CROs are often blamed for missed targets, but the root cause is often a flawed hiring plan from the CEO. Rushing to hire reps without adequate ramp time leads to B-player hires, immense pressure from managers, a toxic "horse whipping" culture, and ultimately, missed numbers.
When a company consistently misses sales goals, the root cause may not be the sales strategy but a failure in the hiring pipeline. A high employee churn rate combined with an inefficient screening process starves the sales team of the necessary manpower to hit its targets.
Because managers don't trust CRM data, they spend their time chasing reps with active deals to secure the forecast. This focus on closing existing business means ramping reps are neglected, which is a primary driver for ramp times increasing from five to nine months and high attrition.
When revenue leaders offload hiring to HR, they lose control over the core attributes of their team. This creates inconsistent talent quality across the organization, weakening the entire sales function. The leader is responsible for the 'DNA' of their team, and abdicating this duty leads to poor performance.
Many companies mistakenly hire salespeople and then define their job and compensation. The correct sequence is to first determine the business need, then construct the specific job role to address it, and finally design a compensation plan that incentivizes the required activities before ever posting the job.
In environments flush with venture capital, sales leaders developed a habit of 'throwing people at the problem' rather than strategically recruiting. This laziness led to hiring mediocre talent ('Cs and Ds'), burning through capital, and creating inefficient sales organizations that struggled when the market tightened.
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.
A senior hire was instrumental in getting Snowflake's CRO promoted. Eighteen months later, that same person was found to be 'cancerous to the organization.' The CRO had to fire them and go on an 'apology tour,' a painful but necessary act of leadership to protect the company culture.
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.
When reps avoid opening opportunities or refuse to close-lose deals, it signals a culture of fear where they believe they will be blamed for losses. This isn't a process issue. Leadership must explicitly create a culture where data is for learning, not blaming individuals.
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.