on a slide.
We’ve sobered up from ZIRP and companies are now focused on profitable efficient growth. This should be great news for RevOps: efficiency is fundamental to the mandate. So RevOps jobs are safe…right?
No! The lack of trust is playing out in the numbers.
Hiring Freezes:
Recruiters are pulling back, and RevOps roles are no longer automatic requisitions.
Pink Slips:
It’s not just hiring; companies are reducing headcount here, too. Over the last twelve months, major tech companies have either downsized or eliminated their RevOps functions.
Several layoffs that included RevOps:
If both Fortune-500 vendors and venture-backed startups are trimming RevOps, the contraction isn’t an enterprise quirk: it’s industry-wide.
Sure, Sales teams are getting hit harder in the market, but nuance here matters. Sellers are aimed at growth, RevOps is aimed at efficiency. Companies are being careful about growth, but they are aggressively pursuing efficiency. Hiring managers are no longer betting on RevOps to drive that efficiency. In fact, they’re pulling back.
Hiring dollars that used to go to RevOps are now being re-routed to Go-to-Market Engineers. Essentially the same mandate, just packaged with deeper coding skills. The very need for a new label is the signal: if boards were satisfied with classic RevOps, they wouldn’t be funding a rebrand.
Companies still want the work RevOps promised, they’re just funding a more modern approach and skill set.
45% of leaders from a recent Salesloft survey view RevOps as a reactive support function rather than a strategic one, and 79% still categorize it as merely “sales-adjacent.”
In practice, this means that companies where RevOps is formally in place, many CROs, CMOs, and CEOs have never fully embraced RevOps as a peer strategic advisor. RevOps teams might be invited to the meeting, and “present in strategic conversations but rarely leading them.” They often have the data and insights but lack the mandate or trust to drive strategic initiatives autonomously.
More concerning, AI is making access to data and generating insights easier (along with CRM, tooling, and basically everything else within RevOps’ mandate). If RevOps’ value is restricted to these areas and is not seen as a major strategic driver, then AI is going to provide increasing pressure to RevOps roles.
Whether RevOps rewrites itself or gets written out is now a quarterly metric, not a philosophical debate.
The trust deficit, the hiring pull‑back, the layoffs, and the flight of budget toward code‑first GTM engineers paint a single picture: RevOps is at risk. The mandate hasn’t vanished. Boards still crave predictable revenue and tighter funnels. They’re just no longer convinced the traditional revOps playbook, and the people holding it, can deliver.
CEO @ VEN