What’s Missing on Your Sales Team?

Table of Contents
    Add a header to begin generating the table of contents

    The classic image of a successful sales team is simple: a pack of hungry Account Executives (AEs), led by a visionary Sales Manager, all fueled by coffee and a killer instinct. This is the “hunter” model, and while it was effective in a simpler age, it’s now a relic of a bygone era.

    Today’s B2B landscape is defined by complexity. Buyers are more informed, sales cycles are longer, and the technology stack required to compete is a labyrinth. Trying to run a sophisticated, high-growth sales organization with only hunters and closers is like trying to win a Formula 1 race with only a driver and a stripped-down engine. You’ll run out of fuel, break down, and never make it to the finish line.

    The truth is, many companies are leaving millions on the table—not because their AEs aren’t good, but because they haven’t invested in the strategic, non-quota-carrying roles that act as the team’s gearbox, navigation system, and pit crew.

    If your pipeline is sluggish, your new hires are taking too long to ramp, or your forecasts are consistently inaccurate, you don’t need more salespeople—you need different salespeople. You need to build a specialized, scalable sales machine.

    Here are the five most critical roles and functions that are likely missing from your sales team, and how they provide the essential leverage for explosive, sustainable growth.

     

    Developing Leadership Within Your Sales Team

     

    1. The Engineer of Efficiency: Sales Operations (Sales Ops) ⚙️

     

    In high-growth companies, Sales Operations is the single most important function for maximizing revenue and minimizing chaos. You can think of Sales Ops as the Chief Data Scientist and Process Architect for the entire sales organization.

    Many smaller companies mistakenly delegate Sales Ops tasks—CRM administration, reporting, commission calculations—to a Sales Manager or even a marketing coordinator. The result is a system riddled with manual bottlenecks, dirty data, and frustrated reps.

     

    What Sales Ops Does:

     

    • Process Optimization: They analyze the entire sales cycle, from lead qualification to deal close, to identify and eliminate friction points. They are the ones who formalize that “gut feeling” process into a repeatable, measurable blueprint.
    • Technology & CRM Management: Sales Ops owns the sales tech stack (CRM, sales engagement tools, forecasting software). They ensure the data is clean, the systems talk to each other, and the tools are configured to support, not hinder, the rep’s workflow. Without them, your costly CRM becomes an expensive data graveyard.
    • Compensation & Territory Design: They develop fair, data-driven sales territories and compensation plans that align seller behavior with company goals. A poorly designed compensation plan can torpedo an entire quarter, and Sales Ops is the shield against this.
    • Reporting & Forecasting: They create the single source of truth for all sales data. Accurate forecasting is impossible without a dedicated Sales Ops professional maintaining the integrity of the data and building the right reports. They turn raw numbers into actionable intelligence for leadership.

    The Impact of Missing Sales Ops: Without this role, your top-performing AEs spend valuable hours on administrative tasks and data entry. Your sales leadership makes decisions based on bad data. Your growth isn’t scalable because your processes are chaotic, leading to the dreaded sales plateau.

     

    3. Build a Diverse and Collaborative Sales Team

     

    2. The Rep’s Performance Coach: Sales Enablement (Sales Enablement) 🎓

     

    If Sales Operations builds the car (the process and systems), Sales Enablement teaches the drivers (the reps) how to drive it to win. Their mission is simple: increase the productivity of every seller.

    In the modern world, products and services change constantly, and the competitive landscape shifts weekly. Throwing a new hire an old playbook and expecting them to succeed is a recipe for high turnover and long ramp times. Sales Enablement formalizes the journey from “new hire” to “top performer.”

     

    What Sales Enablement Does:

     

    • Onboarding and Training: They design the structured, repeatable process that brings a new rep to full quota faster than your competitors. This includes product knowledge, sales messaging, and role-play scenarios.
    • Content & Tools Management: They ensure reps have the right content (case studies, presentations, battle cards) for the right customer at the right stage of the sales cycle. This isn’t marketing’s job; Enablement ensures the sales team actually uses the materials effectively.
    • Coaching and Skill Development: They work with managers to institute a culture of continuous learning. They identify skill gaps across the team—maybe everyone struggles with late-stage negotiation—and create targeted training to address it. They standardize “what good looks like” in a sales conversation.
    • Marketing-Sales Alignment: Enablement is often the bridge between Marketing and Sales, ensuring the leads passed by Marketing are high-quality, and the messaging used by Sales is consistent with the brand.

    The Impact of Missing Sales Enablement: Your time-to-quota is unnecessarily long, making hiring and scaling expensive. Your mid-tier reps plateau because they lack targeted coaching. Your sales pitches are inconsistent, hurting your brand and lowering win rates.

     

    3. The Technical Interpreter: Sales Engineer (SE) / Solutions Consultant 💡

     

    Especially in B2B SaaS, IT, or any complex solution selling, the Sales Engineer (SE) is the unsung hero of the closing process. They are the technical expert who can translate the customer’s complex business problems into a tangible, working solution using your product.

