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Combining new business "hunting" and account management "farming" into a single "360 AE" role is fundamentally flawed. The intrinsic motivations, skill sets, and behaviors for acquiring new customers are vastly different from those needed to nurture existing ones. Specialization is almost always more effective.

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Account managers often react negatively to being called "sellers" because their core identity is rooted in being a strategic advisor and problem-solver. They view revenue as a byproduct of delivering value to the customer, unlike traditional new business reps who often lead with the sale.

Stop targeting the ambiguous "mid-market." Your strategy, hiring, and ACV must align with either a marketing-led SMB motion or a sales-led enterprise motion. Blending them leads to failure as they are distinctly different games.

Forcing PMMs into a 'full-stack' generalist role where they cover everything from data analysis to sales storytelling leads to failure. Specializing roles based on individual strengths and passions creates a more effective and happier team.

A common scaling mistake is continuing to hire for broad, 'multi-hyphen' roles (e.g., 'sales and retail manager'). As the business grows, these generalist positions dilute focus. Instead, create tighter, more specialized job descriptions to bring clarity and attract hyper-focused candidates.

A one-size-fits-all sales role fails in consumption models. Success requires segmenting the team into specialized roles—new business acquisition, customer onboarding, and account management—each with distinct incentives aligned to their specific function, from initial sign-up to value realization and expansion.

Salespeople follow the money. If your compensation plan makes it easier or more lucrative to manage existing accounts than to land new ones, you are financially incentivizing them to stop prospecting. The reward for the difficult work of hunting must be significantly higher.

Simply "servicing" an account by fulfilling orders makes you a replaceable commodity. To become indispensable, you must proactively bring insights and create new growth opportunities for your client. This shifts your role from a reactive vendor to a strategic partner, making you "sticky" and invaluable to their business.

It is exceptionally rare to find salespeople who excel at both acquiring new logos (hunting) and managing existing accounts (farming). The most effective, albeit costly, solution is to stop forcing reps to do both and instead create dedicated roles for each function.

Small companies often overload their first salesperson with both new logo acquisition and existing account management. This is a trap. Prospecting will always lose out to servicing known customers. Plan for account continuity early to protect your growth engine, even before you can afford a second hire.

Peets argues the most crucial, untrainable skill for a startup sales rep is the demonstrated ability to generate pipeline and close net new accounts. He dismisses the common founder obsession with hiring from competitors, stating domain knowledge can be taught, but the grit to land new business cannot.