If data is missing, proceed with explicit assumptions and deliver two options: (A) “Hire now (pilot)” vs (B) “Wait + founder-led milestones to hit first”.
Outputs (deliverables)
Produce a Sales Team Build Pack in Markdown (in-chat; or as files if requested):
Actions: Identify the GTM motion and whether the founder has achieved a repeatable baseline. Look for: (a) organic demand/hand-raisers (if PLG), and/or (b) a repeatable win rate from first meeting → close (target range often ~15–25% over ~50–100 at-bats). Decide: Hire now vs Wait.
Checks: The decision is tied to measurable evidence (or clearly labeled assumptions).
2) Define the “repeatable motion” you’re hiring into
Inputs: ICP, use case, pricing/packaging, current discovery/demo flow.
Actions: Write a 1-page “sales motion spec”: qualification, first meeting agenda, demo/pilot criteria, pricing guardrails, common objections, and what counts as an “at-bat”. Clarify founder vs rep responsibilities for the next 60–90 days.
Outputs: Sales motion spec + handoff boundaries.
Checks: A new rep could run the next 10 deals with this spec without inventing the process.
3) Choose the initial team topology (pilot-first) + sequence hires
PLG/hand-raisers: attach yourself to a pilot AE and/or SDR and run it as a learning pod (not quota theater).
Outbound: consider an SDR+AE sequence (or a hybrid rep) depending on deal complexity.
In very early stages: use founder/CS/support to close a subset of deals until the motion is proven.
Build a hiring sequence that enables A/B testing: if feasible, hire two reps close together to avoid “one data point” dependence.
Outputs: Team design + hiring plan table (roles, timing, success criteria, risks).
Checks: The plan creates comparability (two reps or comparable cohorts) and protects learning time.
4) Write role scorecards (hire for product depth + learning ability)
Inputs: Motion spec; team design; customer/technical context.
Actions: Draft scorecards for each role (AE/SDR/hybrid). For technical products, set a “PM-like” bar: reps should demonstrate product intuition, curiosity, and the ability to earn engineer trust. Translate insights into “must-have signals” + “red flags”.
Outputs: Role scorecards + evaluation rubric.
Checks: Scorecards are specific enough that two interviewers would rate candidates similarly.
Actions: Build a 30/60/90 plan: training, shadowing, call reviews, pipeline targets, activity guardrails, and demo/pilot readiness. Define weekly cadence (pipeline review, call coaching, experiment review). Preserve the “A/B test humans” approach by tracking rep-to-rep differences and diagnosing process vs person.
Always include: Risks, Open questions, Next steps.
Anti-patterns
Avoid these common failure modes when building an early sales team:
Hiring a VP Sales before the motion is repeatable. Founders delegate sales before proving a repeatable, measurable process. A VP Sales cannot “figure it out” for you at seed stage; the founder must own the first 20-50 deals. Redirect to founder-sales until win rate and cycle length are known.
One heroic rep dependency. Hiring a single AE and declaring success when they close deals. You cannot distinguish a great rep from a great market with n=1. Always plan for comparability (hire two reps close together or run structured A/B).
Premature specialization. Splitting SDR/AE/CS roles before the team has enough volume to justify handoffs. Early teams often need hybrid reps who can prospect, demo, and close. Over-specializing creates empty pipelines and finger-pointing.
Quota theater on day one. Setting aggressive quotas during ramp and measuring new reps on bookings before they have pipeline, product knowledge, or territory coverage. Ramp plans must define leading indicators (calls, demos, pipeline created) before lagging ones (revenue).
Copy-pasting enterprise scorecards for seed-stage hires. Using big-company role descriptions (15+ years experience, Rolodex required) when you need scrappy, coachable reps who can learn your product deeply. Scorecards must match your stage and selling motion.
Examples
Example 1 (first AE hires):
“Use building-sales-team. We’re seed-stage B2B SaaS. Founder has closed 12 customers; last 60 first meetings → 14 closed-won (~23%). ACV $12k. We want to hire our first AEs. Output: a Sales Team Build Pack with readiness gate, hire-two plan, role scorecards, and interview loop.”
Example 2 (PLG → PLS pilot):
“Use building-sales-team. We have steady inbound hand-raisers from our product. We want a pilot AE/SDR pod to close mid-market upgrades. Output: team topology, hiring sequence, and a 30/60/90 ramp with coaching cadence.”
Boundary example (redirect to founder-sales):
“We have no repeatable sales motion or ICP yet—hire a VP Sales to ‘figure it out’.”
Response: recommend founder-led discovery/validation first (use founder-sales), define readiness milestones, and return to this skill once a motion can be written down and measured.
Boundary example (redirect to sales-compensation):
“What OTE and commission structure should we offer our first AEs?”
Response: this skill designs the team, roles, and hiring process but not comp plans. Redirect to sales-compensation for OTE, pay mix, quota setting, and commission mechanics.