A RevOps framework is a structured operating model that aligns your sales, marketing, and customer success teams under a single revenue mandate. It consolidates data, processes, and technology so every team operates from the same source of truth. Australian mid-market companies that implement a RevOps framework report 19% faster revenue growth compared to those running siloed commercial operations, according to Gartner.
This guide covers:
A RevOps framework is a structured operating model that unifies revenue-generating functions under shared data, processes, accountability, and technology. Rather than having sales, marketing, and customer success each operate with separate systems, metrics, and handoffs, a RevOps framework creates one connected revenue motion where accountability is clear and reporting is consistent.
The four pillars of a RevOps framework are:
Gartner predicts that by 2025, 75% of high-growth companies will have deployed a RevOps model. In Australia, adoption is accelerating fastest in professional services, SaaS, and B2B technology companies with 50–500 employees — driven by pressure to improve pipeline predictability and reduce go-to-market inefficiency.
A RevOps framework for a mid-market company covers six operational domains. Each requires defined ownership, a documented process, and a technology layer to enforce it.
1. Revenue Architecture
This is the design layer. It defines how your go-to-market motion works: ICP, lifecycle stages, lead scoring model, and the trigger points at which a prospect moves between marketing, sales, and customer success. Without documented revenue architecture, every team operates on assumptions — and those assumptions conflict.
2. Data Governance
Data governance defines which fields matter, who owns them, and what "clean" looks like. For HubSpot users, this means property definitions, required fields on deal stage advancement, and a de-duplication process. Poor data is the number one reason RevOps frameworks fail to deliver on their promise.
3. Funnel and Pipeline Management
The framework defines your pipeline stages, the exit criteria for each stage, and the deal properties required at each point. This standardises how revenue is forecast, not just tracked. A deal should not move to "Proposal Sent" without a documented decision-maker, budget, and timeline.
4. Reporting and Attribution
A RevOps framework includes a defined reporting cadence and a standard set of metrics: MQL-to-SQL conversion rate, average deal cycle, win rate by source, and customer acquisition cost by channel. Every stakeholder reads from the same dashboard. If your Head of Marketing and Head of Sales cite different pipeline numbers in the same meeting, the framework is not working.
5. Systems Integration
Your CRM, marketing automation, customer success platform, and billing system need to exchange data. In a mature RevOps setup, a deal closed in HubSpot automatically triggers the customer success onboarding sequence, billing setup, and handover task — with no manual intervention.
6. Enablement
Enablement is the operational performance layer: sales playbooks, objection handling documentation, competitive intelligence updates, and onboarding materials for new revenue team members. RevOps owns the process; enablement owns the performance.
Building a RevOps framework follows a five-phase implementation sequence. The order matters: configuring technology before fixing process is the most common and expensive mistake Australian companies make.
Phase 1: Audit your current revenue motion (weeks 1–2)
Map every touchpoint from first lead contact through to renewal. Document where data breaks, where handoffs fail, and where accountability is unclear. Use your CRM data to quantify the cost: calculate your current MQL-to-deal conversion rate and average sales cycle. Most mid-market companies discover a 30–50% drop-off at the marketing-to-sales handoff with no clear owner.
Phase 2: Define your revenue architecture (weeks 3–4)
Lock in your ICP, lifecycle stage definitions, and the criteria that move a prospect from one stage to the next. This is a strategic conversation, not a technical one. It requires your Head of Marketing, Head of Sales, and CEO to agree on definitions. Without that agreement, your CRM configuration will encode existing disagreements rather than resolve them.
Phase 3: Configure your CRM to enforce the model (weeks 5–8)
Once the model is agreed, configure your CRM to reflect it: pipeline stages, required properties, deal rotting rules, and automation. In HubSpot, this means building workflows that enforce handoffs, create tasks, and trigger follow-up at each stage transition. A properly configured HubSpot instance becomes the operating system for your RevOps framework.
Phase 4: Build reporting that tells the truth (weeks 7–9)
Build a revenue reporting dashboard that your leadership team can use weekly. Include: pipeline by stage, conversion rates by stage, deal velocity, lead source attribution, and customer acquisition cost. If your data is clean from Phases 1 and 2, this is straightforward. If it is not, reporting will expose the gaps.
Phase 5: Assign operational ownership (ongoing)
A RevOps framework degrades without a named owner. For companies without a full-time RevOps hire, a fractional RevOps engagement covering 2–3 days per week typically provides the operational oversight needed to maintain system hygiene, run the reporting cycle, and manage ongoing CRM optimisation.
