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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
Chad Peets, one of the most respected sales leaders of our time, delivers his signature no-nonsense insights on building world-class sales organizations in this hard-hitting episode. Currently leading sales at xAI while advising companies like Sigma Computing and Augment Code, Peets doesn't hold back on the harsh realities of enterprise sales recruiting, team performance, and leadership. (04:53)
Chad Peets is currently leading sales operations at xAI, the AI company founded by Elon Musk, while serving as an advisor and board member to multiple high-growth companies including Sigma Computing and Augment Code. Previously, he was instrumental in Snowflake's sales transformation and served as a Managing Director at Sutter Hill Ventures. Known for his direct, results-driven approach, Peets has built a reputation as one of the most effective sales leaders in enterprise technology, with a track record of turning around underperforming teams and scaling organizations from startup to billion-dollar valuations.
Peets emphasizes that the best salespeople are "a little fucked in the head" with an obsessive drive to succeed. (12:12) When he wakes up at 3 AM, his first conscious thought is about work - and he needs team members with that same relentless focus. During interviews, he asks candidates about their passion and what drives them, looking for people who want to be the best in the world at their craft rather than those who work simply to fund other interests. This obsession cannot be taught and separates A-players from everyone else.
The most critical qualification for any sales hire is a demonstrated ability to close net new accounts, not upsells or inherited customers. (17:55) Peets immediately ends interviews if candidates can't provide specific examples of new logos they've brought in. At startups, salespeople receive accounts that have never heard of the company, making new customer acquisition the fundamental skill that cannot be taught. Everything else - deal size, domain expertise, technical knowledge - can be developed with proper leadership and enablement.
High-performing sales organizations should maintain 25% total attrition, with 10% coming from firing underperformers. (29:38) This isn't about creating a culture of fear - it's about maintaining standards that keep A-players engaged. When top performers see mediocre colleagues getting away with poor results, the A-players leave. Companies that proudly announce low firing rates are actually signaling they don't hold anyone accountable, which drives away the best talent and creates a culture of mediocrity.
Remote work has specific applications in sales that many companies get wrong. (26:52) Inside sales teams need to be physically present with their managers five days a week for effective coaching, training, and performance management. However, field salespeople must be distributed geographically to be close to their accounts and customers. The key is matching the work structure to the role requirements rather than applying blanket remote or in-office policies.
Quota attainment alone is insufficient for measuring sales performance because quotas can be set incorrectly. (28:43) Effective measurement includes new customer meetings, conversion ratios, travel activity, and steps completed in the sales process. A rep can hit 130% of quota through luck with one large deal while still being someone you'd want to fire. Comprehensive measurement provides the data needed to identify real performance issues and coach effectively rather than relying on potentially misleading quota numbers.