He joined when Snowflake had 0 customers, no CEO, and no website. The company was in stealth mode, he wasn't even allowed to list where he worked on LinkedIn. Twelve years later, Snowflake was doing well north of $4 billion in annual revenue. Chris Degnan was Snowflake's first sales hire and spent over eleven years as its founding Chief Revenue Officer, growing the company from zero to one of the fastest-scaling enterprise software businesses in history. He joined in November 2013 as employee...

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Snowflake's CMO and Former CRO: How Snowflake actually built to $4B+ in revenue!

MAR 31, 202651 MIN
TruthWorks

Snowflake's CMO and Former CRO: How Snowflake actually built to $4B+ in revenue!

MAR 31, 202651 MIN

Description

He joined when Snowflake had 0 customers, no CEO, and no website. The company was in stealth mode, he wasn't even allowed to list where he worked on LinkedIn.Twelve years later, Snowflake was doing well north of $4 billion in annual revenue.Chris Degnan was Snowflake's first sales hire and spent over eleven years as its founding Chief Revenue Officer, growing the company from zero to one of the fastest-scaling enterprise software businesses in history. He joined in November 2013 as employee number 13 and spent the early days cold-emailing thousands of people a week just to get meetings.He is now semi-retired, sitting on seven boards, and advising companies across Silicon Valley.Denise Persson joined Snowflake in May 2016 as employee number 120, when the company had $3 million in ARR and fewer than eight people on the marketing team. She had never worked at a company that small.She is still Snowflake's CMO today.Together, they have one of the longest CRO-CMO partnerships in the history of enterprise technology. They survived three CEO transitions together, multiple executive team overhauls, a global pandemic IPO, and a company that grew from a handful of believers to over 8,000 employees.They wrote a book about it. It's called Make It Snow.In this episode of Truth Works, host Jessica Neal sits down with Chris Degnan and Denise Persson to pull apart exactly how they built the sales and marketing alignment that most companies never achieve — and why most people in those roles don't last long enough to find out.They discuss:How Chris joined with no customers, no website, and no CEO — and why two French founders were the reason he said yesWhat Denise did on day one that built more credibility with the sales team than her entire resume hadWhy Snowflake was always a customer-led company, not a sales-led or marketing-led one — and why that distinction changes everythingThe 3am text message, the new CEO, and why every executive on the team was getting fired except the two of themHow they gave each other feedback that most colleagues would never survive — and why acting on it was the only way to keep getting itWhy heads of sales typically last 18 to 24 months — and what made this partnership last over a decade through four CEOsWhat the book Make It Snow gives founders, CMOs, and CROs that most go-to-market frameworks completely missChris Degnan and Denise Persson are proof that the tension between sales and marketing is not inevitable. It is a leadership failure — and it is entirely fixable.