Tag Archives: trust

How I Prioritize to Make the Most of My One-Woman Team

Over the past 18 months, I’ve been quickly taking on more at my current company. I’ve moved quickly from a specialist role into a manager role as well as from a role solely supporting our Sales team to one that supports the entire Revenue team. My current role, the Sr. Revenue Strategy & Analytics Manger (I know – it’s a mouthful), is a role that was once held by multiple employees.

Because of this change in dynamic, for the past 6 months, I’ve been tasked with getting the work of two people done as just a single contributor. Though I’m efficient, I am not two people, so my life saver in maintaining my trust with colleagues as well as my sanity has been prioritization.

Though this is nothing revolutionary, it’s been ground-breaking in making my work more rewarding as well as making me a more impactful partner to the leaders I work with. Specifically, as I analyze my projects going into 2022, I’m using the same framework that I learned not only in my Sales role before this but also from my very first Ops manager: the effort vs. impact matrix.

The Effort vs. Impact Matrix

Every time I re-evaluate my project prioritization, I’m using the matrix above to classify everything on my plate. When our organization went through a re-org, this is what we used to prioritize handing off tasks between teams. When I set my goals after taking over the RevOps position, I put every project through this matrix. Even as a Sales rep, when I was working through my deals and accounts, this was the matrix I used to decide what activities I needed to do in a day to get the most out of my book of business.

The matrix forces you to classify every single activity as either high or low impact and either high or low effort. This should help you narrow in on the quickest, most impactful activities, while giving you time to fill in the gaps with quicker, smaller wins and plan for the long-term major wins. Here’s I usually utilize this list:

  • High Impact, Low Effort (“Home Runs”): These are the activities I want as my top projects to be working on in this moment. They’re going to allow me to have the most impact as quickly as possible. These will have the highest return on investment for my time commitment.
  • High Impact, High Effort (“Big Bets”): These are the activities I want to kick out a bit as I make more incremental improvements and do more research. There is a huge return on these projects, but it may involve additional work that can be done through other projects or potentially a learning gap I need to bridge.
  • Low Impact, Low Effort (“Quick Wins”): These are the activities I like to use to build confidence with my partners and may use to progress us closer to some of our more long-term goals. They may not necessarily be the biggest return, but if used correctly, they can build momentum and even progress more long-term initiatives.
  • Low Impact, High Effort (“Fall Backs”): These are the activities that I avoid until I can’t avoid them any more. Until they become a major impact, have added value to another higher impact project, or a simpler solution appears, these are things I put on the back burner immediately.

Where I’ve Applied This

I use this in almost every aspect of my life, including personal decisions. I cannot stress enough how useful this framework can be. However, I’ll provide a few examples across different positions and projects where it’s been most useful.

The first time I was introduced to this was in my Account Executive role. They used this exact matrix to talk about how we should be prioritizing our customer interactions. They pushed us to create a list of sales activities we needed to accomplish in the day and forced us to put them through the matrix. This immediately got rid of all the mediocre touch points I had arbitrarily created during my Sales process and pushed me to create more meaningful deadlines and follow-ups with my customers in order to justify interactions being in the matrix. I became not only more efficient, but honestly, a better partner to my customers.

Within that same Sales role, our leaders used this framework to classify accounts. We thought of “Impact” as the actual revenue we could recognize with this customer and “Effort” as the likelihood that customer would buy from us. Since we were selling “seats”, it was pretty simple to classify “Impact” as the size of the company. “Effort” on the other hand became a combination of a few different factors comprising of industry, volume of ideal contacts, familiarity with our product, tech literacy, and more. My entire book of business was classified in this matrix, which helped me further customize my outreach to the “Home Runs” and “Big Bets” while automating my outreach to my “Quick Wins” and “Fall Backs”.

Moving into Ops, this matrix is my life saver. Every quarter, I put my projects back through this matrix. Each quarter I’m working to knock out while I need to get done while collecting more and more project requests from my partners in our Revenue leadership team. As I near my standard quarterly check-in, I’m compiling every project within our Revenue Operations scope, and running it back through this matrix. This helps me catch anything that may have become easier but been put to the wayside prior due to having a high effort to execute. It also helps me surface projects that may be becoming a large pain to the business than previously. Being a one-woman team in my current company, this is what keeps me sane, and also helps me build trust with my colleagues by openly communicating why I may or may not have time to execute against all projects that have been requested.

