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How should a founder evaluate whether their first cohort has truly internalized founder-grade sales rigor, vs. Just performing it performatively while waiting for the VP Sales to 'fix things'?

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How should a founder evaluate whether their first cohort has truly internalized founder-grade sales rigor, vs. Just performing it performatively while waiting for the VP Sales to 'fix things'? — Knowledge Library (Pulse RevOps)
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Quick take

Evaluating your first sales cohort's rigor isn't about their activity, it's about their *impact* and *ownership*. True founder-grade sales means reps are operating as mini-CEOs of their territory, demonstrating deep qualification, proactive pipeline generation, and data-driven deal management, not just checking boxes.

Your job is to audit their process, not just their results, to ensure they're building a repeatable engine, not just getting lucky.

The detail

Founders often mistake activity for rigor. Your first sales hires are setting the cultural and operational foundation. If they're merely performing a sales process rather than internalizing it, you're building on sand. Here’s how to tell the difference and what to do about it.

Defining Founder-Grade Sales Rigor

This isn't about closing every deal; it's about *how* they pursue every deal. A rigorous sales rep operates with the mindset of a founder:

  1. Extreme Ownership: They own their number, their pipeline, and their personal development.
  2. Deep Qualification: They challenge prospects, identify pain, quantify impact, and understand decision processes (MEDDPICC or similar). They are not afraid to disqualify.
  3. Proactive Problem Solving: They bring solutions, not just problems. They ask "how can *we* solve this
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