In the current B2B SaaS landscape, the definition of growth has fundamentally shifted. Gone are the days when growth was measured solely by the volume of new logos coming through the front door. Today, sustainable growth is increasingly found in the quiet efficiency of retention and the steady climb of expansion revenue.
This shift has sparked a high-level debate in boardrooms across the globe. Who is truly responsible for the bottom line? Is it the Chief Revenue Officer (CRO), the traditional architect of the sales engine, or the Chief Customer Officer (CCO), the modern champion of the post-sale experience?
To understand where growth really comes from, we need to look past the titles and examine the distinct philosophies these roles bring to a scaling organization.
The CCO Mandate: Productizing Experience
Not long ago, “Customer Success” was often tucked away under the sales or operations umbrella. However, as recurring revenue models became the industry standard, companies realized that losing a customer was just as impactful as failing to sign a new one.
The Chief Customer Officer emerged as a response to this reality. Unlike a traditional VP of Support who might be reactive, a CCO is a strategic executive focused on the entire lifecycle of the customer. Their primary mission is to ensure that the customer achieves their desired outcomes, which naturally leads to higher retention and organic advocacy.
On Across the Funnel, Paul Staelin, former CCO at Vercel, highlights that this role requires a constant pulse on the customer’s shifting landscape:
“The primary role for the customer success function is to keep tabs on the goals that the customer has. ‘Cause they also evolve; businesses change, grow, leadership changes, their priorities changes. Keeping your view of their goals up to date and making sure that you can map what they’re trying to accomplish to your ever-evolving roadmap so they can continue to make progress is a way to make sure that your customers continue to succeed.” — Paul Staelin
When you hire a Chief Customer Officer, you are signaling that the customer experience is a core product offering. They aren’t just there to “keep people happy.” They are there to map the journey, identify friction points, and build a culture where every department is aligned with the customer’s success.
The CRO Engine: Driving Revenue Efficiency
While the CCO focuses on the depth of the relationship, the Chief Revenue Officer focuses on the breadth and efficiency of the revenue engine. The CRO role was born from the need to break down silos between marketing, sales, and customer success.
In many organizations, the CRO is the “single point of accountability” for all things money. They oversee the entire funnel, ensuring that the leads generated by marketing are high-quality enough for sales to close, and that the deals closed by sales are healthy enough for customer success to retain.
The CRO mindset is often data-driven and systemic. They look at the company as a machine. If you put $1 in at the top, how much comes out at the bottom? By aligning all revenue-generating functions under one leader, companies aim to eliminate the “finger-pointing” that often happens when targets are missed.
Managing the Friction: Expansion vs Upsell
The tension between a Chief Customer Officer and a CRO usually manifests in one specific area: Expansion Revenue.
In a healthy SaaS company, a significant portion of growth comes from upselling and cross-selling existing accounts. Both the CRO and the CCO have a claim to this territory. The CRO sees it as “revenue,” while the CCO sees it as the “natural result of success.”
If a company has both roles, the reporting structure becomes critical. If the CCO reports to the CRO, the focus often stays on short-term revenue targets. If they are peers reporting to the CEO, the company is more likely to prioritize long-term brand equity and customer health.
The 2026 Reality: Retention Over Acquisition
In 2026, acquisition costs (CAC) continue to climb. Relying solely on a “new logo” strategy is an expensive way to grow. This is why the Chief Customer Officer has become such a pivotal figure.
Growth today comes from three primary sources:
- Net Revenue Retention (NRR): This is the gold standard metric. If your CCO can keep your NRR above 110%, your company is growing even if you don’t sign a single new customer this month.
- The Advocacy Loop: A successful customer is your best salesperson. CCOs leverage these relationships to create case studies, referrals, and community proof that lowers the CRO’s cost of acquisition.
- Informed Iteration: The CCO sits on a goldmine of data. By feeding customer pain points back to the product team, they ensure the company stays ahead of the market. Platforms like Hyperengage help bridge this gap by turning raw customer behavior into actionable insights that prevent the “churn-and-burn” cycle.
Patrick Petteruti, CRO at Chargeblast, emphasizes on Across the Funnel that real-time visibility into customer data is what allows revenue leaders to move from reactive to proactive:
“We track descriptor data and dispute trends. Because we integrate directly into processing, we can see dispute rates rising in real time. If we see discrepancies, sudden spikes, unmatched alerts, or incorrect data being sent, we proactively reach out to the merchant. Our support team follows a clear SOP for this.” — Patrick Petteruti
Strategy Over Structure: Prioritizing Leadership
The choice between prioritizing a CCO or a CRO often depends on your stage of growth and your business model.
If you are a seed or Series A company focused on proving market fit and building a repeatable sales process, a strong Sales leader or a CRO might be your first priority. You need to prove people will buy what you are building.
However, as you move toward Series B and beyond, the “leaky bucket” problem becomes your biggest threat. This is when a Chief Customer Officer becomes essential. You need someone at the executive table who can say “no” to bad-fit customers and “yes” to long-term investments in the user experience.
Beyond the Org Chart: A Path to Scale
So, where does growth really come from? The truth is that it comes from the synergy between these two perspectives.
The CRO builds the systems that scale revenue, while the Chief Customer Officer protects the relationships that sustain it. Growth isn’t just about the initial transaction anymore. It is about the cumulative value of a customer over years, not months.


