C-Suite (20+ years)

Chief Commercial Officer

This isn't just a sales leadership job; it's about owning the entire commercial engine for the business. You'll be the architect of how we find, win, and keep customers, ensuring every part of our go-to-market strategy works together. Think of yourself as the ultimate orchestrator, setting the rhythm for revenue growth across the whole company. It's a high-stakes, high-impact role, frankly, where your decisions directly shape our market position and investor confidence.

Job ID
JD-SAMA-CCO-007
Department
Sales
NOS Level
Level 8
OFQUAL Level
Level 8
Experience
C-Suite (20+ years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The Chief Commercial Officer is responsible for defining and executing our enterprise-wide commercial strategy, which directly impacts our market share, revenue growth, and overall company valuation. You'll work at the intersection of Sales, Marketing, Product, and Finance, translating our business vision into a scalable, predictable revenue engine that the Board and investors can trust. This means you're not just hitting targets; you're building the infrastructure that makes hitting targets repeatable, year after year. When this role is done well, we'll see sustained, profitable growth, happy customers, and a clear path to market leadership. When it's not, we'll struggle with inconsistent revenue, high churn, and a confused market message—which, let's be real, can sink a company. The challenge is balancing aggressive growth with operational efficiency and long-term strategic investments, often with imperfect information and competing internal priorities. The reward? Seeing your commercial vision come to life, driving significant shareholder value, and leading a high-performing team that genuinely makes a difference.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: Your decisions here directly influence the company's P&L (typically £10M+), market positioning, and long-term viability. You're accountable for the entire revenue generation process, from initial lead to customer retention and expansion. Frankly, if you don't get this right, the company won't hit its growth objectives, and investor confidence will plummet. You're the one who ultimately owns the revenue number.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Year-on-Year Revenue Growth
  2. Desc: The percentage increase in total revenue compared to the previous year. This is the big one, the headline number everyone watches.
  3. Target: +30% annually
  4. Freq: Quarterly and Annually
  5. Example: If we hit £120M this year compared to £90M last year, that's a 33% growth. You'll be presenting this to the Board every quarter, explaining the 'how' and 'why'.
  6. Metric: Net Revenue Retention (NRR)
  7. Desc: How much revenue we retain from existing customers, including expansions and downgrades. For SaaS, this is often seen as the ultimate health metric.
  8. Target: >115%
  9. Freq: Monthly and Quarterly
  10. Example: If we start the year with £10M in recurring revenue from existing customers and end with £11.5M (after accounting for churn, upgrades, and downgrades), that's 115% NRR. It shows our 'land and expand' strategy is really working.
  11. Metric: Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) Payback Period
  12. Desc: How long it takes to earn back the money we spent to acquire a new customer. We want this to be as short as possible.
  13. Target: < 12 months
  14. Freq: Quarterly
  15. Example: If it costs us £10,000 to acquire a customer, and they bring in £1,000 in monthly recurring revenue, our payback is 10 months. You'll be working with Marketing and Finance to keep this tight.
  16. Metric: Gross Margin Percentage
  17. Desc: The percentage of revenue left after subtracting the cost of goods sold (COGS). This tells us how profitable our core sales are, not just how much we're selling.
  18. Target: >75%
  19. Freq: Monthly and Quarterly
  20. Example: If we sell a software licence for £10,000 and it costs us £2,000 to deliver (hosting, support, etc.), our gross margin is 80%. You'll need to balance sales incentives with maintaining healthy margins.
  21. Metric: Market Share Growth
  22. Desc: Our percentage of the total available market. Are we growing faster than the competition?
  23. Target: +2-5% annually in key segments
  24. Freq: Annually (with quarterly pulse checks)
  25. Example: If our market share goes from 10% to 12% in our target enterprise segment, that's a significant win. You'll be looking at competitor data and market reports to track this.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Board and Investor Confidence
  2. Desc: The level of trust and belief the Board and investors have in your commercial strategy and execution. This isn't just about numbers; it's about your narrative.
  3. Evidence: Proactively sought for strategic input in Board meetings, positive feedback from investor calls, successful fundraising rounds, consistent support for commercial initiatives and budget requests.
  4. Metric: Strategic Alignment Across Functions
  5. Desc: How well Sales, Marketing, Product, and Customer Success are working together towards common commercial goals. Are we all pulling in the same direction?
  6. Evidence: Clear, unified Go-to-Market (GTM) strategy document, joint planning sessions with actionable outcomes, minimal 'finger-pointing' between departments, shared KPIs, and consistent messaging to the market.
  7. Metric: Talent Development and Retention
  8. Desc: The ability to attract, develop, and retain top commercial talent across all levels of the organisation. Are we building a bench for the future?
  9. Evidence: Low regrettable attrition rates in key sales roles, internal promotions to senior leadership, high engagement scores in commercial teams, strong pipeline of future leaders identified through succession planning.
  10. Metric: Market Reputation and Thought Leadership
  11. Desc: Our standing in the industry as an innovative and customer-centric commercial organisation. Are we seen as leaders?
  12. Evidence: Invited to speak at major industry conferences, positive analyst reports, strong presence in industry publications, high-profile customer testimonials, and awards for commercial excellence.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Driving Enterprise-Wide Impact
  2. Daily: You'll spend your days making decisions that directly affect the company's P&L, market share, and investor perception. Every strategic move you make, from a new GTM plan to a compensation structure, has ripple effects across the entire organisation.
  3. Motivator: Building and Scaling High-Performing Commercial Teams
  4. Daily: A significant part of your role is about attracting, developing, and retaining top talent. You'll be mentoring VPs, shaping organisational structure, and fostering a culture of excellence and accountability across Sales, Customer Success, and RevOps.
  5. Motivator: Strategic Problem Solving at the Highest Level
  6. Daily: You'll be tackling the most complex commercial challenges – navigating competitive landscapes, optimising global revenue operations, and integrating new acquisitions. It's about seeing the big picture and designing innovative solutions that drive long-term growth.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. If you crave complete control over every variable, or if you struggle with ambiguity and constant change, you'll find it tough. You'll often be asked to hit aggressive targets with imperfect resources, and you'll need to make tough calls that won't make everyone happy. The pressure from the Board and investors is constant, and you're the face of the revenue number, good or bad.

