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To build a scalable enterprise GTM motion, prioritize hiring world-class partner and enablement leaders even at single-digit million ARR. This front-loads investment in channel credibility and seller quality, creating a powerful force multiplier before you reach 50-100 sellers.
Resist adding every interested partner to your program. Instead of focusing on quantity, vet potential partners based on their profile and a clear "propensity to sell" your specific solutions. This ensures a mutually beneficial relationship and avoids wasting resources trying to force an unnatural fit.
To scale specialized product training, like for AI solutions, segment partners by their expertise and selling motion, not just their company size. Create tiered training programs and offerings (e.g., expert vs. associate level) that align with a partner's specific capabilities and the solutions they are likely to sell to their customers.
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.
Before your sales motion is repeatable, hire sellers motivated by long-term equity who can help solve foundational problems. Once you have a clear, repeatable playbook and ICP, switch to hiring "coin-operated" reps who are experts at executing a proven process at scale. Using the wrong type at the wrong time leads to failure.
Companies often hire growth leaders in a panic when growth stalls. A better approach is to hire when you have early signs of channel fit. This allows the new hire to scale what's working and build a team around that proven channel, rather than desperately searching for any that might work.
Contrary to waiting for a playbook, ElevenLabs hired its VP of Sales at zero revenue. The right hire is a scrappy operator willing to experiment and get their hands dirty. This allows the founder to transition out of founder-led sales sooner and focus on other critical areas like product.
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.
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.
While founder-led sales are critical, StackAI believes they waited too long to hire their first salesperson. Bringing in help earlier, around $500K ARR, would have accelerated their ability to test and refine their go-to-market strategy much faster.
While adding reps seems like the fastest path to growth, true scalability comes from investing in leverage functions like enablement. A strong culture of accountability and programmatic training will unlock more revenue than simply hiring more bodies.