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A growing company hired top performers from established firms, who all failed. They were skilled at selling known products in mature markets but lacked the traits for the "evangelical" sale required to build a new category. Success at a large company doesn't predict startup success.

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Sales reps at market leaders often succeed due to brand strength and inbound leads, not individual skill. Instead, recruit talent who proved they could win at the #3 company in a tough market. They possess the grit and creativity needed for an early-stage startup without a playbook.

Founders often hire their first sales leader to solve the problem of selling, which they haven't yet cracked. This role requires an entrepreneurial "renaissance rep" to discover the sales motion, not someone with a big-company resume to simply execute a known playbook. This mismatch in expectations is a primary cause of high turnover.

Hiring executives from large corporations like Google or Microsoft into an early-stage startup almost always fails due to a 'massive impedance mismatch.' Their expectations for established processes clash with the startup's reality. HubSpot experienced a near-100% attrition rate with these types of hires.

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.

Neil Blumenthal warns that hiring talent from large, established companies can be a mistake. These hires often thrive in environments with fully built-out systems, whereas a startup needs entrepreneurial problem-solvers who can create those processes and manuals from scratch.

Salespeople from hot companies with products that 'sell themselves' may just be order-takers. The truly skilled sellers are those hitting quota at tier-three companies. They have proven they can create demand, not just capture it from a market-leading brand.

The ideal sales hire changes dramatically across scaling stages. Initially, you need a "product manager" type who can handle ambiguity and provide product feedback. A top rep from a large company would fail because they rely on established processes and support systems that don't yet exist.

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.

Peets identifies a critical hiring error: founders hire sales leaders with experience managing a large, scaled organization for their future goals. This backfires because those leaders often lack the essential skills to build a sales function from the ground up, preventing the company from ever reaching that future state.

Goop's experience showed that hiring senior executives from established giants like L'Oreal often fails. These individuals may lack the 'grit,' resourcefulness, and scarcity mindset essential for a startup environment. Startups waste valuable time waiting for these hires who ultimately can't adapt and 'do the work.'