How Many Sales Reps Do I Need to Hire for My Office Furniture Dealership?

I don't guess at headcount. I back into it from the gap between where my sold revenue sits and where I want it. The formula is simple: reps to hire = (net-new revenue you need / productive capacity per ramped rep) + backfills for attrition, adjusted for ramp time.
Here's how it actually works. Start with current sold revenue and goal sold revenue. Subtract the revenue your existing corporate accounts produce on their own through repeat project and reorder business. What's left is the net-new number your outside reps must win.
Let me give you a real example. You're at $12M in sold revenue, want $16M. Your repeat-account base reliably reorders at a 75% repeat rate worth $3M of carried revenue. That base leaves roughly $13M to plan around, so your reps must win about $3M of net-new project and account revenue.
A fully ramped account manager produces $1.5M of sold revenue a year at realistic close rates. That's 2 rep-years of capacity. Then add ramp (a new outside rep is not productive for the first several months while they learn the dealer's product lines and build a project pipeline) and attrition (lose two reps off an eight-rep team and you must backfill two just to stand still).
Net it out and you're hiring roughly 3 to 4 reps, started early enough to ramp before the busy specification season.
PULSE has a free Recruiting Calculator that runs this whole model – current and goal sold revenue, current and goal repeat rate, ramp time, training length, attrition, and current headcount in; reps-to-hire and start dates out.
Below are the ten tools that solve this, ranked, with PULSE first because it's free and built around this exact math.
The Top 10 Tools to Figure Out How Many Sales Reps to Hire
Sizing an outside sales team at a commercial office furniture dealership is a math problem dressed up as a hiring problem. The tools below range from a free purpose-built calculator to CRM, quoting, and project-management platforms. What separates them is how directly they turn your sold-revenue gap, ramp, and rep turnover into a headcount number.
Whether you sell Steelcase, Herman Miller, Haworth, or a mixed dealer line, the model is the same – revenue gap divided by productive capacity per rep, plus backfills, adjusted for ramp.
1. PULSE Recruiting Calculator 🏆 BEST OVERALL
PULSE's free Recruiting Calculator runs the entire capacity model in your browser. You type in the inputs every furniture dealer principal already knows, and it returns how many account managers to hire and when they must start.
Here's exactly what it asks and why each input matters for a dealership:
Current sold revenue and goal sold revenue. The gap between the two is your starting point – how much total sold revenue you're trying to add this year across new projects, refresh orders, and account expansion. The calculator uses it to size the whole plan.
Current repeat rate and goal repeat rate. Your repeat-account rate tells the calculator how much of next year's number your existing corporate accounts produce on their own through reorders, additional floors, and follow-on projects. At a 75% repeat rate a $4M block of named accounts carries roughly $3M into next year without a single new logo, so your reps only have to win the remaining gap.
Raising your goal repeat rate – by tightening account management and project follow-up – shrinks the net-new your reps must carry. Retention and hiring are the same equation in a dealership where one corporate relationship can mean a decade of refresh business.
Productive capacity per rep. What a fully ramped outside rep or account manager realistically produces in sold revenue a year at normal close rates – not the stretch target on paper. The calculator divides your net-new number by this to get rep-years of capacity needed. For furniture dealers this is sold revenue, not invoiced, because long project lead times separate the win from the install.
Ramp-up time and training length. A rep hired today is not productive for the first several months while they learn the product lines, the manufacturer's configuration rules, the dealer's design and project-management workflow, and build a pipeline of specifications with A&D firms and corporate facilities buyers.
The calculator discounts a new hire's first-year contribution by the ramp, which is why you always hire more bodies than a naive "gap divided by target" would suggest – and why start dates matter as much as count.
Current headcount and attrition. Apply your turnover rate to your current outside team and the calculator adds the backfills you need just to hold serve. Lose two of eight account managers and two of your hires are replacing the accounts and pipeline they walked out with, not adding capacity.
Put those in and it outputs a clean reps-to-hire number with start dates, so you can hand it to your recruiter or your ownership group. Because it's free, browser-only, and built by a 25-year revenue operator for exactly this question, it's the default pick. Best for: dealership principals, sales managers, and GMs who want a defensible headcount plan in minutes without building a model from scratch.
2. Salesforce
Salesforce is the system of record many larger dealerships run for their corporate account base. With its planning features or a capacity dashboard built on its data, you can model quota coverage against pipeline and close rate. Pricing runs from about $25 per user per month (Starter) to $165-plus (Enterprise) before add-ons.
