Fixing founder led sales

Fixing founder led sales

Nearly always, the founder of any business is the best salesperson.

Why?

They naturally embody everything about the business. They deeply understand the product, the vision, the culture, and, above all, the problems their customers face.

This makes them uniquely persuasive and authentic salespeople.

But the trouble with founder-led sales emerges as your business grows.

Founders are busy individuals. They juggle countless responsibilities, from managing key client relationships, overseeing operations, and keeping finances in check to setting company vision, steering strategy, and regularly attending events and networking sessions.

All of these tasks are important, but they consume significant amounts of time.

On top of this, sales, by their very nature, are a highly time-consuming responsibility.

Eventually, something has to give, and too often, it's the sales pipeline that suffers, placing a growth ceiling on your business.

The question many founders ask themselves at this stage is:

"Do I have to step away from sales entirely, or can I replicate my effectiveness by hiring a unicorn salesperson who mirrors my passion and expertise?"

Unfortunately, we all know how this often turns out. It rarely works.

The good news, though, is that you don't need to replace your founder in the sales process. Instead, what's required is a structured, strategic approach to designing your sales engine.

This structure should leverage the founder's strengths and experience strategically, allowing them to remain influential in the right parts of the sales process without becoming a bottleneck.

Here's how you can build such a scalable, sustainable, and effective sales engine within your B2B business.

Why founder-led sales has scalability limits.

Before solving the problem, it's crucial to understand clearly why founder-led sales eventually become unsustainable.

Typically, the founder begins their sales journey with deep involvement across the entire sales funnel, from generating leads and nurturing relationships to closing the deals themselves.

While initially manageable, this becomes impossible at scale. Each sales task can be demanding and complex, especially as the business grows and client expectations become more sophisticated.

In parallel, a founder's operational responsibilities and strategic duties inevitably expand as well. They are required not only to steer the direction of the business but also to ensure its day-to-day operations run smoothly.

Moreover, founder involvement often remains critical in key client interactions, which further dilutes the time and energy available to invest in actively driving sales forward.

As a result, the sales pipeline can quickly stall when it relies entirely on the founder's personal efforts. If your sales process can't function effectively without continuous founder input, your business will eventually reach a point where it cannot grow further.

A scalable sales engine doesn't replace your founder, it leverages them.

The solution is not to remove the founder from sales altogether.

Rather, it's about restructuring your sales process to maximise their impact in a strategic, scalable way.

Crucially, this approach acknowledges that the founder's role in sales is irreplaceable, particularly when engaging with high-value prospects or during critical moments in the sales cycle.

Instead of being actively involved in every step of the process, the founder's role shifts to providing targeted influence where it's most impactful.

For example, at the Top of Funnel (TOFU), your founder's visibility and others can be used effectively without them personally managing cold outreach and leading qualification activities.

Instead, an energetic and organised individual, often someone early in their career with strong potential, can handle the detailed tasks of launching campaigns, handling early-stage qualification, and managing early-stage interactions using our go-to-market personas, like our founder persona.

The founder's persona, personal brand and credibility are leveraged strategically through carefully prepared content, talks, or thought leadership pieces, making their presence felt without direct involvement in daily execution. Not to mention scaled demand generation and outreach.

Moving down to the Middle of the Funnel (MOFU), this is where you'd put your existing Business Development Manager, or if you're hiring instead, look for a commercially savvy individual with a strong relationship management background.

This role is critical because it involves transitioning leads from general interest MQL's into actionable opportunities.

The person running the MOFU takes responsibility for nurturing prospects through discovery meetings, identifying their needs, and creating persuasive proposals.

Here, the founder doesn't disappear. Instead, they step in selectively at pivotal moments, perhaps a significant discovery meeting or a critical proposal review, to add their vision, passion, and gravitas into the process, ensuring the sales narrative remains compelling and aligned with the company's core values.

At the Bottom of Funnel (BOFU), your founder's involvement becomes even more targeted.

Here, founders excel because closing deals, especially larger ones, often hinges on trust, credibility, and personal assurance, all attributes that founders naturally provide.

Again, your MOFU owner manages the ongoing follow-ups, handles communications, and maintains momentum. Still, your founder and senior team members become closely involved at critical stages, providing the strategic authority required to get deals over the line without becoming bogged down in routine follow-up work.

Building a supportive sales culture.

However, success with this structure isn't only about clearly defined roles.

It's also about establishing a sales culture that permeates the entire business.

Businesses that successfully scale founder-led sales foster a sense of collective responsibility for sales performance.

Every team member, from delivery to finance, understands how their work supports and impacts the sales function.

Alignment around shared goals and a clear understanding of the company's positioning and value proposition are critical.

This kind of alignment creates momentum throughout the business and ensures sales becomes a shared responsibility rather than resting entirely on one person's shoulders.

Let's wrap this up.

Scaling beyond founder-led sales isn't about replacing your founder. It's about rethinking how you use their strengths most effectively.

By strategically positioning your founder's involvement at critical points in the sales funnel and supporting them with clearly defined roles, robust processes, appropriate technology, and the right team culture, your business can scale sustainably without losing the unique power of your founder's influence.

Don't wait until sales become your bottleneck. Act now and build a scalable sales engine that uses your founder's time strategically, freeing them to focus on closing high-impact deals and driving business growth, not being trapped in operational details.


Mike Weatherley

Founder, InsiteTrack | Helping Retailers and Brands to optimise price

5 天前

As a founder of a small business I can totally relate to this! and the constant challenge is resisting the urge to deal with the urgent day to day demands versus the important task of ensuring a consistent flow of quality leads. Developig a scalable sales engine should be the number 1 priority of all founders.

Duray Pretorius

The South African SEO ???? Driving Ecom revenue through search ?? Co-founder of Viaduct Generation????

5 天前

Thank you for this

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