cover of episode 266 (Lead) How to Lead a Sales Team From $0 to $100M in 8-Years

266 (Lead) How to Lead a Sales Team From $0 to $100M in 8-Years

2024/11/21
logo of podcast 30 Minutes to President's Club | No-Nonsense Sales

30 Minutes to President's Club | No-Nonsense Sales

Frequently requested episodes will be transcribed first

Shownotes Transcript

Mark Kosoglow walks through the key skills, responsibilities, and attributes for a Sales Leader at each phase of company growth

Doer Phase (0 to $1M ARR):

  • The initial stage focused on finding product-market fit.

  • The sales leader handles everything, including cold calls, demos, building sales systems, and refining the sales process.

  • They act as an individual contributor, ensuring the company moves forward without distracting other key team members.

  • Key trait: Being a hands-on, self-reliant executor.

Builder Phase ($1M to $10M ARR):

  • The leader transitions to hiring and scaling the team, typically starting with individual contributors (AEs and SDRs).

  • Still involved in selling but begins to set foundational systems, processes, and training.

  • They document best practices and create repeatable frameworks while maintaining some "doer" responsibilities.

  • Key trait: Hiring and building effective teams and processes.

Doctor Phase ($10M to $25M ARR):

  • The leader becomes more metrics-driven, focusing on diagnosing and optimizing performance based on data.

  • Begins managing managers and spending more time collaborating cross-departmentally (e.g., with RevOps, marketing, and customer success).

  • Key trait: Using data and metrics (L1 and L2) to prevent thrash and fine-tune the organization’s operations.

Architect Phase ($25M to $100M ARR):

  • The leader’s role expands to a more executive level, crafting the overall blueprint for the sales organization in alignment with other departments.

  • Focus on segmentation, pricing strategies, and designing compensation plans that drive desired behaviours.

  • They influence larger strategic initiatives and ensure the execution aligns with organizational goals.

  • Key trait: Seeing the big picture and designing a cohesive GTM blueprint.

Communicator Phase ($100M+ ARR):

  • The leader’s primary role becomes communication: setting clear expectations, timelines, and evaluating the mental models used by the team to meet goals.

  • The focus shifts outward, ensuring alignment across broader organizational and market dynamics.

  • Key trait: Clear and effective communication to drive alignment and execution at scale.

**RESOURCES DISCUSSED:**