As a technical founder, Sanjit Biswas initially avoided sales. He embraced it only after reframing it as a systems engineering problem—a necessary challenge to solve in order to get his product out into the world and achieve real impact.
Most founders instinctively try to "push" sales forward: creating urgency, sending non-stop follow-ups, and trying to convince prospects. The actual physics of sales is "pull." When a customer has genuine demand and lacks good options, they will do the work—scheduling meetings, bringing in stakeholders, and asking for information—to acquire your solution.
The most significant mindset shift for founders is realizing they can't force a customer to have demand. Demand is an objective state in the customer's world—a project they are already trying to accomplish. This transforms sales calls from high-pressure convincing into low-pressure discovery, liberating the founder from feeling responsible for the outcome.
Early-stage founders, especially those who are analytically minded, must resist the comfort of spreadsheets and data. The most crucial activity is direct engagement and selling, even if it feels uncomfortable. No amount of analysis can replace the impact of the founder personally championing the product.
In the pre-product-market fit stage (the first ~20 deals), the sales leader's primary role is not just closing revenue, but acting as a product manager. They must be in every meeting to gather objections, find pockets of value, and translate raw market feedback into actionable insights for the engineering team.
Creating elaborate decks and spreadsheets provides a feeling of productivity but is often a sophisticated form of procrastination. It allows founders to delay the core, uncomfortable task of directly engaging potential customers and facing rejection, thereby making no real progress on finding product-market fit.
Rather than imposing processes after investing, VCs can use frameworks like the "sales sprint" as a pre-investment litmus test. Sharing the approach and observing the founder's reaction reveals their mindset. A founder who is eager to adopt a disciplined, customer-centric process is a stronger bet than one who must be forced into it.
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.