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While the sales team is the fuel for an organization, the right sales leader acts as the octane additive, making the engine perform at a much higher level. The wrong leader, however, will extinguish the fire completely, making this a critical hire.

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A sales leader's job is to shield their team from internal politics, administrative burdens, and cross-departmental friction. This protection allows reps to focus solely on selling. The leader must also mediate between sales and the rest of the organization to maintain harmony.

Non-sales founders often don't know how to evaluate or support their first sales leader. The advice is to hire a sales-focused board member or advisor whose primary role is to mentor and care for that new sales leader, providing crucial guidance and a dedicated advocate.

A sales leader's job isn't to ask their team how to sell more; it's to find the answers themselves by joining sales calls. Leaders must directly hear customer objections and see reps' mistakes to understand what's really happening. The burden of finding the solution is on the leader.

A sales leader's value isn't in managing from headquarters. It's in being on the front lines, personally engaging in the most challenging deals to figure out the winning sales motion. Only after living in the field and closing landmark deals can they effectively build a playbook and teach the team.

Effective sales leadership isn't about managing spreadsheets; it's about leading from the front with deep product knowledge. A leader who can't sell the product themselves cannot effectively judge their team, determine what "good" looks like, or have confidence in their forecast.

When evaluating sales leaders, prioritize their track record in recruiting above all else. Exceptional leaders are talent magnets who build scalable teams through strong hiring and enablement. Their ability to attract A-players is the foundation of a predictable revenue machine.

When hiring a sales leader, founders often fall for the most enthusiastic candidate. Ben Horowitz advises picking the one who rigorously qualifies the opportunity—questioning the product and customers. This demonstrates the critical discovery skills they'll apply when selling.

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.

Counterintuitively, the best sales leaders often come from companies with mediocre products. Their ability to hit numbers despite a weak offering demonstrates exceptional sales skills, which are then amplified when they are given a great product to sell.

ElevenLabs' CEO realized his first sales leader hire was monumental not just for revenue, but for culture. Sales leaders tend to hire people in their own image, meaning that first hire dictates the approach and values of the entire future sales organization.