Stepping up from a founding Account Executive (AE) to a sales leader is a thrilling yet demanding journey. In a startup’s early days, founding AEs are the revenue engine, hunting for deals, refining the sales process, and closing business. But as the company scales, those same AEs often face the opportunity and challenge of evolving into leadership roles. If that is the path you are on, here is what to expect and how to navigate the transition.
Your Role Will Shift Dramatically
As a founding AE, your world revolves around pipeline generation and deal execution. You are the frontline closer. But as a sales leader, your focus shifts to strategy, team development, and process optimization. Instead of owning your personal quota, you will be responsible for enabling your team to hit theirs. Expect to spend more time coaching, hiring, and forecasting rather than running demos and negotiations.
Letting Go of Your Individual Contributor (IC) Mindset
One of the biggest challenges for new sales leaders is stepping back from direct selling. You have built your reputation on winning deals, but now, success is measured by how well your team performs. This means resisting the urge to jump in and close deals for them. Your job is to teach them how to do it themselves.
Building and Scaling a Team
Sales leadership is not just about managing. It is about scaling. You will need to recruit, onboard, and develop AEs who can replicate and improve on your early successes. Hiring the right people, setting clear expectations, and fostering a high-performance culture will be critical.
Developing a Repeatable Sales Process
Early-stage startups often lack a formal sales playbook. As a leader, you will need to document and refine the sales process, ensuring consistency across the team. This includes defining qualification criteria, standardizing outreach strategies, and establishing best practices for closing deals.
Owning Forecasting & Metrics
As an AE, you focused on hitting your own number. As a sales leader, you will be responsible for accurate forecasting, pipeline health, and revenue predictability. This means diving deeper into CRM data, analyzing trends, and ensuring your team maintains strong pipeline discipline.
Managing Up & Cross Functionality
Beyond leading your team, you will need to communicate effectively with executives, marketing, and customer success. Sales leaders play a crucial role in aligning go-to-market efforts, influencing product direction with customer feedback, and ensuring smooth handoffs between sales and post-sales teams.
Adapting to the Pressure of Leadership
When you were an AE, missing quota was a personal challenge. As a sales leader, the weight of the entire team’s performance falls on your shoulders. The pressure increases, but so does the opportunity to make a lasting impact. Your ability to stay composed, motivate your team, and make data-driven decisions will define your success.