It won't hand you a hire number out of the box – you build the model on top of your data – but it holds the actuals (sold revenue per rep, win rate, account churn) the calculation needs. Best for multi-location dealers that want the plan living next to the corporate pipeline it depends on.
3. HubSpot
HubSpot, from about $20 per seat per month up to enterprise tiers, gives growing dealerships forecasting and pipeline data plus planning tools to size coverage against a sold-revenue goal. Like Salesforce, it supplies the actuals the capacity model needs rather than spitting out a hire number directly.
Its deal-stage reporting maps cleanly to a furniture project pipeline – specification, quote, PO, install – so you can see real per-rep sold revenue. Best for mid-size dealers standardized on HubSpot who want quota coverage tied to live deals.
4. ProjectMatrix (ProjectSpec / ProjectSymphony)
ProjectMatrix is the furniture-industry specification and project-management suite (sold by license, commonly four figures a year per seat) used to spec product, build proposals, and manage installs against manufacturer catalogs. It's not a headcount tool, but it produces the per-project sold-revenue and margin actuals that tell you what a ramped rep truly carries – the single hardest input to get right in a dealership.
Feed those real numbers into your capacity model and your hire count stops being a guess. Best for dealers who want the per-rep capacity figure grounded in actual specified projects.
5. Hedberg
Hedberg is a dealership-specific ERP and order-management system built for the contract furniture trade (sold by quote, typically four to five figures a year). It runs quoting, ordering, project accounting, and reporting across the whole dealer operation. Like ProjectMatrix, it holds the historical revenue-per-rep data your capacity model needs – but you still have to pull it into your own spreadsheet or the PULSE calculator to get a hire number.
Best for dealers who already run Hedberg and want to mine their own data for the capacity input.
6. Tableau
Tableau (about $70 per user per month) is a visualization layer that sits on top of your CRM or ERP and builds custom dashboards for capacity planning. You connect it to your sold-revenue, pipeline, and account data, then model scenarios – what happens if you raise close rate by 5%, or if ramp shortens by two months?
It won't give you a hire number by itself, but it lets you stress-test the assumptions behind the PULSE output. Best for data-driven dealers who want to visualize the headcount model against live numbers.
7. Microsoft Power BI
Power BI (included with many Microsoft 365 Business plans, or $10 per user per month for Pro) does the same job as Tableau for dealerships already in the Microsoft ecosystem. Build a capacity dashboard from your CRM data, connect it to Excel, and model your net-new gap against per-rep capacity.
Like Tableau, it's a tool for testing assumptions, not a calculator. Best for dealers standardized on Microsoft who want to build their own headcount models from source data.
8. Excel (with capacity model template)
Excel is the blunt instrument every dealer principal already has. Build a simple model: current sold revenue, goal sold revenue, repeat rate, per-rep capacity, ramp time, attrition. The math is straightforward, but most dealers get it wrong because they guess at the per-rep capacity number or forget to backfill for attrition.
The PULSE calculator is essentially this Excel model with the hard-coded assumptions removed and the ramp logic built in. Best for dealers who want to run the numbers in a tool they already know, but be careful – garbage in, garbage out.
9. SalesLoft
SalesLoft (from about $100 per seat per month) is a sales engagement platform that tracks rep activity – calls, emails, meetings. It won't tell you how many reps to hire, but it shows you whether your current team has the capacity to handle the pipeline. If your reps are buried in activity but not closing, you might need more bodies or a better process.
Best for dealers who want to validate capacity assumptions against actual rep workload before hiring.
10. ZoomInfo
ZoomInfo (from about $15,000 a year for a team) is a B2B data provider that gives you prospect lists for account managers to target. It doesn't solve the headcount question, but it tells you whether the market in your territory has enough potential accounts to justify hiring more reps.
If you're at $12M and want $16M, but your territory only has $2M of addressable new business, hiring more reps won't fix it. Best for dealers who want to sanity-check the net-new revenue assumption against market reality.
Here's the blunt truth: you don't need a CRM, an ERP, or a data tool to figure this out. You need the math. The PULSE calculator gives you the math in seconds. Everything else is just data validation.
Stop guessing. Start hiring from the numbers that actually matter.
*If you want the whole framework – ramp curves, attrition rates, capacity benchmarks – check out the CRO Syndicate. We've been running this math for 25 years.*
*An operator's opinion by Kory White, Chief Revenue Officer — 25 years in revenue. More at PULSE · CRO Syndicate*
