SALES PERFORMANCE

Are you hiring for the sales team you have now, or the business you're trying to become?

When growth gets harder than it should, the instinct is to hire more sellers. Sometimes that is right. More often, the business is hiring for the sales model it has rather than the one it needs to become.
Dark monochrome corridor with a lone silhouette in the distance, representing uncertainty, transition and the hidden operational pressure inside scaling businesses.
94%
buyers using AI
13
internal stakeholders
22
people influencing deals
2–3 pts
IRR uplift

When growth starts to feel harder than it should, hiring more salespeople is often one of the first options on the table.

It is an understandable instinct. More people should mean more conversations, more coverage, a larger pipeline, and more chances to hit the number. Sometimes that is exactly what the business needs.

But in scaling B2B businesses, especially where the sales motion has become more complex, or the business is under investor scrutiny, hiring more sellers can expose a deeper problem rather than solve it.

The real question is not only whether you need more sales capacity. It is whether you are building the sales team for the business you have today, or the business you are trying to become.

 

The sales team that got you here may not get you through the next stage

Early growth often depends on people who can work around gaps. A founder who is still personally close to every important deal. Top sellers who carry the proposition through force of personality and existing relationships. Informal qualification that works because the people doing it have been in the market long enough to know a real buyer when they see one. Managers who inspect pipeline rather than coach judgement. CRM is used as a reporting layer rather than a deal governance tool. Success that depends on memory, instinct and personal ownership.

That can work for a while. It stops working when the business needs repeatability.

A small team can often compensate for weak process with experience, urgency and personal ownership. A larger team cannot rely on those same conditions. What looks like flexibility at one stage can become fragility at the next.

The transition point matters. It usually arrives when targets rise faster than the team can absorb, when forecast scrutiny increases, when the founder can no longer sit inside every important deal, or when investors and boards start asking harder questions about how revenue is actually being generated. At that point, the way the team has always operated stops carrying the load.

That is the moment the hiring conversation typically starts. It is also the moment when hiring is least likely to fix anything on its own.

 

More sellers amplify the system already in place

Headcount is a multiplier. It multiplies clarity, but it also multiplies confusion.

If the commercial model is strong, hiring adds capacity, and the new sellers slot into a system that already works. They follow a clear ICP, qualify against shared criteria, manage deals using consistent stage definitions, and provide forecast evidence the leadership team can trust.

If the model is weak, hiring multiplies the inconsistency. More sellers interpreting ICP differently. More opportunities entering the pipeline with weak qualification. More variation in how deals are staged. More managers chasing updates because the underlying judgement is inconsistent. More forecast uncertainty. More friction between sales, marketing, and customer success as different sellers create varying downstream expectations.

The pattern is recognisable. The business adds five sellers. Activity goes up. Pipeline volume goes up. Forecasts get more confused, not clearer. Win rates drift. Some of the new hires perform, some quietly struggle, and nobody can quite explain why, because the standards against which they are being measured were never made explicit.

The business has spent six figures on hires that have made the underlying problem harder to see, not easier to solve.

 

What businesses often mistake for a hiring problem

There are four patterns I see repeatedly. Each one looks like a capacity issue and is actually something else.

Pipeline is light, so the answer must be more sellers. It may be. It may also be that the ICP is no longer clear, that demand quality has dropped, that qualification standards have softened, or that the proposition has drifted from what buyers now respond to. Hiring more sellers into a pipeline problem caused by ICP drift or weak qualification will produce more activity at the top of the funnel and the same result further down.

Sales cycles are slow, so the team must need more capacity. Slow cycles are rarely a capacity issue. They are usually a deal strategy issue. Weak stakeholder mapping, lack of urgency creation, poor alignment across the buying group, or insufficient evidence to move a decision forward. Adding more sellers does not shorten cycles. Building the deal capability of the sellers you have shortens cycles.

Forecast is unreliable, so the team needs stronger closers. Sometimes. More often, the issue is inconsistent stage definitions, optimistic qualification under pressure to fill the pipeline, weak evidence standards in deal reviews, and a lack of challenge in the forecast process itself. Stronger closers improve outcomes at the bottom of the funnel. They do not fix forecast integrity.

Founder is too involved, so the answer is to hire senior sellers. Possibly. But the first step is usually codifying how the founder sells, what judgement they apply, what context they bring to every conversation, and what part of the commercial process is still living in their head rather than in the team. A senior seller hired into a founder-led environment will not succeed unless the founder’s tacit knowledge has first been made explicit and transferable.

Before you hire to solve a sales problem, you need to be clear whether the problem is capacity, capability, process, leadership or proposition. Those require different fixes.

 

What to check before hiring more sellers

This is the part of the conversation where I find myself most often, with leadership teams about to make a significant hiring investment. There are five questions worth answering honestly before the first job specification goes out.

  1. Is the ICP clear enough for a new seller to use without interpretation? If every seller in the current team would define a good-fit customer slightly differently, hiring more sellers adds noise. The ICP needs to be specific enough that a new starter could apply it on day one without asking five colleagues what counts.
  2. Does the sales process reflect how buyers actually buy now? Forrester’s 2026 research shows 94% of B2B buyers now use generative AI in their purchasing process, typical buying decisions involve 13 internal stakeholders and nine external influencers, and buyers expect proof before commitment in a way they did not even three years ago. A sales process built around the buyer journey of 2020 will produce worse outcomes for new hires than for experienced ones, because the experienced ones can flex around the gaps.
  3. Are qualification standards consistent across the team? If stage progression is based on seller confidence rather than evidence, forecast risk goes up with every additional hire. New sellers will calibrate to whatever they see, and what they see is the team’s tolerance for soft qualification.
  4. Do managers have a coaching rhythm, not just a reporting rhythm? New sellers need judgement built around them. A weekly pipeline update is not coaching. If managers are inspecting deals rather than developing the people running them, hiring more sellers increases the manager workload without improving the team’s commercial decision-making.
  5. Can the business explain what good looks like in the role? Hiring fails when the business recruits for experience without defining the behaviours, judgement and commercial standards needed. A job description tells someone what the role is. The operating model tells them how to succeed inside it. Too many sales hires get the first without the second.