Common Frustrations

  1. Forecast Whiplash: Being pressured by the Board for an aggressive 'hockey stick' forecast, while simultaneously needing to extract a conservative, achievable number from your team.
  2. The 'Garbage In, Garbage Out' CRM Problem: Inheriting a CRM filled with years of incomplete, inaccurate data, making any meaningful forecasting or analysis a nightmare until you lead a painful, six-month data hygiene project.
  3. Marketing & Sales Misalignment: Wasting hours debating the definition of a 'Marketing Qualified Lead' (MQL) while the sales team complains about lead quality and Marketing complains about follow-up times. It's like being a referee.
  4. The Product Roadmap Black Hole: Fighting to get a critical feature prioritised for a multi-million-pound deal, only to be told by Product that it 'doesn't align with their strategic vision for Q3.'
  5. Discounting Death Spiral: Acting as the 'bad cop' who must hold the line on pricing and reject discount requests from reps who are desperate to close a deal at any cost to hit their number.
  6. Sandbagging Season: Knowing your top reps are holding deals back at the end of a quarter to give themselves a head start on the next, making your company-level forecast a work of fiction.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A predictable 9-to-5 work schedule – expect late nights, early mornings, and travel.
  2. The ability to avoid tough conversations – you'll be having them constantly, both internally and externally.
  3. A role where you can avoid public scrutiny – your performance is directly tied to the company's success and is visible to the Board and investors.
  4. A role where you can focus solely on one aspect of the commercial engine – you need to be a generalist at this level, overseeing everything.

ADHD Positives

  1. The fast-paced, high-stakes nature of C-suite leadership can be highly engaging and stimulating, offering constant novelty and challenges.
  2. The need for rapid decision-making and strategic pivots can suit those who thrive under pressure and can quickly synthesise complex information.
  3. The broad scope of the role, covering multiple functions, can prevent boredom and allow for shifting focus between different, exciting problems.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Managing multiple, complex strategic initiatives simultaneously can be overwhelming; strong executive support for project management and delegation is key.
  2. The extensive meeting schedule and need for sustained attention in Board presentations might be challenging; consider flexible meeting structures or pre-reading materials.
  3. The detail-oriented nature of financial reporting and compliance requires meticulous oversight; leveraging strong support staff (e.g., Chief of Staff, RevOps) for execution is crucial.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. High-level strategic thinking, pattern recognition, and 'big picture' vision are often strengths that are highly valued in a CCO role.
  2. Strong verbal communication and storytelling abilities, especially in presentations to the Board or investors, can be a significant asset.
  3. The ability to delegate detailed written tasks to a strong support team (e.g., Chief of Staff, executive assistant) is inherent in this level.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Extensive reading of complex financial reports, legal documents, and investor presentations can be demanding; using text-to-speech tools or having key summaries prepared by staff can help.
  2. Drafting critical external communications (e.g., investor letters, press releases) requires careful proofreading; a dedicated editor or AI writing assistant should be available.
  3. Reliance on visual aids and clear, concise summaries in meetings can significantly improve information processing and retention.

