RevAssured helps Series A–C SaaS companies design, fix, and scale predictable revenue systems — across CRM architecture, GTM alignment, and forecasting. For founders and CROs who are done guessing.
If you recognise your company in any of these, the work starts here.
Stages are inconsistent. Fields are ignored. Reporting looks clean, but leadership is making decisions on bad inputs. The CRM has become a liability — not an asset.
The number changes every week because the system behind it is weak. Inspection is reactive. Confidence is low. Board meetings become uncomfortable exercises in estimation.
Leads stall, handoffs break, follow-up slips, and no one sees the loss until the quarter is already gone. The pipeline looks fine on paper. It isn't.
Sales, Marketing, and Customer Success run different definitions, different processes, and different priorities. Alignment is aspirational. The cost shows up in the numbers.
RevAssured works exclusively with Series A–C SaaS companies ($2M–$30M ARR) where revenue system quality directly determines trajectory.
Growing fast but the revenue engine is breaking under pressure. CRM is a mess, the board asks forecast questions you can't answer, and every new hire adds complexity instead of capacity.
You've inherited broken systems and need to show results to the board in 90 days. You need a trusted RevOps operator beside you — not a junior analyst or a slow consulting firm.
Reps aren't adopting the CRM, pipeline reviews are theatre, and handoffs from marketing are consistently broken. You need the system fixed so your team can actually sell.
Each engagement is shaped around your business context, GTM complexity, and revenue risk — not predefined templates.
Kashish Saxena founded RevAssured to solve a problem most SaaS companies discover too late: growth exposes every weakness in the revenue engine.
With 16+ years inside some of the world's most competitive SaaS environments, he has operated at the precise intersection of RevOps, SalesOps, GTM execution, CRM architecture, forecasting, and revenue acceleration.
He built RevAssured with one mandate: design revenue systems that leadership can actually trust. This is not a vendor relationship. It is a strategic advisory partnership. The work begins where implementation ends.
Engagements built around trust, transparency, and outcomes that move the business forward.
Kashish rebuilt our entire pipeline framework and operating cadence from scratch. Within 8 weeks, our forecast accuracy went from educated guesses to a system the whole leadership team trusts.
We'd tried fixing our HubSpot twice internally. Kashish came in, redesigned the entire data model in 6 weeks, and adoption went from 40% to 85%. The data we see now is the data that's actually happening.
Most RevOps consultants hand you a deck and disappear. Kashish was embedded in our weekly cadences, pushing back on the right things, and building systems that would outlast the engagement.
A Series B SaaS company had weak pipeline definitions, inconsistent CRM discipline, and forecast calls driven by judgment rather than system truth. Leadership had no reliable number to take to the board.
Redesigned stage criteria, cleaned reporting logic, clarified ownership across the GTM motion, and introduced a disciplined weekly operating cadence with inspection checkpoints.
Leadership gained a clearer view of pipeline health and stronger forecast confidence.
Sales, Marketing, and CS were working from different lifecycle assumptions — creating reporting gaps, handoff friction, and conflicting priorities on the same accounts.
Mapped the end-to-end customer journey, aligned functional definitions across three teams, rebuilt process design inside the CRM, and established clear ownership at every handoff point.
The company moved from siloed execution to a unified revenue operating model.
The CRM had become a reporting burden instead of a growth asset. Low adoption, poor data hygiene, and a system that no longer matched how the team actually sold.
Re-architected the CRM around the actual sales motion, simplified data capture requirements, rebuilt dashboards, and improved management visibility at rep and territory level.
Adoption improved materially. Leadership gained operational control they could trust.
The exact 47-point framework Kashish uses in every engagement to identify where revenue is breaking — and what to fix first.
Used by 45+ SaaS revenue teams. Free. No fluff.
47 questions that reveal exactly where your revenue system is breaking. Delivered instantly.
No spam. No sales pitch in disguise. Just the framework — and occasional RevOps insights worth your time.
Click below to open it — then print or save as PDF. Bookmark it and use it with your team.
Open the Checklist →Every engagement follows a proven structure. No generic playbooks. No hand-off at the end.
Understand system weaknesses, revenue friction points, and operational risk across five critical dimensions.
Weeks 1–3Create the target operating model, CRM structure, reporting logic, and governance approach specific to the business.
Weeks 3–6Operationalise the system through CRM configuration, workflow design, dashboards, and stakeholder alignment.
Weeks 5–10Drive adoption, management discipline, and ongoing system trust so the work outlasts the engagement.
Weeks 8–12+Three ways to engage — from a focused diagnostic to embedded fractional leadership. All scoped to your business.
A focused diagnostic of where your revenue system is breaking. Delivered in 2–3 weeks with a clear, prioritised action plan.
Deep engagement across multiple service areas with phased delivery. The most common structure for Series A–C SaaS.
Senior RevOps advisory for companies that need operator-level expertise without a full-time hire. Flexible by scope.
Frameworks, observations, and hard-won lessons from 16+ years inside SaaS revenue engines.
Most CRM failures aren't technology problems. They're architecture problems. Here are the five structural mistakes that kill adoption — and the patterns that fix them.
Most SaaS companies have one of three broken forecast patterns. Knowing which one you have determines exactly which lever to pull first.
Lifecycle definition misalignment is costing your company more than you think. Here's how to build a single source of truth across all three teams.
Most companies treat RevOps as tooling or process cleanup. That framing is costing them. Here's the case for treating it as strategic infrastructure.
If your pipeline visibility is weak, your forecast is unstable, or your CRM no longer supports the business — this is where the work starts.
For founders, CROs, and revenue leaders — not generic implementation support.
Direct email: kashish@revassured.com