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In this captivating episode of 20 Sales, host Harry Stebbings sits down with Chris Deignan, the legendary former CRO at Snowflake who scaled the company from zero revenue to over $3 billion annually. (00:43) Chris shares raw insights from his journey as Snowflake's first sales hire, building a world-class go-to-market engine from scratch and growing the team to more than 6,000 people globally. The conversation dives deep into the evolution of enterprise sales, the critical relationship between sales and marketing, and what it really takes to build sustainable revenue growth in today's AI-driven landscape. (46:02)
Chris Deignan is the former Chief Revenue Officer at Snowflake, where he was instrumental in one of the most remarkable scaling stories in enterprise software history. He joined as the company's first sales hire when revenue was literally zero and no customers were using the product. Under his leadership, Snowflake grew from less than $1 million to over $3 billion in annual revenue, becoming one of the fastest-growing enterprise software companies ever. Chris built Snowflake's entire go-to-market engine from scratch and scaled the global team to more than 6,000 people before retiring in May 2024.
Harry Stebbings is the host of 20 Sales and a prominent venture capitalist. He's known for his deep expertise in go-to-market strategies and has built an extensive network of sales leaders and enterprise software executives. Through his podcast and investment activities, Harry has become a trusted advisor to founders and sales leaders navigating the complexities of building world-class revenue organizations.
The most transformative insight from Chris's experience involves redefining the relationship between sales and marketing teams. (05:42) When Denise Pearson joined Snowflake as CMO at $3 million in revenue, she revolutionized their approach by eliminating the traditional friction around MQLs and SQLs. Instead of arguing about lead definitions, she focused entirely on "qualified meetings" and treated the sales team as her primary customer. (06:03) This meant sitting down with every SDR, inside sales rep, and account executive to understand their needs directly. The result was a marketing organization that existed solely to fuel sales success, leading to unprecedented growth and alignment.
Chris implemented a radical transparency practice that became foundational to Snowflake's early success culture. (10:27) Every week, he would send company-wide emails detailing his exact activities: eight face-to-face meetings, competitive situations encountered, deal progression, and key learnings from customer interactions. This practice served multiple purposes beyond personal accountability - it educated the entire organization about market realities, helped engineers understand customer needs, and established a culture where results mattered more than hierarchy. The transparency also built credibility with technical teams who began building features based on Chris's direct customer feedback.
One of Chris's most controversial yet effective philosophies centers on sales rep accountability for pipeline creation. (13:52) He fundamentally believes that salespeople should be responsible for generating their own opportunities, with marketing serving as "the cherry on top" rather than the primary source. In Snowflake's early days, Chris and an intern would manually build lists and send 2,500 outbound emails weekly, sourcing prospects through creative methods like searching job boards for companies posting Amazon Redshift positions. This approach ensures that sales teams develop fundamental prospecting skills and don't become dependent on marketing-generated leads alone.
Chris learned through painful experience that hiring based on company pedigree rather than actual capabilities leads to organizational toxicity. (33:53) His biggest mistake was trusting "big company people" who managed up effectively but couldn't execute fundamental sales activities. The solution involves implementing rigorous productivity measurements: sales reps should achieve $250,000+ in new ACV within six months of onboarding, consistently conduct multiple customer meetings weekly, and pass certification tests proving they can effectively pitch the product. (36:44) This systematic approach to measuring leading indicators helps identify failing reps early and maintains high performance standards across the organization.
Chris's most radical organizational decision was eliminating traditional customer success teams at Snowflake in favor of a revenue-generating professional services model. (45:04) He discovered that many CS professionals could neither sell effectively nor implement technically, essentially functioning as expensive documentation guides. Instead, Snowflake built a professional services organization that customers paid for (even if partially subsidized), creating a team that customers valued more highly because they had financial investment. This approach ensured that post-sales support remained strategic rather than becoming a cost center, while maintaining the sales team's responsibility for both renewals and upselling in competitive environments.