Of course, I can’t leave out how this helps me in my group projects at school. To be a good team member, it’s important to always deliver as much value back to the team as possible. When working in a group for school, especially while also working full-time, this can be really difficult to balance. For me, it’s helped to think of the overall project or work we’re doing in small chunks and put these through this matrix. When I see a “Big Bet” on the matrix, I’m trying to find ways I can quickly progress out team to moving that over to the “Home Run” category. When I see a “Quick Win” on the matrix, I’m trying to volunteer what limited time I do have to knock those out and help our team continue to progress. It can be really difficult to be a good teammate when you’re also working 40 hours per week, but when you’re making those most of those hours you do have for the course by prioritizing in this way, your limited time becomes 10x more impactful to the broader team.

Conclusion

Prioritization can be used in any role, and 100% should be! If you’re not doing this on paper, you’re probably doing it in some way. The times where I find it most impactful are those where I feel like I have a lot of things to do and not enough hours in the day to do them.

I know we’ve all felt this way at some point in life, careers, or school. It can feel really wasteful to take a step back and slow down when you’re in that moment. However, the value you will get in return to running all those tasks through a matrix will save not only your time but also your mental health. Give it a go next time you’re in this loop! I promise it’s worth it.

4 Ways to Build Confidence between Sales and Product

I’ve worked with several companies and on several Sales teams, but I consistently hear the same frustrations between Sales and Product. Sales reps consistently say things like “I could make so much more revenue for the company if only the product did x, y, z” or “I’m not sure our Product team is listening to the feedback from our customers.” While on the Product side, I often hear comments like “Sales is constantly giving us a laundry list of items of features” or “we’re trying to develop one-off solutions for very niche use-cases vs. building the product for scale.”

Comments like these happening cross-functionally can create devastating impacts on culture, morale, and trust internally, but it can also lead to poor outcomes for both Product and Sales alike. How can teams avoid this tension and create cross-functional confidence between teams? In this post, I hope to share 4 best practices that I’ve seen between Product and Sales teams that have helped build confidence and trust between both sides of the business. Each of these is framed to be used by either team to improve cross-functional collaboration.

Assume Positive Intent

This is a lesson that I learned early on in my career, and something that sticks with me to this day. Most people you interact with, especially in the workplace, are not malicious. They mean well, they want to be good at their job, and they want to do what’s best. If you approach your interactions cross-functionally assuming that the other team is bought into doing what’s best for the organization, its mission, and its customers, you will find that it’s easier to collaborate.

From the Sales side, I often find that teammates feel unheard with their Product team. They either feel like the most high-impact updates are not on the roadmap or that updates being rolled out are not in line with what they expected. This often gets brought into internal meetings with Product and even with customers at times and prevents both Sales and Product from truly meeting their customer needs.

From the Product side, I often find that Product Managers and Engineers feel like Sales is creating laundry lists of to-dos for Product with little understanding of the long-term vision or how one-off requests may fit into that vision. This misalignment can often cause Product teams to devalue or misunderstand important needs being brought forward from Sales and customers.

If you’ve ever been on a cross-functional call between Product or Sales, you may notice that these tensions can manifest in incredibly unproductive ways. It can derail Product updates due to misalignment, create hostile meetings between leaders, and even create unproductive siloes that prohibit growth.

The Product and Sales teams that I’ve seen most successfully collaborate are those that have leaders that consistently lift their cross-functional partners up. They walk into each cross-functional meeting assuming that they want the same thing: success for the business and its customers. When you find yourself feeling misaligned, whether you’re on the Sales or Product side, take a step back and remind yourself that the person on the other end of the call isn’t attacking you or your work. They are not questioning or challenging as an attack. They are likely seeking to understand and want the same outcome: to move the business forward.

Quantify Customer Impact

I’ve mentioned this several times already: working with a Sales team as a Product Manager can feel like getting a laundry list of to-dos. Without proper quantification of impact to the customer experience, internal processes, or revenue, it can be a guessing game to determine what’s a priority. If you find means to quantify this impact, it will help both teams feel valued and heard in the negotiation of a Product Roadmap.

From the Sales side, it’s super easy, especially in a small organization, to feel like every product limitation is of the utmost importance, especially when you are not tapped into the product roadmap and decision making around it. You start to notice patterns in your own customers, and it becomes incredibly simple to tie lost revenue to these limitations.

From the Product side, you’re consistently tapped into where the Product is in its current state and the cost of the Product requests on your overall roadmap to the future state. It is incredibly understandable to be overwhelmed by all of the information on competitors, ideas for new features, and customer limitations shared by a Sales team when there is a clear vision for where the product needs to go and limited resources to get it there.