 

A job description tells someone what the role is. The operating model tells them how to succeed inside it.

 

Hiring for the business you’re growing into

The most important shift a leadership team can make is to stop hiring for the gaps in the current sales motion and start hiring for the motion the business needs next.

That usually means a different kind of capability, not just a different number of people. Moving from founder-led to team-led selling. Moving from relationship-led to evidence-led selling. Moving from activity-led to judgement-led management. Moving from a simple buyer journey to multi-stakeholder buying groups where the seller is rarely the most senior person in the room. Moving from informal handoffs into delivery to joined-up commercial execution across marketing, sales and customer success. Moving from “hit the number” to “build revenue the board can trust.”

The next stage of growth usually requires a different kind of sales capability. Not always a more senior seller, and not always more sellers. Often, it requires clearer standards, stronger management rhythm and a team that can make better commercial decisions without everything being escalated.

The hire then becomes a different question. Not “do we have enough sellers” but “do we have the commercial leadership and team capability to build the business we are trying to become.”

 

What good looks like before hiring

This is not about reaching perfection before adding headcount. No business has a perfect sales engine, and most growth happens while the engine is still being refined. But there is a minimum standard of readiness that makes hiring an investment rather than a gamble.

What should be in place before serious sales hiring begins:

  • A clear ICP that is genuinely shared across the team
  • A defined proposition and value narrative that reflects how buyers now buy
  • Qualification criteria tied to real buying signals, not seller optimism
  • Stage definitions that mean the same thing across every seller
  • A manager coaching rhythm separate from the reporting rhythm
  • A structured deal review process that challenges as much as it tracks
  • Forecast evidence standards that the leadership team trusts
  • A clear handover into delivery and customer success that protects the relationship after signature
  • Expectations for seller behaviour and judgement that are explicit, not implied
  • A simple onboarding route into the sales methodology the business uses

 

You do not need a perfect sales engine before you hire. But you do need enough structure that a good seller is not forced to invent their own version of how the business sells.

 

Why this becomes sharper under investor scrutiny

For PE-backed and growth-stage businesses, the hiring question carries additional weight because investors do not look only at revenue volume. They look at whether revenue is repeatable, explainable and transferable.

A business that depends on a founder, a small handful of top sellers, or an inconsistent sales process carries hidden risk. Hiring more sellers without structure can make the risk harder to see, not easier. Activity goes up. Headcount cost goes up. Pipeline volume goes up. But the underlying repeatability of revenue generation remains unclear.

Boards and investors increasingly want confidence in the “how”, not just the “what”. McKinsey’s research shows PE firms prioritising operational value creation achieve internal rates of return up to two to three percentage points higher than peers. That gap is largely about whether the commercial engine is institutional-grade or founder-led with extra bodies.

Under investor scrutiny, the question is not simply whether the team can sell. It is whether the business can show how sales performance is being created, repeated and managed.

A hiring plan that comes with a clear answer to that question is significantly more credible to a board, a sponsor or an LP than one that does not.

 

Where Sales Engine helps

A leadership team often comes to us with a hiring question, a pipeline question, or a sales performance question. The first job is to understand what is really holding the model back.

Sometimes, headcount is part of the answer. Sometimes the better first move is to strengthen the process, rhythm and judgement around the team already in place, so that the next round of hires has the conditions they need to succeed.

Our Commercial Performance Diagnostic is built for exactly this question. It gives leadership teams a forensic view of where the commercial model is strong, where it is fragile, and what needs to be in place before scaling headcount. The diagnostic covers process maturity, sales infrastructure, leadership rhythm, qualification standards, commercial capability and forward fit against the business you are trying to become.

Where leadership teams need commercial leadership in place while the readiness work is happening, we place experienced fractional CROs and CMOs into the business. This gives the company senior commercial capability now, without the risk of making a permanent hire into a model that is not yet ready to support them. Often, the fractional leader builds the conditions that make the eventual permanent hire significantly more likely to succeed.

When the business is ready, we also help with the permanent hire itself, bringing the same understanding of the commercial model into the search, the brief, and the selection process. The hire is calibrated against the business you are growing into, not the gaps in the business you currently have.

 

The hiring decision is the next stage of growth that will reward

Hiring more sellers can be the right decision. But it should not be the automatic response to commercial pressure.

The better question is whether the business is ready to make those hires successful. If the commercial model is clear, the process is usable, the leadership rhythm is strong, and the team understands what good looks like, hiring can accelerate growth. If those things are missing, hiring usually creates more activity, more variation and more pressure on the same weak points.

The sales team that got you here deserves credit. The next stage may still require something different.

If you are considering adding sales headcount because growth is becoming harder to predict, it may be worth looking first at the commercial model those hires will be joining. Sales Engine helps leadership teams across the full arc: from diagnosing commercial readiness, to placing fractional CROs and CMOs while the business prepares for a permanent leadership hire, to running the permanent commercial hire itself when the conditions are right.

Get in touch with the Sales Engine team if you would like to talk through where your business sits on that arc.

Ian Elam is CRO of Sales Engine.

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