How To Structure A Commercial Organization
There are several different ways to structure a commercial organization. Markets, products, segments, etc. The model I prefer is to structure the teams around metrics. This does a few things:
1/ It ensures that the organization has a metrics mindset. Sometimes people forget what metric their work moves. Building the org around metrics makes this nearly impossible.
2/ It ensures everyone knows they’re contributing. There’s nothing worse than coming to work each day and doing a bunch of work that doesn’t actually contribute to a business objective.
3/ It helps with prioritization. Teams should prioritize their work based on the impact it’ll have on the metrics. Focus on low effort/high return work, and avoid high effort/low return work. It’s amazing how few people have this mindset.
I separate a commercial org into three buckets. If you’re not directly contributing to one of these three buckets or supporting someone that does then you’re on the wrong team. Commercial orgs only do three things:
1/ They sell stuff.
2/ They implement stuff.
3/ They retain stuff.
Everyone should be impacting at least one of those things. Then assign a set of metrics with targets against each. Here are some examples:
1/ Selling stuff (bookings, upsells, expansions, new logos).
2/ Implementing stuff (speed to go-live, quality of implementation, cost of implementation).
3/ Retaining stuff (retention, renewals, net promoter score, user activity).
I’ve found that structuring the team around these three activities and some set of metrics ensures that everyone has clarity on their role, their value, and how they’re impacting the business in a positive way.