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Tom Mohr

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Tom Mohr

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Tom Mohr has a diverse background as a CEO coach, serial entrepreneur, and Fortune 500 executive.

In his role as founder and CEO of CEO
 Quest, he leads a team of tech CEO coaches in Silicon Valley, New York, and Los Angeles. CEO Quest coaches provide expert advisory support to CEOs on their journeys of company building.

Prior to CEO Quest, Mohr co-founded Digital Air Strike. During his six years there, he raised a lot of VC money and scaled the company from whiteboard concept to profitability, with 2000 auto dealer customers. Previously, he was president of Knight Ridder Digital, a Fortune 500 subsidiary, and sat on the boards of CareerBuilder, Cars.com, Apartments.com, and ShopLocal. He has been at the helm of companies and divisions at ev
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Week 52 — Faith

Week 52 — FaithNew– Song for December. Listen => Mother Mary, Ordinary (on Mary’s, gentleness, courage, strength and trust)

Rising Leader,

Over two thousand years ago, in a desolate shed near Bethlehem, a child was born. Transcendent God humbled Himself, stepping down from Heaven to enter our world. God lived with us in human flesh for a fleeting moment, and the world was forever changed.

This Christ

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Published on December 21, 2022 10:20
Average rating: 4.27 · 15 ratings · 4 reviews · 6 distinct worksSimilar authors
Scaling the Revenue Engine (1)

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Funding & Exits

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Reflections on Old Victoria...

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Funding & Exits

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The Four-Way Fit

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Letters to Rising Leaders

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Quotes by Tom Mohr  (?)
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“I call my revenue engine model “the bowtie schema.” It was the product of continuous iteration. As I interacted with marketing and sales practitioners and waded through the research, the model slowly emerged. The final model conveys not just the product and customer journey across the bowtie, but also the foundational layers that support that journey-- the interaction between people tools, workflow, and metrics that make it all happen.”
Tom Mohr, Scaling the Revenue Engine

“The most basic question a CEO must answer is whether the product has achieved a value breakthrough. Without that, the revenue engine is irrelevant. Once product-market fit is confirmed, the next step is to clearly identify your ideal customer profile (ICP) and your business model. This includes the lifetime value (LTV) profile of your company. Assuming a strong product, a clear ICP, and a solid understanding of the constraints composed by your unit economics, the path forward is clear. Then, the focus will turn to uplifting the maturity of your revenue engine and scaling it efficiently.”
Tom Mohr, Scaling the Revenue Engine

“The revenue engine is a whole system. It encompasses a diverse set of integrated components, each doing its part to advance the system’s purpose. The engine is not just comprised of marketing and sales— it includes product, accounting, and the underlying technology and data infrastructure required to keep everything flowing. It involves people, tools, workflow, and metrics. Its purpose is to optimize reach, conversion, and expansion of customer spend.”
Tom Mohr

“A company’s revenue engine is a critical success factor. I had seen from my own direct experience how easy it was to get caught in silos: marketing people would just think of marketing, salespeople would just think of sales, and accounting wouldn’t think of itself as part of the revenue engine at all. Furthermore, product and the revenue engine were too often thought of completely independent of each other. The need for a more integrated approach was on my mind from the beginning.”
Tom Mohr

“The revenue engine is a whole system. It encompasses a diverse set of integrated components, each doing its part to advance the system’s purpose. The engine is not just comprised of marketing and sales— it includes product, accounting, and the underlying technology and data infrastructure required to keep everything flowing. It involves people, tools, workflow, and metrics. Its purpose is to optimize reach, conversion, and expansion of customer spend.”
Tom Mohr

“I call my revenue engine model “the bowtie schema.” It was the product of continuous iteration. As I interacted with marketing and sales practitioners and waded through the research, the model slowly emerged. The final model conveys not just the product and customer journey across the bowtie, but also the foundational layers that support that journey-- the interaction between people tools, workflow, and metrics that make it all happen.”
Tom Mohr, Scaling the Revenue Engine

“The most basic question a CEO must answer is whether the product has achieved a value breakthrough. Without that, the revenue engine is irrelevant. Once product-market fit is confirmed, the next step is to clearly identify your ideal customer profile (ICP) and your business model. This includes the lifetime value (LTV) profile of your company. Assuming a strong product, a clear ICP, and a solid understanding of the constraints composed by your unit economics, the path forward is clear. Then, the focus will turn to uplifting the maturity of your revenue engine and scaling it efficiently.”
Tom Mohr, Scaling the Revenue Engine

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