Free interview plan

How to hire a RevOps manager who makes the forecast trustworthy

A complete playbook — sourcing strategy, boolean strings, screening, interview stages, a real CRM-and-forecast diagnosis exercise, reference checks, and a weighted scorecard. Built for B2B SaaS revenue teams.

6
Hiring stages covered
32
Interview questions
21
Days to place via LatamCent
Built from real RevOps manager placements Used by SaaS hiring teams Free. No fluff.
LatamCent initial screen
Hiring manager interview
CRM & forecast diagnosis
Exec / culture round
Reference check script
Salary bands by country
Weighted scorecard

Where RevOps talent that builds the revenue engine lives in LATAM

Where RevOps talent that builds the revenue engine (not just reports on it) lives in LATAM.

The difference between a great RevOps hire and a mediocre one is the difference between an architect and a report-puller. The architect designs clean data flows, automates the busywork, and makes forecasts you can trust; the report-puller waits for requests and exports CSVs. Filter for what they've built in the CRM and whether they understand the GTM motion they serve. LATAM has deep, mature Salesforce and HubSpot talent built supporting US teams.

Systems thinker, not report-puller

The signal is someone who designs the revenue engine's plumbing — clean data, automated workflows, accurate forecasting — not someone who just pulls reports when asked. Ask what they built or fixed in the CRM, not what dashboards they maintained.

CRM mastery is the floor

Deep Salesforce or HubSpot admin skill is non-negotiable: objects, automation, validation, reporting. But the role is bigger than the tool — it's about making the whole GTM stack (CRM + enrichment + sequencing + call intelligence) work together. The boolean above targets stack fluency.

Speaks GTM, not just ops

Great RevOps understands the sales and marketing motions they support — pipeline stages, conversion, attribution, comp plans. An ops person who can't reason about why a forecast is off is a technician, not a partner.

LATAM-specific

Strong bilingual RevOps and Sales Ops talent in Argentina, Colombia, Mexico, and Brazil, much of it built supporting US sales teams at SaaS companies and agencies. Salesforce and HubSpot ecosystems are mature across the region. Buenos Aires, Bogotá, CDMX, São Paulo are the deepest hubs.

Copy-paste boolean strings

Use these on LinkedIn Recruiter. Adjust company names and certifications to match your target stack.

Boolean string — LinkedIn (primary)
("RevOps" OR "Revenue Operations" OR "Sales Operations" OR "GTM Operations") AND ("Salesforce" OR "HubSpot") AND ("pipeline" OR "forecasting" OR "attribution" OR "CRM") AND ("Argentina" OR "Brazil" OR "Colombia" OR "Mexico")
Boolean string — SaaS GTM-stack alumni
("RevOps" OR "Sales Ops" OR "Marketing Ops") AND ("HubSpot" OR "Salesforce" OR "Outreach" OR "Gong" OR "Clay") AND ("SaaS" OR "B2B") AND ("remote" OR "US")
Boolean string — certification & systems signal
("Salesforce Administrator" OR "HubSpot certified" OR "RevOps") AND ("automation" OR "workflow" OR "reporting") AND ("bilingual" OR "LATAM" OR "remote")

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The 30-minute call that separates architects from report-pullers

The 30-minute call that separates revenue-engine architects from report-pullers.

This screen confirms real CRM depth and a builder's mindset before the hiring manager invests time. The fastest filter is the build story in Q1 — architects describe systems they designed; report-pullers describe dashboards they maintained. English is tested live; RevOps partners with US sales, marketing, and finance daily.

Screen Q1
Tell me about something you built or fixed in a CRM that made the sales team more effective. What was broken, and what changed?
Listen for: Builders have specifics: a broken pipeline stage definition, a manual process they automated, a data hygiene problem they solved. "I managed our Salesforce" without a build story signals a maintainer, not an architect.
Screen Q2
Salesforce or HubSpot — how deep are you really? Walk me through the most complex automation or report you've built.
Listen for: Tests true platform depth. Strong: workflow/flow logic, validation rules, custom objects, complex reporting. "I can run reports" is admin-lite and a flag for a senior role.
Screen Q3
How do you keep CRM data clean when reps don't want to update it?
Listen for: The eternal RevOps problem. Strong answers blend automation (enrichment, required fields, validation) with process and incentives — not just nagging. Pure "I'd make them" is naive.
Screen Q4
Walk me through how you'd build a forecast a CFO could trust.
Listen for: Forecasting rigor. Pipeline coverage, stage-weighted vs commit, historical conversion, accounting for rep sandbagging. This is where RevOps earns its seat.
Screen Q5
How do you think about attribution when marketing and sales both claim the same deals?
Listen for: GTM diplomacy + analytical honesty. Should reason about multi-touch reality, the limits of attribution, and aligning teams rather than picking a winner.
Screen Q6
What does your GTM tech stack look like, and how do you decide whether a new tool is worth adding?
Listen for: Stack judgment. Integration thinking, avoiding tool sprawl, ROI on tooling. The best RevOps simplify, not accumulate.
Screen Q7
You'll support a US sales team across timezones. How do you stay responsive and keep the engine running when issues come up mid-deal?
Listen for: Responsiveness + remote ops maturity. Plus live English check — RevOps works with reps, leaders, and finance constantly.

