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Bret Taylor identifies the biggest red flag in an enterprise startup is a CEO who doesn't personally spend time with customers. Outsourcing sales like a non-essential task reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of enterprise go-to-market, where founder-led selling is critical for building a successful company.

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Founders often hire their first sales leader to solve the problem of selling, which they haven't yet cracked. This role requires an entrepreneurial "renaissance rep" to discover the sales motion, not someone with a big-company resume to simply execute a known playbook. This mismatch in expectations is a primary cause of high turnover.

A founder can only excel at one function at a time. In the beginning, it's product. Once that's solid, the focus must shift entirely to go-to-market and founder-led sales. Later, it may become finance. This is a conscious trade-off and sequential juggling act.

At the $1-10M ARR stage, avoid junior reps or VPs from large companies. The ideal first hire can "cosplay a founder"—they sell the vision, craft creative deals, and build trust without a playbook. Consider former founders or deep product experts, even with no formal sales experience.

Before scaling a sales organization, founders must personally learn how to sell the product, even if they do it poorly. This hands-on experience provides an invaluable, holistic understanding of the full customer journey, which is critical context that cannot be outsourced or delegated when building a GTM engine.

New ventures succeed through obsessive customer focus. As businesses scale, leaders often turn inward to focus on internal metrics, processes, and stakeholders. This shift away from the customer is a leading indicator of failure. Success is a function of customer proximity.

Founders can secure meetings, pivot in conversations, and leverage their deep product knowledge in ways that hired salespeople cannot. This initial success is a unique, non-repeatable phase of founder-led selling, not a scalable go-to-market strategy to be replicated by a sales team.

Founder-led selling is essential for the first 6-12 months but becomes a critical growth bottleneck if it continues. Founders who can't let go create a self-fulfilling prophecy where the business can't scale beyond them. They must be coached to transition from being the primary seller to an enabler of the sales team.

Don't outsource these core skills before reaching $1.5M-$2M ARR. If your founding team has a gap, the best path is to learn the missing skill or intentionally limit your business scope, not to hire an agency or junior employee.

Founders often dread sales because they mistakenly believe their role is to aggressively convince customers. This "seller push" feels inauthentic. Adopting a "buyer pull" perspective, where you help customers solve existing problems, transforms sales from a chore into a collaborative process.

Founders often default to building product not for strategic reasons, but because it is a more comfortable activity than selling. Early-stage selling, without a finished product to lean on, creates significant discomfort. This aversion to uncomfortable situations is a primary driver of the value-destroying 'build it and they will come' mindset.