Head of Operations
TLDR
Cross-functional builder and owner of end-to-end operations, turning chaos into structured, repeatable processes with automation and playbooks across multiple domains.
Core scope from day one:
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Internal escalation layer — Serve as the single accountable owner for any operational issue that crosses two or more functions or reaches an executive level. Own the escalation path end-to-end: triage → assign → drive to resolution → confirm root cause is fixed and QA'd. Delegation is fine. Accountability passing is not.
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Organizing dispersed functions — Consolidate today's scattered operational activities into coherent teams with clear charters, hand-offs, and accountability. Build playbooks, runbooks, and tooling that replace institutional knowledge held by individuals.
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B2B escalations function — Own the centralized intake, routing, and resolution of restaurant escalations, with clear owners and SLAs, so that Customer Success can refocus on growth, sales, and retention.
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Strategic operational initiatives — Own the implementation of cross-functional, project-based operational initiatives that move the needle at a company level.
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Product operations — Run the operational layer that sits between product/engineering and the field, ensuring releases land cleanly with restaurants.
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Delivery operations — Own day-to-day execution and issue resolution for delivery across partners.
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Customer support — Absorb and structure the support function once the foundation above is in place.
Step two (as the operating model matures):
You will be the single point of contact for all operational matters — internally for product, engineering, and GTM teams, and externally as the operational owner restaurant partners can rely on when needed. This is primarily an internal function; external-facing involvement happens as needed, not as a default.
This role is deliberately focused on building structured, repeatable operations. A separate 0-to-1 operator will continue to own unstructured, exploratory work — e-payments, delivery partnerships, and new market/product launches — where ambiguity is high and the process does not yet exist. Onboarding is also out of scope at this stage.
As functions mature and become repeatable, they move into this organization. The explicit goal is to build an operational engine that is structured, documented, and not dependent on any individual — and where the team this person builds is, wherever possible, a team of agents and automated workflows rather than headcount.
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Incident ownership and command — Be the single accountable owner for any operational issue that crosses two or more functions. Run the escalation path end-to-end. Delegation of hands-on work is fine; accountability passing is not. This role owns the outcome.
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Root-cause elimination, not ticket-clearing — Maintain a live registry of recurring issues with root-cause status. Hold functional leads (Engineering, CS, Dispatch, Finance, Product) accountable for permanent fixes on a defined SLA. The authority to set and enforce those SLAs is part of the role. Kill the top recurring issues each quarter; measure recurrence, not volume handled.
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Build with agents first — When a process is repeatable, the default solution is automation: bots, AI agents, and workflows. Headcount is the last resort, not the first.
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Stand up clear, documented processes and SLAs — Across all operational workflows, replacing ad-hoc, person-dependent firefighting with measurable systems.
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Turn field signals into facts — Build a structured intake methodology that converts frontline input into evidence-based case studies and long-term, resolution-oriented processes.
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Operate with influence, not just authority — Manage cross-functional work across Finance, Legal, CS, Product, and R&D without necessarily having direct reports. Think product manager, not department head.
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Establish operational metrics and reporting — Track resolution time, SLA attainment, escalation volume, and drive continuous improvement.
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Remove the operational bottleneck — Between product/engineering releases and the field, so the company can ship and grow faster.
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Codify institutional knowledge — Currently held by key individuals into playbooks, runbooks, and tooling.
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Partner with Product, Engineering, Customer Success, and GTM — As the single operational point of contact, reducing executive cognitive load and coordination overhead.
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6+ years in operations leadership at a real operational company — ideally a high-growth marketplace, logistics, food-tech, fintech, or B2B SaaS serving SMB customers. Candidates should come from a company with a recognizable growth story: we want to see that you've scaled something, not just managed it.
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On-demand delivery or restaurant-tech experience is a strong plus.
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Bachelor's degree or higher.
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Proven track record building operational functions from scratch or from chaos — with evidence: playbooks, systems, metrics, before-and-after. Not just "I led ops."
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Experience owning cross-functional operations across multiple domains simultaneously (legal, finance, support, product ops, delivery).
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Strong systems and process thinking; comfortable defining SLAs, metrics, and accountability models and holding others to them.
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Hands-on SQL knowledge — you read the data yourself, you don't wait for someone to pull it.
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Demonstrated agent and automation building — you can show something you've built: a bot, a workflow, an AI-powered process. Not theoretical interest; actual output.
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Thrives in chaos — you operate effectively when priorities shift daily, problems are ambiguous, and pressure is high. You don't firefight indefinitely; you turn recurring chaos into documented systems.
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A service mindset — operational companies are pulled toward serving customers. You build engines that deliver that service at scale.
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Excellent stakeholder management; credible as the single point of contact for executives, partners, and internal teams.
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Experience working with Israeli startup culture, or a clear demonstrated ability to operate in a fast-moving, direct, low-hierarchy environment.
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Based in either NYC or Miami.
Operational noise is constant in any company that serves real businesses — restaurants need solutions, not just software. Every morning something new creates noise: a delivery issue, a legal question, a finance escalation, a product rollout problem. The difference between a company that scales and one that stalls is whether that noise flows through a structured engine with a clear owner, or through a handful of overloaded individuals.
You will build that engine. And in doing so, you'll unlock the company's next phase of growth.
Benefits
Equity Compensation
Strong & Competitive Compensation Package
Flexible Work Hours
Flexible Work Environment
Health Insurance
Company-Sponsored Insurance Package (Health, Dental, Vision, Mental Health)
Paid Parental Leave
Paid Time Off
Responsible Paid Time Off Policy
Sauce is a cutting-edge restaurant technology platform designed to empower local businesses with a commission-free delivery and pickup system. By offering proprietary delivery optimization tools, we help restaurants thrive in the competitive $105 billion U.S. market, enabling them to connect directly with their customers and reach their full potential.