Keep going if they

  • Have built/fixed real CRM systems with impact
  • Demonstrate deep Salesforce or HubSpot admin skill
  • Reason about forecasting and GTM motions, not just reports
  • English B2+ and comfortable partnering with US sales leaders

Hard stop if they

  • Only ran reports; never built automation or fixed data
  • Shallow CRM skill ("I can pull a list")
  • Can't explain why a forecast might be wrong
  • Treat RevOps as a ticket queue, not a strategic function

The 60-minute depth eval with your CRO

Block 60 minutes with the CRO or head of sales. Go deep on the broken-forecast fix and the CRM cleanup plan — those are the two highest-value, most-tested skills in the role.

You're separating RevOps managers who architect a trustworthy revenue engine from technicians who keep the lights on. Push hard on the forecast question — watch whether they diagnose systematically or jump to a tool. The strongest candidates think in systems, speak fluent GTM, and tell hard truths with data.

HM Q1
Our forecast is consistently wrong and leadership has stopped trusting it. Walk me through how you'd fix that.
Listen for: The core scenario. Go deep — diagnose (data quality? stage definitions? rep behavior? methodology?), then rebuild with rigor. This is the highest-value thing a RevOps manager does.
HM Q2
Our CRM is a mess — duplicate accounts, half-empty fields, inconsistent stages. What's your 60-day cleanup plan?
Listen for: Data architecture under real conditions. Go deep — audit, dedupe, enforce hygiene via automation and process, prevent regression. Tests whether they can stabilize chaos.
HM Q3
How would you design our lead-to-opportunity-to-close process so handoffs don't drop deals?
Listen for: Process design across the funnel. SLAs, routing, stage exit criteria, the marketing-to-sales handoff. Go deep — this is where revenue leaks.
HM Q4
How do you think about sales comp plan design and the role RevOps plays in it?
Listen for: Strategic partnership. RevOps often models and administers comp. Should reason about aligning incentives with company goals and the operational complexity of getting comp right.
HM Q5
We want to add AI/automation to our GTM motion. Where would you start and where would you be cautious?
Listen for: Modern judgment. Lead scoring, enrichment, sequencing, call intelligence — and the discipline not to automate a broken process. 2026 RevOps lives here.
HM Q6
Tell me about a time the data told a story sales leadership didn't want to hear. How did you handle it?
Listen for: Integrity + influence. RevOps is the truth-teller of the revenue org; the good ones deliver hard truths without becoming the enemy.
HM Q7
How do you prioritize when sales, marketing, and the CRO all want something different from you this week?
Listen for: Stakeholder management. RevOps is pulled in every direction; the good ones triage by revenue impact and manage expectations.
HM Q8
What reporting would you put in front of the leadership team, and what would you deliberately leave out?
Listen for: Executive focus. The best RevOps surface the few metrics that drive decisions (pipeline coverage, conversion, velocity, forecast accuracy) and resist the dashboard-everything urge.

Functional assessment: CRM and forecast diagnosis

A real diagnosis of a messy CRM and pipeline, scored on systems thinking and judgment.

Don't quiz them on Salesforce trivia. This exercise replicates the RevOps manager's actual mandate: find what's broken in the revenue data, decide whether the forecast can be trusted, and prescribe durable fixes. It reveals both technical depth and the GTM judgment that separates a partner from a technician.

The exercise: Provide a messy sample CRM export (duplicate accounts, inconsistent stage names, missing close dates, a few obviously stalled deals marked "commit") plus current pipeline. Prompt: "Diagnose what's wrong with this data and this pipeline, tell me whether you'd trust the forecast, and give me your top 5 fixes — what you'd automate, what you'd change in process, and what you'd flag to leadership." Timebox: 3–4 hours; short doc or Loom.

