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Founders with deep domain expertise often sell effectively themselves but can't enable a sales team. They are 'unconsciously competent,' unable to extract their innate knowledge into a structured, repeatable sales motion that reps without their brain can execute.

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Your best reps are often "unconsciously competent" and can't explain their own success. Before an SKO, leaders must help these individuals deconstruct their process and build a prescriptive presentation, translating their individual "art" into a replicable science for the entire sales team.

If branding dilutes your high-touch founder sales process, the problem isn't the market. The solution is to "scale the unscalable" by creating a small, elite team trained to replicate the founder's one-on-one approach, even if they only perform at a B-minus level.

The intuitive skills that make a top individual salesperson successful cannot be directly transferred to a team. To scale performance, leaders must deconstruct their own "unconscious competence" into a teachable, repeatable process covering messaging, qualification, and forecasting to enable the entire team.

Many top-performing salespeople operate on instinct and talent, making them "unconsciously competent." While successful in the field, they struggle to lead teams because they lack the self-awareness to deconstruct and teach the specific actions that make them great.

Founders can secure meetings, pivot in conversations, and leverage their deep product knowledge in ways that hired salespeople cannot. This initial success is a unique, non-repeatable phase of founder-led selling, not a scalable go-to-market strategy to be replicated by a sales team.

To transition from practitioner to thought leader, you must codify your implicit knowledge into simple, teachable frameworks. Unlike rigid scripts, frameworks provide a flexible structure or "rails to run on" that allows individuals to adapt to specific situations while following a proven system.

A startup's initial salesperson should prioritize mirroring the founder's successful sales approach. Their job is to deconstruct the founder's "hook" through observation and trial-and-error, not to immediately implement formal sales processes, metrics, or a CRM. Success comes from successful knowledge transfer, not premature system building.

Founders who sell intuitively often can't explain their methods. Instead of expecting new hires to "just do what I do," they need someone who can translate their talent into a teachable process, effectively acting as an interpreter for the rest of the team.

The founder, as the best salesperson, should always have a trainee shadowing them. This "double dips" on their time, turning every sales activity into a real-time training session. It's the most efficient way to transfer skills, duplicate the founder's success across a team, and build a scalable sales process based on modeling.

A founder's ability to sell is not proof of a scalable business. The real litmus test for repeatability is when a non-founder sales hire can close a deal from start to finish. This signals that the value proposition and process are teachable, which is the first true sign of a scalable go-to-market motion.