Freshworks has promoted Ian Tickle to Chief Revenue Officer, unifying global sales, customer success, and customer experience.
Imagine a familiar scenario.
A customer begins with a chatbot query. The conversation moves to a support ticket. Then a sales representative reaches out with an offer that ignores the entire history.
The customer repeats the story. Again.
This is the hidden cost of organizational silos.
Customer experience leaders know that fragmented teams create fragmented journeys. Sales, support, and success teams often operate with separate goals and systems.
That is why leadership changes at companies like Freshworks Inc. are attracting attention across the CX industry.
In March 2026, CEO Dennis Woodside announced a strategic move: unify the company’s global sales organization under a single revenue leader. The company promoted Ian Tickle to Chief Revenue Officer.
The shift goes beyond a title change.
It reflects a broader trend: CX and revenue are becoming inseparable.
For CX leaders facing AI adoption gaps, siloed teams, and journey fragmentation, this move offers important lessons.
Freshworks unified global sales, customer success, and CX under one leader to streamline growth and customer outcomes.
The company promoted Ian Tickle to Chief Revenue Officer, consolidating multiple revenue-related functions under one executive.
Previously, Tickle served as Chief of Global Field Operations and earlier led enterprise sales across Europe.
In his new role, Tickle oversees:
This change followed strong financial momentum for Freshworks.
The company recently reported profitability and record free cash flow in its 2025 financial results. It also raised its revenue outlook for fiscal year 2026.
At the same time, Chief Integrated Customer Growth Officer Mika Yamamoto will depart the company.
For CX leaders, the structural change signals a deeper philosophy.
Customer experience must sit at the center of revenue operations.
Modern CROs increasingly oversee the entire customer lifecycle, not just sales pipelines.
In traditional organizations, revenue responsibilities were divided across several teams.
Typical structure:
| Function | Leader |
|---|---|
| Sales | VP Sales |
| Customer Success | VP Customer Success |
| Support | Customer Experience Head |
| Marketing | CMO |
Each team optimized its own metrics.
The result?
Misaligned incentives.
Sales teams chased bookings. Support focused on ticket resolution. Success teams tracked renewals.
Customers experienced the gaps.
The modern CRO model merges these responsibilities into a unified revenue engine.
Key goals include:
Freshworks’ move mirrors a broader trend across SaaS companies.
Revenue growth now depends heavily on retention, expansion, and loyalty.
And those outcomes depend on experience.
When sales, success, and support share leadership, organizations eliminate journey fragmentation.
Customers rarely interact with just one department.
They move through a sequence of touchpoints:
If these teams operate independently, the journey becomes inconsistent.
Unified leadership enables several improvements.
A single revenue organization aligns systems.
Sales and support teams access the same context, including:
This reduces repetitive interactions.
Instead of isolated KPIs, teams focus on shared outcomes:
Cross-team collaboration becomes easier.
Escalations move quickly between sales, support, and product teams.
The result is a more seamless customer journey.
AI initiatives fail when organizations remain siloed.
Many companies invest heavily in AI-powered customer platforms. But adoption often stalls.
The root problem is rarely technology.
It is structure.
For example:
The tools do not connect.
The insights remain fragmented.
Freshworks has positioned itself as a provider of AI-powered service software. Its strategy emphasizes “uncomplicated AI” that improves employee and customer experiences.
Leadership alignment helps make AI initiatives more effective.
A unified revenue leader can ensure:
Without this alignment, AI simply creates new silos powered by automation.
Experience across global sales operations often prepares leaders to manage full customer lifecycles.
Before joining Freshworks, Ian Tickle held senior leadership roles across major SaaS companies.
His background includes:
President and Chief Revenue Officer at Domo
Vice President EMEA for SaaS solutions at Oracle
Across these roles, Tickle developed expertise in:
These experiences matter in today’s CX-driven growth model.
Revenue leaders must balance:
They must also coordinate sales motions across global markets.
This complexity explains why many companies now seek CROs with operational and CX experience.
Consolidating sales and CX leadership improves alignment but introduces operational complexity.
Organizations often underestimate the difficulty of integrating teams.
Common challenges include:
Sales teams may prioritize aggressive targets.
Customer success teams often emphasize relationship building.
Aligning these cultures requires leadership clarity.
Different teams measure success differently.
For example:
Unified leadership must redefine metrics.
Legacy systems often separate sales and support data.
Integrating these platforms requires careful planning.
Without it, the promised benefits of unification may not materialize.
Freshworks’ leadership change highlights several important CX trends.
1. CX is becoming a revenue driver, not a support function.
Customer experience increasingly determines renewal and expansion.
2. AI adoption requires organizational alignment.
Technology alone cannot fix fragmented teams.
3. Unified leadership accelerates decision-making.
Cross-functional coordination improves speed and accountability.
4. Revenue strategy now includes lifecycle management.
Winning the sale is only the beginning.
Retention and loyalty matter more than ever.
Organizations can apply a structured approach when aligning revenue and experience teams.
Identify all touchpoints from acquisition to renewal.
Look for ownership gaps.
Create shared goals across sales, support, and success.
Examples include:
Build a unified customer profile accessible to all teams.
Include behavioral and support signals.
Assign leaders responsible for entire journey phases.
This prevents accountability gaps.
Deploy AI tools where they improve outcomes:
This approach connects AI investment directly to CX outcomes.
Customer experience now drives retention and expansion revenue. Unified leadership ensures teams focus on lifecycle value instead of isolated sales targets.
Modern CROs often oversee sales, customer success, revenue operations, and sometimes support functions to ensure consistent customer outcomes.
Fragmented teams create inconsistent experiences. Unified leadership improves collaboration and removes handoff friction.
AI initiatives fail when teams operate with separate systems and goals. Integration requires both technological and organizational alignment.
Common metrics include net revenue retention, customer lifetime value, product adoption, and expansion revenue.
They can map the full customer journey, align metrics across teams, and create shared accountability for lifecycle outcomes.
As CX strategies evolve, the lines between sales, success, and service continue to blur.
The leadership shift at Freshworks reflects a powerful reality.
The future of revenue growth belongs to organizations that treat customer experience as a core business engine, not a support function.
For CX leaders navigating complex journeys, that insight may prove decisive.
The post Chief Revenue Officer: Freshworks Appoints Ian Tickle to Unify Global Sales and CX Strategy appeared first on CX Quest.