What you're really testing: Whether they catch the planted problems (the sandbagged/inflated commit deals, the duplicates, the stage inconsistencies), whether they reason about forecast trustworthiness from the data, and whether their fixes blend automation with process and stakeholder management rather than just "clean the data." The best candidates also flag what they'd tell leadership and why.

DimensionStrong (3)Weak (1)
DiagnosisCatches the data problems AND the pipeline/forecast issues; reasons from evidence.Surface-level cleanup; misses the inflated commit deals or stage problems.
Forecast judgmentHas a defensible view on trustworthiness and how to make it reliable.Takes the pipeline at face value; no forecasting reasoning.
Fixes & systems thinkingBlends automation, process, and incentives; prevents regression.Manual one-time cleanup with no durability or process change.
Communication & influenceClear, prioritized, flags what leadership needs to hear.Jargon dump; no prioritization; no stakeholder awareness.

30 minutes with the CRO on neutrality and judgment

30 minutes with the CRO or founder on neutrality, integrity, and judgment.

The assessment proved technical and analytical depth. This round answers whether they can be the trusted, truth-telling neutral party that a revenue org needs — across teams and across a timezone gap.

Exec Q1
RevOps sits between sales, marketing, and finance — often with conflicting agendas. How do you stay a trusted neutral partner to all three?
Reading for: Diplomatic backbone. The ability to serve everyone while telling the truth, and to not get captured by any one team's narrative.
Exec Q2
When have you had to tell a sales leader something they really didn't want to hear?
Reading for: Integrity under pressure. RevOps that only confirms what leaders want to believe is worse than useless.
Exec Q3
How do you decide what to automate vs leave manual?
Reading for: ROI judgment and restraint. The maturity to know that automating a broken process just breaks it faster.
Exec Q4
You'd run RevOps from LATAM for a US sales team. How do you stay close enough to the deals and the reps to catch problems early?
Reading for: Proactivity and embeddedness across distance — joining pipeline reviews, knowing the reps, spotting issues before they hit the forecast.

Reference checks and closing the offer

Reference the sales leaders and reps who relied on their systems and forecasts.

Ask for a former CRO, head of sales, or a rep. The reference should confirm they made the revenue org run better, not just kept the CRM tidy.

Reference script
  • Did they build systems that made the team more effective, or just maintain what existed?
  • Could leadership trust their forecasts and reporting?
  • How did they handle being the bearer of bad news about the numbers?
  • Did sales reps actually adopt what they built, or work around it?
  • Would you hire them again, today? (Listen for the pause.)
Offer & closing checklist
  • Confirm comp expectations early; RevOps comp varies by CRM depth and GTM seniority.
  • Clarify scope: pure ops, or ops-plus-analytics/enablement in a smaller company.
  • Run references and verify Salesforce/HubSpot certifications before the verbal.
  • Sell the growth path: a scaling SaaS company offers a route toward Director of RevOps or GTM strategy.
  • Move fast — bilingual RevOps talent with real CRM depth is scarce and recruited heavily.

LATAM salary bands and the weighted scorecard

Systems/CRM depth and revenue-process judgment carry the most weight; trust and cross-functional influence are close behind.

Score independently, then reconcile. Favor the architect who builds durable systems and tells the truth over the technician who simply maintains them.

Weighted scorecard
DimensionWeightWhat it measures
CRM & GTM-systems depth30%Deep Salesforce/HubSpot, automation, clean data architecture
Revenue process & forecasting judgment25%Builds trustworthy forecasts and funnel processes that hold
Systems thinking & automation15%Designs durable, automated workflows; avoids tool sprawl
Trust & cross-functional influence20%Neutral partner to sales/marketing/finance; tells hard truths
English fluency (B2+)10%Partners with US sales leaders and reps clearly
Total100%Weighted hiring decision

LATAM salary bands (annual USD, fully remote, paid in USD). Reflects what US SaaS companies pay LATAM RevOps talent in 2026. Deep Salesforce/HubSpot admin skill plus GTM judgment pushes to the top of each band.

LATAM RevOps manager salary bands
CountryJuniorMidSenior
Argentina$20k–$32k$38k–$56k$62k–$85k
Colombia$20k–$32k$36k–$54k$58k–$80k
Mexico$20k–$32k$38k–$56k$60k–$82k
Brazil$22k–$34k$40k–$58k$64k–$88k
Chile$22k–$34k$40k–$58k$64k–$88k

Reality check: A US RevOps Manager runs $110k–$170k depending on stage and scope. A skilled LATAM RevOps manager lands around 35–50% of that, often with strong Salesforce/HubSpot certifications built supporting US teams. CRM depth plus genuine GTM understanding — not just admin skills — is what moves a rate to the top of the band.

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