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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this episode of GRYT, host Juven interviews Chris Degnan (Snowflake's first AE turned CRO) and Denise Pearson (Snowflake's CMO) about their partnership that helped scale the company from early-stage startup to a multi-billion dollar public company. They discuss their new book "Make It Snow," sharing insights on building successful sales and marketing alignment, hiring strategies, and maintaining company culture during hypergrowth. (00:40)
Chris was Snowflake's first Account Executive (employee #7) who eventually became the company's Chief Revenue Officer. He helped build Snowflake's sales organization from zero revenue to over $5 billion, playing a crucial role in what investors recognized as the company's exceptional distribution capabilities. Chris left Snowflake about six months ago and now advises eight companies, focusing primarily on early-stage startups in the Series A to D funding range.
Denise joined Snowflake as CMO when the company had around $3 million in ARR in 2016. She built Snowflake's world-class marketing organization, with particular expertise in demand generation and field marketing that directly supported the sales team's success. She continues to serve as CMO at Snowflake and has been instrumental in scaling the company's marketing efforts from startup to public company scale.
Many companies position themselves as "sales-driven" or "engineering-driven," but Snowflake's leadership emphasized being "customer-driven" across all functions. (33:00) This philosophy required every department—from sales to marketing to engineering—to align around customer outcomes rather than internal metrics. Denise explains that this approach meant no single function was considered more important than others, and every team had to contribute to customer success. This customer-centric alignment was crucial during Frank Slootman's tenure, where all executives attended Chris's quarterly business reviews to discuss customer issues, not just sales metrics.
Denise's perspective that "sales is my customer" fundamentally shaped how marketing operations functioned at Snowflake. (28:30) Rather than creating traditional marketing qualified leads (MQLs) that often frustrated sales teams, the marketing organization focused on generating qualified meetings and pipeline that directly supported sales efficiency. This meant marketing teams were aligned with field managers at every level, with field marketers held accountable for lead quality going to specific sales territories. The success of this approach was measurable—sales reps would immediately tell you whether leads were valuable or not.
Chris joined Snowflake pre-revenue as employee #7, which conventional wisdom might suggest is too early. However, this early hire was intentional and strategic. (74:54) Mike Speiser instructed Chris not to collect revenue initially, but to get the product into as many customer hands as possible to break it and validate the product. This approach revealed critical product flaws that required major engineering changes, including replacing a core database engine. The key insight: if you're building a deep competitive moat, you need early sales feedback to perfect the product before competitors can replicate it. As Chris notes, "we needed to get market share before the competition got product."
One of the most damaging patterns Chris and Denise observed in other companies was CEOs who deliberately created "healthy tension" between sales and marketing teams. (30:01) Instead, they handled all conflicts privately between themselves, never escalating issues to leadership or creating organizational drama. When problems arose—whether leads weren't being followed up on or lead quality was poor—they solved it through direct communication and intellectual honesty. This approach built trust and prevented the toxic finger-pointing that destroys many go-to-market organizations. The key was that when one gave the other feedback, they acted on it immediately rather than making excuses.
Technical founders often fall in love with product marketing and brand initiatives, but Denise emphasizes that early-stage companies need leads above all else. (35:03) When joining at $3 million ARR, her first 90-day priority was building demand generation capabilities, not website redesigns or brand exercises. This focus on immediately addressable priorities is crucial—if you haven't fixed the critical demand issue within six months, "you're done." While product marketing and other functions became world-class later, the foundation had to be built on lead generation that directly supported sales efficiency. As Chris advises every CEO he works with: "Focus on demand gen. Focus on demand gen."