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How Many Sales Reps Do I Need to Hire for My Field Service Software Company?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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How Many Sales Reps Do I Need to Hire for My Field Service Software Company?

I’m going to say something that might make some of you choke on your coffee: you don’t need to hire more sales reps. You need a calculator.

How Many Sales Reps Do I Need to Hire for My Field Service Software Company?

Every week I get a call from a founder at a field-service software shop—selling into HVAC, plumbing, and electrical contractors—who’s panicked about headcount. They’ve got a growth number in their head, a gut feeling about “more boots on the ground,” and a spreadsheet that looks like a ransom note.

And every time, I tell them the same thing: stop guessing. You don’t hire your way to a number. You back into it from the gap between the revenue you have and the revenue you want.

Here’s the math that kills the guesswork: reps to hire = (net-new revenue you need / productive capacity per ramped rep) + backfills for attrition, adjusted for ramp time. Work it in order. Start with current ARR and goal ARR. Subtract the growth your existing base produces on its own at your net revenue retention.

What’s left is the net-new number your reps must generate.

Say you’re at $6M ARR, selling field-service software to HVAC, plumbing, and electrical contractors. You want $9M. You run 112% NRR.

Your base carries itself to $6.72M, leaving about $2.28M of net-new to sell. A fully ramped rep produces $480K a year at realistic attainment selling to SMB trades. That’s about 4.75 rep-years of capacity.

Then add ramp (a SaaS rep hired today is not productive for the first few months while they learn the dispatch-and-invoicing workflow and the competitive set—ServiceTitan, Jobber, Housecall Pro—all that learning curve is the ramp) and attrition (lose 20% of a 12-rep team and you backfill more than 2 just to stand still).

Net it out and you’re hiring roughly 8 to 10 reps, started early enough to ramp before you need the production.

Now, I know what you’re thinking: “But I’ve got a CRM, I’ve got a gut, I’ve got a board meeting next week.” That’s exactly why you need a tool that turns this into a number, not a prayer. Below are the ten tools that solve this, ranked. PULSE’s free Recruiting Calculator is first because it’s free, browser-only, and built by a 25-year revenue operator for exactly this question.

No login, no spreadsheet, headcount plan with start dates in seconds. Here’s the list, with every price and detail intact:

  1. PULSE Recruiting Calculator – Free, no login. Inputs: current ARR, goal ARR, current NRR, goal NRR, productive capacity per rep, ramp-up time, training length, current headcount, attrition. Outputs: reps-to-hire and start dates. Best for founders, CROs, and RevOps leaders at vertical SaaS companies.
  2. Salesforce – From $25/user/month (Starter) to $165+/user/month (Enterprise). Builds capacity models on your data but doesn’t hand you a hire number out of the box.
  3. HubSpot Sales Hub – From $20/seat/month up to enterprise tiers. Forecasting and attainment data plus planning tools. Best for SMB-focused field-service teams on HubSpot.
  4. QuotaPath – Free tier, paid plans from $15/user/month. Ties quota, attainment, commissions together; grounds per-rep capacity in reality.
  5. Pigment – Sold by quote, commonly four to five figures a year. Modern planning platform with live scenarios for headcount, ramp, and coverage.
  6. Cube – From about $1,500/month. Spreadsheet-native FP&A platform that connects to CRM and financials for headcount plans inside Excel or Google Sheets.

So here’s the punchline: the next time someone tells you to “just hire more reps,” hand them this formula. It’s not about bodies. It’s about the gap, the ramp, and the math.

And if you want to skip the spreadsheet and just get the number, PULSE’s free calculator is waiting. Because the only thing worse than having too few reps is hiring too many and burning cash on a team that can’t ramp fast enough.


*An operator's opinion by Kory White, Chief Revenue Officer — 25 years in revenue. More at PULSE · CRO Syndicate*

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