    An AE’s job is to secure the business value proposition. The SE’s job is to secure the technical win. Asking an AE to perform a deep-dive technical demo or architect a solution for an enterprise client is a common mistake that leads to lost credibility and stalled deals.

     

    What the Sales Engineer Does:

     

    • Technical Discovery: They go beyond the AE’s initial needs assessment to understand the customer’s current technical environment, integration requirements, and security concerns.
    • Custom Demonstrations: They build and deliver tailored product demonstrations that show the customer exactly how the solution will work in their specific context, handling all technical questions and objections.
    • Proof-of-Concept (POC) Management: They manage trials and pilots, providing the technical support required to prove the solution’s ROI before the contract is signed.
    • Product Feedback Loop: They are the eyes and ears for the Product team, gathering critical, real-world technical feedback from prospects to influence the product roadmap.

    The Impact of Missing a Sales Engineer: Deals stall late in the process when technical details are required. Your AEs over-promise on product capabilities they don’t fully understand. You lose credibility with high-value technical stakeholders (CTOs, VPs of Engineering) who demand expert-level answers.

     

    Training and Equipping Your Sales Team for Success

     

    4. The Architect of Renewal: Customer Success Manager (CSM) 🤝

     

    Sales is no longer a linear process ending with the first signature; it’s a cycle. For recurring revenue businesses, the Customer Success Manager (CSM) is the most critical driver of long-term value. Their goal is to ensure the customer achieves their desired outcome using your product, which in turn leads to renewals, up-sells, and cross-sells. They are the ‘Farmer’ who cultivates the account after the ‘Hunter’ (AE) has secured the initial land.

    Many organizations still mistakenly treat Customer Success as a purely cost-center “support” function. This is a massive missed opportunity. A CSM is a revenue driver, measured by churn reduction, Net Revenue Retention (NRR), and identifying expansion opportunities.

     

    What the Customer Success Manager Does:

     

    • Onboarding & Value Realization: They own the post-sale customer journey, ensuring the product is adopted, integrated, and used effectively to drive measurable results for the client.
    • Relationship & Retention: They conduct proactive check-ins, quarterly business reviews (QBRs), and health checks to manage the relationship and anticipate potential churn risks long before a renewal date arrives.
    • Expansion Identification: By working with the client daily, they are perfectly positioned to identify new business units, new use cases, or new problems that could be solved by additional products or services. These qualified opportunities are then passed back to a dedicated Account Manager or the original AE for closing.

    The Impact of Missing a Customer Success Manager: High customer churn erodes your initial sales victories. Expansion opportunities are missed or left to the mercy of random timing. Your revenue is tied to constant, expensive new logo acquisition rather than the more profitable, sustainable path of client retention and growth.

     

    5. The Pricing Strategist: The Deal Desk / Commercial Operations 💰

     

    As your company grows and enters the Enterprise market, deals become complex, multi-layered, and require non-standard terms, custom pricing, and detailed legal review. The Deal Desk is the specialized team that takes ownership of this complexity.

    The Deal Desk acts as the central command for complex transactions, managing the flow of non-standard requests between Sales, Finance, Legal, and Product.

     

    What the Deal Desk Does:

     

    • Non-Standard Deal Structuring: They create and approve custom pricing, large discounts, unique payment terms, and creative contract structures that fall outside of the standard pricing matrix.
    • Process Governance: They enforce discount approval policies and ensure all non-standard deals are profitable and compliant, acting as the guardian of your margins.
    • Accelerating Deals: By centralizing the approval process, they dramatically reduce the time it takes to get a custom contract out the door, eliminating the infamous “late-stage finance delay” that kills deal momentum. They are the single point of contact for the AE to manage internal bottlenecks.
    • Price Book Management: They maintain the pricing model, ensuring it remains competitive, profitable, and easy for the sales team to use.

    The Impact of Missing a Deal Desk: Your AEs spend days chasing internal approvals. Deals close with inconsistent or unprofitable terms because they are run by an overwhelmed Sales Manager. Your average contract value (ACV) shrinks because reps, under pressure, offer excessive discounts without strategic oversight.

     

    The Roadmap: How to Stop Missing Out on Revenue

     

    Building a complete, modern sales team isn’t about simply adding headcount; it’s about adding leverage—strategic roles that free up your high-value closers to do what they do best: close.

    Follow these three steps to assess and address the gaps in your own organization:

     

    Step 1: Conduct a Sales Process Audit

     

    Map your customer journey from the first touchpoint to the renewal. For every stage, ask this critical question: “Is our core seller (AE/SDR) responsible for an activity that is administrative, repetitive, or requires deep specialization?”

    Symptom (The AE is doing this) Diagnosis (The Role You’re Missing)
    Calculating complex ROI models or setting up the CRM. Sales Operations
    Training new hires on the latest product features. Sales Enablement
    Handling deep technical questions during a demo. Sales Engineer
    Focusing solely on new logos while old accounts churn. Customer Success Manager
    Negotiating and chasing approval for non-standard pricing. Deal Desk

     

    Step 2: Measure the Cost of Inefficiency

     

    Quantify the time your AEs are not selling. If an AE spends 10 hours a week on reporting, CRM cleanup, or chasing pricing approvals, that’s 25% of their working week lost. Now, multiply that cost across your entire team’s quota. This number is your business case for hiring a specialist.

