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.

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Contrary to the belief that deep-tech startups should be purely technical, ElevenLabs prioritized distribution early. Their first 10 hires included 3 people focused on go-to-market and growth, enabling both self-serve and sales-led motions from the start alongside foundational research.

Instead of waiting for a specific revenue milestone, the strongest signal that it's time to hire is feeling consistently overwhelmed. This feeling indicates you are already "behind the eight ball" and need to begin the hiring process to prevent burnout and enable growth.

Snowflake hired its first salesperson pre-revenue not to sell, but to get the product into customers' hands to break it. This person acted as a de facto product manager, gathering critical feedback that led to a core architectural change, proving the value of a GTM hire before product-market fit.

Resist hiring quickly after finding traction. Instead, 'hire painfully slowly' and assemble an initial 'MVP Crew' — a small, self-sufficient team with all skills needed to build, market, and sell the product end-to-end. This establishes a core DNA of speed and execution before scaling.

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.

Jumping to enterprise sales too early is a common founder mistake. Start in the mid-market where accounts have fewer demands. This allows you to perfect the product, build referenceable customers, and learn what's truly needed to win larger, more complex deals later on.

Founder-led selling is essential for the first 6-12 months but becomes a critical growth bottleneck if it continues. Founders who can't let go create a self-fulfilling prophecy where the business can't scale beyond them. They must be coached to transition from being the primary seller to an enabler of the sales team.