RevOps implementation costs in Australia vary based on whether you hire in-house, engage a fractional resource, or work with a specialist agency. The table below reflects current market rates across each model.
| Approach | Typical cost (AUD) | Best for |
| In-house RevOps Manager | A$110,000–A$150,000/year | Companies with 200+ employees and complex revenue models |
| Fractional RevOps | A$3,000–A$8,000/month | Companies with 50–150 employees needing consistent oversight |
| Agency-led implementation | A$15,000–A$50,000 project | Companies with an immature CRM needing a foundation build |
| Agency retainer | A$3,000–A$10,000/month | Ongoing optimisation after initial implementation |
For most Australian mid-market companies in the 50–150 employee range, a combination of an agency-led foundation build followed by a monthly retainer is the most cost-effective path. The initial build installs the framework; the retainer maintains it and evolves it as the business grows.
See our detailed breakdown of HubSpot implementation costs in Australia for line-by-line cost guidance.
HubSpot is the most common CRM for Australian mid-market RevOps implementations. Its strength is the native integration across Marketing Hub, Sales Hub, and Service Hub, which removes the need for third-party middleware to exchange data between revenue functions. Where many companies use separate tools for marketing automation, CRM, and customer success, HubSpot consolidates all three under one data model.
For RevOps specifically, HubSpot provides:
The key limitation is that HubSpot requires configuration to reflect your specific revenue architecture. Out of the box, it is a CRM. With a proper implementation, it becomes the operating system for your RevOps framework.
For a direct comparison of how HubSpot stacks up against Salesforce for mid-market RevOps, see HubSpot vs Salesforce for Mid-Market B2B.
The four mistakes that most commonly derail RevOps implementations in Australian mid-market companies:
1. Configuring the CRM before agreeing on the model
Teams spend weeks building HubSpot workflows before leadership has agreed on lifecycle stage definitions or ICP criteria. The result is a CRM that encodes the wrong assumptions — and those assumptions are now automated.
2. Treating RevOps as a technology project
RevOps is an operating model change. Technology is the enforcement layer. Companies that buy HubSpot and expect it to deliver RevOps outcomes without process design or people changes consistently underperform against expectations. The tool does not fix the behaviour.
3. No named owner
A RevOps framework without a dedicated owner degrades within 90 days. Pipeline hygiene slips, reporting breaks, and teams revert to workarounds. Whether in-house or fractional, ownership is non-negotiable.
4. Measuring activity instead of outcomes
Reporting on calls made and emails sent is activity reporting. RevOps reporting measures conversion rates, pipeline velocity, and win rates by source. If your weekly review opens with activity metrics, you are not running a RevOps operation yet.
See our foundational guide to Revenue Operations (RevOps) for the principles behind these decisions.
The practical difference between RevOps and traditional siloed operations is visible in how three core scenarios play out differently:
Lead handoff from marketing to sales
Siloed: Marketing passes leads via spreadsheet or manual notification. Sales ignores many of them because quality is inconsistent and there is no agreed definition of "qualified."
RevOps: An MQL meeting defined score criteria automatically creates a sales task, notifies the assigned rep, and opens a deal record. The handoff is documented, timestamped, and tracked.
Pipeline forecasting
Siloed: The sales leader exports from the CRM, adjusts numbers based on gut feel, and presents a forecast that marketing and finance treat with scepticism.
RevOps: Pipeline is maintained in real time with required fields at each stage. Forecasting uses historical conversion rates, not intuition. Marketing and finance read the same data.
Customer onboarding handoff
Siloed: A new customer receives a welcome email. Sales considers the deal closed. Customer success discovers the account three weeks later with no context on what was sold or promised.
RevOps: Deal closure triggers an automatic customer success sequence: kickoff meeting booked, implementation tasks created, account health baseline recorded — before the rep has left their desk.
A RevOps framework aligns sales, marketing, and customer success under shared data, process, and accountability. For Australian mid-market companies (50–500 employees), the most effective path is a five-phase implementation: audit, architecture, CRM configuration, reporting, and ownership. HubSpot is the leading CRM for mid-market RevOps in Australia because its native hub integration removes the data silos the framework is designed to eliminate. The total cost of a foundation implementation ranges from A$15,000–A$50,000 for an agency-led project, with ongoing retainer costs of A$3,000–A$10,000 per month. Without a named owner and a defined reporting cadence, a RevOps framework degrades within 90 days of implementation.