Autism Positives

  1. A deep, analytical approach to market dynamics, sales data, and commercial strategy can lead to highly effective, data-driven decisions.
  2. A preference for logic and objective data over emotional appeals can be valuable in high-pressure negotiations and Board discussions.
  3. The ability to maintain focus on long-term strategic goals, even amidst short-term distractions, is a significant asset for enterprise leadership.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Navigating complex, unwritten social rules in C-suite dynamics and investor relations can be challenging; a trusted mentor or executive coach can provide guidance.
  2. The constant need for networking, public speaking, and engaging in 'small talk' at industry events might be draining; strategic delegation of some external-facing duties or structured preparation can help.
  3. Unexpected changes in strategic direction or market conditions can be disruptive; clear communication about upcoming changes and rationales is essential.

Sensory Considerations

The CCO role typically involves a mix of environments: quiet, focused work in a private office, high-energy team meetings, potentially noisy open-plan areas (though less common at this level), and frequent travel to client sites, conferences, and investor meetings. Expect varied lighting, sound levels, and social interaction. We'll always discuss any specific needs to ensure you have the right setup to thrive.

Flexibility Notes

We recognise that top talent comes in many forms. We're committed to providing a supportive environment and are open to discussing reasonable accommodations to ensure you can perform at your best. Our focus is on impact and outcomes, not rigid adherence to traditional work styles.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Chief Commercial Officer (C-Suite)
  2. Responsibilities: Define and articulate the enterprise-wide commercial strategy, setting the 3-5 year vision for how we acquire, retain, and grow customers. This isn't just a document; it's the guiding light for the entire revenue engine.
  3. Own the company's overall revenue performance and P&L (typically £10M+), presenting results, forecasts, and strategic initiatives to the CEO and Board of Directors. Expect tough questions and be ready with clear answers.
  4. Architect and optimise the end-to-end Go-to-Market (GTM) model, ensuring seamless integration between Sales, Marketing, Customer Success, and Revenue Operations. If these aren't working together, it's on you to fix it.
  5. Build and lead a world-class commercial leadership team, including VPs of Sales, Customer Success, and RevOps. This means hiring top talent, mentoring them, and holding them accountable for their numbers and strategic objectives.
  6. Drive strategic partnerships and channel development, identifying and securing alliances that significantly expand our market reach and revenue streams. This often involves complex negotiations and long-term relationship building.
  7. Represent the company externally as a key spokesperson to investors, analysts, major customers, and industry bodies. You'll be articulating our commercial vision and performance to critical audiences.
  8. Ensure commercial operations are compliant with all relevant regulations (e.g., data privacy, ethical selling) and internal governance policies. A breach here can have serious financial and reputational consequences.
  9. Supervision: Fully autonomous on enterprise commercial strategy and execution. You report directly to the CEO and are accountable to the Board of Directors for overall commercial performance. You'll typically meet with the CEO weekly for strategic alignment and present to the Board quarterly.
  10. Decision: Full strategic authority over the entire commercial function, including P&L management (£10M+), organisational design, global GTM strategy, major investment decisions (e.g., new CRM platforms up to £1M), and hiring/firing of direct reports (VPs). Board-level decisions (e.g., M&A, significant market entry) require Board approval, but you'll be leading the recommendation.
  11. Success: Achieving consistent, profitable year-on-year revenue growth, exceeding Net Revenue Retention targets, maintaining a healthy CAC payback period, building a highly effective and engaged commercial leadership team, and securing strong investor confidence in the company's growth trajectory.

Decision-Making Authority

Save 15-25 hours weekly: Supercharge your commercial strategy with AI

Let's be real, as CCO, your time is precious. You're constantly juggling strategic planning, team leadership, investor relations, and putting out fires. Imagine if you could cut through the noise, get insights faster, and free up hours for truly impactful work. AI isn't just for junior roles; it's a game-changer for executive productivity, and we're building an AI Hub to show you how.

ID:

Tool: Automated Pipeline Risk Analysis

Benefit: AI can scan your entire CRM for deals at risk – think no recent activity, lack of executive engagement, or repeatedly pushed close dates. It'll flag these in a concise weekly summary, saving you and your VPs hours of manual pipeline review. You'll get proactive alerts, not just reactive reports.

