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by ananddass
5025 days ago
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Conrey-I agree with your point about things not being black and white between sales vs biz dev . It boils down to how many resources do you have to invest in go-to-market initiatives. For most startups, customers decide to trust and buy based on their interactions with the founding team and the CEO. In fact if the founding team isnt actively involved in the deal closure process that is a red flag. Given this assumption what you need is a person on the team who is obsessively focused in generating prospects. Once a prospect has been engaged then the founding team will have to wing into action in closing the deal. On domain knowledge-certainly its easy to teach what you do than teach how to sell. Always better to get a strong sales guy than the other way round. In the article I was reference the difference between one with industry knowledge and product knowledge. |
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Also, I feel like focusing on domain knowledge too narrowly can lead the hiring process astray. I think you are spot on regarding hiring for intelligence and acumen but I think it is a mistake to think that those attributes can only be found in those with domain knowledge. I can tell you that I knew nothing about video encoding before becoming Zencoder's head of sales and had it been a requirement, I wouldn't have been hired. We were able to grow that company rapidly to acquisition with only myself focused on sales.
My opinion is that a good sales hire should be 1. fully committed to learning your product inside and out and have the technical acumen to be able to execute on that. 2. Should think about sales the same way the engineering team think about product (test, iterate, listen,) 3. Should be able to sell themselves they way you want your product to be sold. Listen to how they talk about themselves in the interview. This is how they will sell your product.