    • Example: If your AE team of 10 has an average quota of $1M, and they lose 25% of their time to admin/non-selling tasks, you’re looking at a $2.5 million opportunity cost annually.

     

    Step 3: Build the Revenue Team, Not Just a Sales Team

     

    Start by hiring the function that will give you the most immediate leverage. For most growing companies, this is either a dedicated Sales Operations professional (to fix data and process) or a Sales Enablement lead (to accelerate new rep ramp time).

    As you continue to scale, understand that all five of these strategic functions are not optional; they are the bedrock of a Revenue Operations (RevOps) framework that ensures every dollar you spend on a quota-carrying rep is maximized.

    The era of the lone-wolf salesperson is over. The future of sales belongs to the highly organized, expertly supported, and strategically engineered team. Stop missing out on your potential revenue—it’s time to fill the gaps and build the machine that will truly scale your growth.

     

    ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A NEW JOB?

    Pulse Recruitment is a specialist IT, sales and marketing recruitment agency designed specifically to help find the best sales staff within the highly competitive Asia-Pacific and United States of America market. Find out more by getting in contact with us!

    FROM OUR PULSE NEWS, EMPLOYER AND JOB SEEKER HUBS

    Featured Articles

    How to Stand Out in a Crowded Job Market

    Let us be honest: applying for jobs can feel like shouting into a void. You spend hours crafting an application, click submit, and then hear nothing. It is demoralising, and it is an experience many job seekers are all too familiar with right now. The good news is that the problem is rarely a lack…

    What Every Job Seeker Needs to Know in 2026

    If you have not looked for a new job in the last two or three years, you may be in for a surprise. The hiring landscape has undergone a series of significant shifts since the post-pandemic period, and understanding those changes is essential if you want to navigate your job search effectively in 2026. This…

    The Skills That Will Get You Hired in 2026

    The job market has changed dramatically over the past few years, and 2026 is shaping up to be one of the most skills-focused hiring climates in recent memory. Employers are no longer content to hire based on job titles and years of experience alone. Instead, recruiters and hiring managers are digging deeper — scrutinising portfolios,…

    3 LinkedIn Mistakes That Are Costing You Interviews

    Your LinkedIn profile is working against you right now. While you’re applying to jobs and wondering why recruiters aren’t responding, three critical mistakes on your profile are causing immediate disqualification before you ever get a chance to interview. Recruiters spend an average of 6 seconds scanning LinkedIn profiles—if they see these red flags, your application…

    Personal Branding for Introverts: How to Stand Out

    The conventional wisdom around personal branding in sales feels exhausting for introverts: constant networking events, daily social media posting, aggressive self-promotion, and being “always on.” If you’re an introverted sales professional, you’ve probably felt the pressure to adopt extroverted behaviors to build your brand and advance your career. But effective personal branding doesn’t require you…

    5 Red Flags Recruiters Look for (And How to Fix Them)

    Tech sales recruiters review hundreds of resumes and LinkedIn profiles weekly. After thousands of placements, they’ve developed pattern recognition for red flags that predict poor performance, early turnover, or problematic behavior. These warning signs cause immediate disqualification regardless of how impressive other credentials appear. Understanding what recruiters consider red flags—and more importantly, how to fix…

    How Enterprise Sales Became a Multi-Stakeholder Strategy Game

    In the traditional “golden age” of sales, the path to a closed-won deal was often a straight line. You identified a decision-maker—usually a charismatic executive with a budget and a problem—convinced them of your value, signed a contract, and moved on to the next lead. This “single-threaded” approach relied on personal rapport and individual authority….

    You Should Prioritize Alignment Over Compensation in Tech Sales

    In the hyper-competitive world of tech sales, it is easy to be blinded by the “Big Number.” Recruiters often lead with eye-popping On-Target Earnings (OTE), signing bonuses, and equity packages that look like lottery tickets. For years, the prevailing wisdom was simple: follow the money. However, as we navigate the sales landscape of 2026, the…

    Self-Direction Is One of the Most Valuable Sales Skills

    For decades, the image of the “Sales Floor” was one of high-octane chaos: rows of desks, the rhythmic sound of cold calls, and a manager pacing the aisles with a leaderboard in hand. It was an environment built on external pressure and shared energy. Today, that floor is silent. The shift toward hybrid and remote…

    Why “AI Curiosity” No Longer Cuts It in 2026

    Not long ago, having “AI curiosity” on your CV signaled something valuable. It suggested initiative, adaptability, and a willingness to explore new tools before they became mainstream. In 2024, that alone could differentiate you. It hinted that you weren’t waiting for change—you were leaning into it. In 2026, that signal has largely disappeared. The market…