Both sides are in a very tough position: Sales must acquire and retain customers despite product limitations and Product must consistently weigh product limitations in the current state against the overall product roadmap. The quickest way to make sure both teams are aligned in this is by creating mechanisms to quantify product needs from your customer base and feedback loops to keep the Sales team in the know.

The most successful teams I’ve worked on use CRM data, ticket requests, and feedback forms to collect this information. Leaders review this consistently and use it to re-prioritize and negotiate the product roadmap. Where you become really dangerous (will discuss this further in the following sections) is turning that into a 360-degree loop where that impact data and the outcomes from it are then communicated back to the Sales team as actions. Whether you’re in Sales or Product, try to find ways to mechanize customer impact and product requests to better align your product strategy to the changes that will provide the most meaningful impact to your customers. Take the guessing out of product development and work together to pull the business forward as a unit.

Collaborate Consistently

The teams I see struggle the most are those that become siloed within the organization. Sales teams aren’t taking the time to deliver feedback or even read about the updates from the Product teams. Product teams are not providing avenues for feedback on product updates or product roadmaps. This siloing is often unintentional but can provide huge levels of distrust or frustration between teams.

Sales teams often stop communicating product requests when they feel like the requests they are making are unheard or unimportant. Delivering customer feedback or meeting with Product can be incredibly time-consuming and difficult to balance against the time that needs to be spent trying to hit a quota.

Product teams often end up siloed when their Sales teams are not providing meaningful information on revenue impact, requirements, or feedback around current and future product updates. Without buy-in from the Sales team on making sure Product goals align with what the end-user needs, it can be difficult to make the right solution to meet those needs.

You want your Product team to match customer expectations, but without the Sales team, your direct front with your customer base, how can you possibly meet your customer needs without simply guessing? This lack of collaboration is often what continues to progress the tension I’ve consistently discussed: Sales feels unheard, Product feels unvalued.

The companies I’ve seen most successful at combating this siloing have leaders dedicated to getting Product in front of customers and Sales as frequently as possible. They meet consistently. They have liaisons between their two teams collecting and sharing feedback on a regular basis. They think of their organizations as one team with one goal: satisfying the end-user. If you’re in a small organization, this may be relatively easy; however, it can often break down in larger organizations. Whether you’re an individual contributor or leader in Product or Sales, find ways to work cross-functionally not only on immediate or urgent needs but consistently. Find mechanisms or avenues to stay up-to-date on current goals, pain points, and updates from your cross-functional partner. Most importantly, be sure to respectfully give as well as receive honest and consistent feedback throughout.

Lead with Transparency

This is basic knowledge if you ever want to be a leader or generally just build trust with others. A lack of transparency causes tension, distrust, and general frustration cross-functionally. It’s important to constantly remember that you are the expert of your own team, but your cross-functional partners probably have no idea what your role or projects entail. Sometimes it can be tedious to remind and educate cross-functionally, but in not doing that, you run the risk of losing trust with these important partners.

From a Sales side, reps are often not tapped into technical specifications, limitations, or decision making. Most Sales reps have never worked in project-based roles, so the way a Product team operates is quite foreign to them. It’s also quite difficult to understand why certain requests may be nearly impossible to execute. This lack of understanding can make often manifest as frustration with the progress made on the Product.

From a Product side, the team is often solution-oriented and can often miss out on key information from the Sales team on what the customer needs and why they need it. Without clear, concise information from Sales, product updates and changes can easily become misaligned due to a lack of transparency from Sales or a lack of understanding of the problem by Product.

Not taking the time to meet your cross-functional partner where they are at in understanding your team, its vision, its needs, etc. is a very quick way to become misaligned. All too often, we assume the other party knows what is happening and understands exactly our intention, limitations, and decision-making.

The teams that work most productively together consistently educate and re-educate on these important concepts. They are honest about why they are making decisions, why they may not be able to satisfy the other team’s needs, and what they need to work better with their cross-functional partners. Whether your Sales or Product, continually push yourself to better understand your cross-functional partners. Ask questions, assume positive intent, and most importantly be honest! Even if you are not meeting the expectations of your cross-functional partner, the best thing you can do is be honest and direct with that information, so they can adjust their own expectations accordingly.

Conclusion

Whether you are Sales or Product, you and only you can control your own reactions to frustrations with your cross-functional partners. You can assume negative intent and continue that rift between your organizations, or you can step up and change the narrative.

Assuming positive intents, quantifying customer impact, collaborating consistently, and leading with transparency are just a few basic ways to build trust between your teams and ones that I’ve seen work really well in my own experience. Let’s keep this conversation going! In the comments, tell me more about your own experience working cross-functionally and what contributed to some of your best and worst experiences doing so.