Founders can assess their Head of Sales using two core metrics: 1) Can they hire reps who consistently close over $250k in new ACV per quarter within six months? 2) How many sales calls are they personally conducting each week? These are the ultimate measuring sticks of effectiveness.
Getting to $1M ARR can be driven by a founder's personal hustle. To scale to $10M and beyond, you must have a repeatable GTM recipe. The key question is: can you hire an average account executive off the street and teach them to replicate your success? If not, you don't have a scalable business.
View metrics like call volume and conversion rates not just as numbers for your manager, but as your personal scoreboard. This perspective provides immediate, unbiased feedback on your own performance. It shifts the focus from external pressure to internal analysis, empowering you to identify weak spots and take ownership of your improvement.
Don't hire more reps until your current team hits its productivity target (e.g., generating 3x their OTE). Scaling headcount before proving the unit economics of your sales motion is a recipe for inefficient growth, missed forecasts, and a bloated cost structure.
Scaling doesn't mean abdicating sales. The founder's presence remains crucial for closing high-value deals, even in a mature agency. Bodhi Gallo aims to reduce his involvement to a target of 35% of sales calls, not eliminate it, to maintain a competitive edge.
When evaluating sales leaders, prioritize their track record in recruiting above all else. Exceptional leaders are talent magnets who build scalable teams through strong hiring and enablement. Their ability to attract A-players is the foundation of a predictable revenue machine.
When a sales leader consistently fails to attract A-players, it's a vote of no confidence from the talent market. Top performers are signaling they don't believe that leader can advance their careers, which is a major red flag about the leader's own capabilities and future success.
Don't use static KPIs. Every month, analyze the activity metrics of reps who successfully hit quota. Use this data to set the new KPIs for the entire team for the upcoming month. This ensures targets are based on proven success and increases team buy-in.
A sales leader's success is determined less by personal sales ability and more by their capacity to attract a core team of proven performers who trust them. Failing to ask a leadership candidate 'who are you going to bring?' is a major oversight that leads to slow ramps, high recruiting costs, and organizational inefficiency.
A sales organization has truly scaled when leadership stops talking about individual deals and starts managing based on predictable capacity. This means knowing that a certain number of ramped sellers will predictably generate a specific amount of revenue each quarter, turning sales into a machine.
A founder's ability to sell is not proof of a scalable business. The real litmus test for repeatability is when a non-founder sales hire can close a deal from start to finish. This signals that the value proposition and process are teachable, which is the first true sign of a scalable go-to-market motion.