ID:

Tool: AI-Powered Revenue Forecasting

Benefit: Move beyond gut feel and spreadsheet roll-ups. Use AI models that analyse historical deal data, seasonality, rep performance, and even external market signals to generate a more accurate, unbiased forecast. This supplements your team's numbers, giving you a more robust view to present to the Board.

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Tool: Instant Competitor Intelligence Briefings

Benefit: Forget spending hours reading competitor earnings calls, product launch announcements, and analyst reports. AI tools can summarise all this information, providing a concise, actionable briefing. You'll get the key takeaways and strategic implications in minutes, keeping you ahead of the curve.

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Tool: C-Suite Communication Drafts

Benefit: Staring at a blank page for your monthly Board update or internal QBR narrative? Use generative AI to create the first draft based on performance data and key highlights. It won't be perfect, but it'll turn a daunting task into a solid starting point, saving you significant drafting time.

15-25 hours weekly Weekly time savings potential
We'll introduce you to 4-6 core AI tools relevant to your role, with an average investment of £50-£200/month per user for premium features. Expect to see value within 1-2 weeks of adoption. Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for Chief Commercial Officer →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

As Chief Commercial Officer, you're expected to be a master of leadership and strategic thinking. These aren't just 'nice-to-haves'; they're the bedrock of your ability to drive enterprise-level growth and influence the entire organisation. You'll be operating at the highest level, so your ability to communicate, solve complex problems, and lead through change is paramount.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

These are the core commercial methodologies and technical proficiencies that underpin a CCO's ability to design, build, and scale a predictable revenue engine. You're not just managing; you're architecting the entire commercial function.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

To reach the CCO level, you'll have already mastered the art of leading large sales organisations and will have a strong grasp of the wider commercial ecosystem. This role is about taking that experience and applying it at an enterprise-wide, strategic level, influencing every aspect of the business, not just sales.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

The future CCO isn't just a sales leader; they're a technologist, a data scientist, an ethicist, and a strategist all rolled into one. Your ability to embrace these evolving technical and strategic areas will define your success and the company's growth trajectory.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

Level: Minimum | Req: Bachelor's degree in Business Administration, Marketing, Finance, or a related field from a reputable university. | Alts: Exceptional professional experience (25+ years) in senior commercial leadership roles with a proven track record of P&L ownership and enterprise growth may be considered in lieu of a degree. | Level: Preferred | Req: Master's degree (MBA) from a top-tier business school. | Alts: A postgraduate qualification in a relevant field such as Strategic Marketing, Finance, or Technology Management.

Preferred Certifications

Recommended Activities

Career Progression Pathways

Entry Paths to This Role

Career Progression From This Role

Long Term Vision Potential Roles

Sector Mobility

Your skills as a CCO are highly transferable across various industries, particularly within B2B SaaS, technology, and other high-growth sectors. The principles of building a scalable commercial engine, driving revenue, and managing executive teams are universal, though specific market knowledge will always be a learning curve.

How Zavmo Delivers This Role's Development

DISCOVER Phase: Skills Gap Analysis

Zavmo maps your current competencies against all requirements in this job description through conversational assessment. We evaluate your foundation skills (communication, strategic thinking), functional skills (CRM expertise, negotiation), and readiness for career progression.

Output: Personalised skills gap heat map showing strengths and priorities, estimated time to competency, neurodiversity accommodations.

DISCUSS Phase: Personalised Learning Pathway

Based on your DISCOVER results, Zavmo creates a personalised learning plan prioritised by impact: foundation skills first, then functional skills. We adapt to your learning style, pace, and neurodiversity needs (ADHD, dyslexia, autism).

Output: Week-by-week schedule, each module linked to specific job responsibilities, checkpoints and milestones.

DELIVER Phase: Conversational Learning

Learn through conversation, not boring modules. Zavmo uses 10 conversation types (Socratic dialogue, role-play, coaching, case studies) to build competence. Practice difficult QBR presentations, negotiate tough renewals, and handle churn conversations in a safe AI environment before facing real clients.

Example: "For 'Stakeholder Mapping', Zavmo will guide you through analysing a complex enterprise account, identifying key decision-makers, and building an engagement strategy."

DEMONSTRATE Phase: Competency Assessment

Zavmo automatically builds your evidence portfolio as you learn. Every conversation, practice scenario, and application example is captured and mapped to NOS performance criteria. When ready, your portfolio supports OFQUAL qualification claims and demonstrates competence to employers.

Output: Competency matrix, evidence portfolio (downloadable), qualification readiness, career progression score.

Discover Your Skills Gap Explore Learning Paths