Bought by ops, abandoned by everyone else
When every screen is built for the buyer persona, the rep, the content marketer, and the CMO see a wall of someone else's data. Adoption stalls, and renewals get hard.
Wave · Role-Based Views
The same intelligence, shaped per persona: content marketers, ABM managers, sales, marketing ops, leadership, and IT. Sensitive fields stay hidden from lenses that do not need them, and access is decided server-side, never by the lens.
Quick answer
Role-Based Views shape Wave's interface to the job in the seat. Seven named personas ship: a generalist default plus content marketer, ABM manager, sales, marketing ops, leadership, and IT and data. Each persona emphasizes what that role runs on, across accounts, people, buying groups, content, and schedule. Sensitive field classes are withheld server-side from personas that do not need them, and switching a lens in the UI never expands what a seat can access.
Key capabilities
Last updated: July 2026
The problem
Intelligence platforms are bought by one role and expected to be adopted by six. Most become the cluttered tool that only the person who configured it ever opens.
When every screen is built for the buyer persona, the rep, the content marketer, and the CMO see a wall of someone else's data. Adoption stalls, and renewals get hard.
A field hidden with CSS still left the server. For regulated teams, the wrong person being able to fetch the wrong field is an audit finding, whether or not it rendered on screen.
Training every role on the full platform means most people learn none of it. Each role needs the five things that matter for their job, not a tour of everything.
How Wave does it
Personas change what each seat sees. Permissions still decide what it can do. The two are separate by design, and the separation is enforced where it counts: on the server.
Each seat carries one of seven personas: generalist, content marketer, ABM manager, sales, marketing ops, leadership, or IT and data. The assignment lives with the seat on the server, not as a browser preference.
Accounts, people, buying groups, content inventory, and schedule reorder per persona. Sales sees seat status and next content; ops sees writeback health and confidence; leadership sees motion trends without operational noise.
Classes of sensitive data, consent and compliance signals, raw contact PII, financial fields, model internals, and source record identifiers, are omitted from responses for personas that do not need them. Absent, not hidden: a hostile client cannot recover a withheld field.
A lens switcher lets anyone preview another persona's layout, but the lens is presentation only; field access always follows the seat's assigned persona. Admins can experience any seat exactly as that seat sees it, gating included.
Where it fits
Role-Based Views are not a module; they are how the whole platform renders. Every Wave surface inherits the persona system.
Permission tiers keep deciding what a seat can do while personas decide what it sees, so a leadership seat and an ops seat can look at the same account and get materially different, equally true, views. Field gating is enforced once, server-side: the architecture answer to the governance question, not a UI toggle. When an admin impersonates a seat to verify a rollout, they experience that seat's exact gating.
Works alongside The full Wave platform; see Wave's trust posture for the governance model behind field gating.
Why Wave is different
Competing platforms force one view on everyone or quote you a dashboard-building engagement. Wave ships the persona library in the product, with governance built into the architecture.
FAQ
A persona dimension on every seat that shapes what Wave shows: layout, emphasis, and field visibility per role, across accounts, people, buying groups, content, and schedule. Permission tiers still control what a seat can do; personas control what it sees.
Seven: a generalist default that matches the standard layout, plus content marketer, ABM manager, sales, marketing ops, leadership, and IT and data. Each maps to a layout tuned to how that role actually works.
Sales gets seat status, deal context, and recommended next content. Content marketers get asset performance and format signals. ABM managers get account coverage and motion views. Marketing ops gets writeback health, cadence, and confidence diagnostics. Leadership gets motion health and portfolio trends. IT and data gets provenance and technical metadata.
Wave classifies sensitive fields into classes, consent and compliance signals, raw contact PII, financial fields, model internals, and source record identifiers, and withholds each class server-side from personas that do not need it. Withheld fields are absent from the response, not blanked or hidden.
No. The lens switcher changes presentation only. Field access always follows the seat's server-side persona assignment, so previewing another persona's layout never expands what a seat can retrieve.
No, and the separation is deliberate. Permission tiers (admin, operator, viewer) govern what a seat can do; personas govern what it sees. A viewer-tier sales seat and an admin-tier sales seat see the same sales-shaped layout with different abilities.
The feature is off by default per tenant. When off, every seat renders Wave's standard layout, unchanged. Turn it on when your team is ready and assign personas seat by seat; a global emergency stop sits above the per-tenant switch.
Book a 20-minute walkthrough. We will show the same account through a sales lens and an ops lens side by side, including how field gating differs between them.
See it on your team
Book a 20-minute walkthrough. Bring a rep, a content marketer, or your ops lead, and we will show each of them the lens built for their job.
Request a demo