About the Opportunity
This is not a traditional community management or association role — candidates without enterprise IT leadership experience will not be considered.
We're looking for a former CIO, VP of IT, or senior technology leader who is passionate about building peer networks for Salesforce executives. Flosum is building something that doesn’t exist yet: a private, invitation-only executive council for the highest-ranking Salesforce leaders at the world’s largest enterprises. This is not a user group. It is not a marketing event. It is a closed-door executive network where CIOs, SVPs, and VPs of Salesforce at Fortune 500 and Global 2000 companies come together to share hard-won lessons, solve real problems, and build lasting professional relationships.
We are looking for a founding leader to own this executive network end-to-end: from recruiting its inaugural members and designing its programming, to facilitating every session and cultivating the trust that makes a community like this invaluable. Flosum acts as host and facilitator—not as a sales channel. There will be no product pitches, no vendor presentations, and no recordings. Chatham House Rules apply. The only focus is the exchange of ideas and peer learning.
This role is rare. You will be an executive relationship manager, content strategist, and master facilitator—all in one. If you’ve ever wished you could create the executive peer network you always wanted to belong to, this is your chance to build it from scratch.
About the Executive Council
The Executive network operates under the following principles:
- Invitation-Only Membership: One to two senior Salesforce executives per large enterprise account. Membership is curated, not open.
- Closed-Door & Confidential: Nothing is recorded. Chatham House Rules are strictly enforced. Candor is the norm.
- Vendor-Neutral: Salesforce (the company) does not participate as a member. System integrators may be invited as guest contributors for specific sessions, but they are not community members. No vendor holds a privileged seat at the table.
- No Sales, No Pitches: Flosum’s role is to facilitate and add value. Members will never sit through a product presentation. Trust is built organically through genuine contribution, not promotion.
- Multi-Track Programming: The council is organized around 6–8 tracks reflecting the real priorities of Salesforce executives, such as Finance & Budgeting, Hiring & Culture, Innovation & Emerging Technology, Success Stories & Lessons Learned, Governance & Compliance, Data Strategy, and more.
- Remote-First: Sessions are virtual to create consistent momentum and minimize scheduling friction for busy executives across time zones.
Core Session Format
Each session is designed to maximize candor, connection, and actionable takeaways:
- Storytelling & War Stories: An open floor for members to share success stories, hard-earned lessons, and candid anecdotes from their Salesforce transformation journeys. Both triumphs and setbacks are welcome—real insights emerge from honesty.
- Moderated Panel Discussion: A peer-led panel of council members sparks dialogue on a timely topic. No slides, no fluff—just a pragmatic conversation about what’s working (or not) in the largest Salesforce implementations.
- Roundtable Ideation: Interactive roundtables where every attendee can raise challenges they’re facing and crowdsource solutions from peers who’ve tackled similar issues.
- Networking & Executive Connections: Unstructured networking time to forge new relationships in a trusted circle of Salesforce IT executives—connections members can rely on long after the session ends.
What You Will Own - Peer Group Curation
- Identify, recruit, and personally enroll senior Salesforce executives from large enterprise accounts into the council. This is relationship-driven outreach—not mass email campaigns.
- Develop and maintain a target member list in partnership with Flosum’s leadership, ensuring diversity of industry, company size, and executive seniority.
- Serve as the primary point of contact and trusted relationship manager for all members. Own the member experience from first invitation through ongoing engagement.
- Set and enforce membership criteria to protect the exclusivity, trust, and caliber of the group.
Programming & Content Strategy
- Design the programming calendar, including track themes, session topics, panel compositions, and roundtable formats.
- Curate 6–8 content tracks aligned with what matters most to Salesforce executives: budgeting, hiring, innovation, governance, success stories, data strategy, and other emerging priorities.
- Source and prepare council members to serve as panelists and discussion leads—coaching them to share candidly and facilitate peer-to-peer learning.
- Stay deeply informed on Salesforce ecosystem trends, enterprise IT challenges, and executive priorities so that programming is consistently timely and relevant.
Session Facilitation
- Serve as the lead facilitator for all sessions. You set the tone, manage the energy, and ensure every member walks away with value.
- Moderate panel discussions with skill and confidence—drawing out insights, managing strong personalities, and keeping conversations productive.
- Facilitate roundtable ideation sessions so that every voice is heard and real challenges receive actionable input from peers.
- Enforce Chatham House Rules and the no-sales-pitch policy with consistency and professionalism.
Infrastructure & Engagement
- Build and manage the group's collaboration infrastructure—selecting and administering the platforms, tools, and communication channels that allow members to connect between sessions.
- Foster year-round engagement: facilitate introductions between members, spark asynchronous discussions, and ensure the group delivers value beyond scheduled events.
- Track member engagement, satisfaction, and feedback. Use data and qualitative insight to continuously improve the experience.
- Manage all operational logistics: scheduling, invitations, session preparation, follow-up communications, and member onboarding.
Strategic Impact
- Act as Flosum’s eyes and ears within the executive group—surfacing insights on market trends, member challenges, and opportunities that inform Flosum’s broader strategy.
- Build the kind of trust and executive relationships that naturally drive retention and expansion within large accounts—without ever making a sales pitch.
- Collaborate with Flosum’s leadership to align community strategy with business objectives, ensuring the group serves members first while creating measurable strategic value.