Most early-stage founders avoid sales the same way most kids avoid eating vegetables — they invent elaborate reasons why it doesn't apply to them. The product needs more work. The website isn't ready. The market is wrong. The Google ads will kick in any day now. None of this is true. The reason your startup isn't taking off is that you, the founder, have not yet decided to sit down and sell it.
This was Gustaf Alstromer's point in a YC lecture I just watched, and it's worth repeating because it lands the same way every time: startups don't take off by themselves. Startups take off because founders make them take off. Pushing a button on an ad network is not customer acquisition. Writing more code is not customer acquisition. Recruiting your first hundred customers is a hands-on, manual, occasionally humiliating job — and it has to be yours.
Two things break the moment you outsource sales:
You stop learning what to build. Talking to customers and selling to them are two faces of the same coin. If you've never tried to sell your product, you do not actually know whether it's good. You just know it compiles. The first salesperson you hire will be three months late discovering that your pitch doesn't land — and they'll quit before they tell you.
You stop owning your destiny. Sales has to be DNA, not a department. Until you can close a customer yourself, you have no idea what good looks like, which means you have no basis to hire for it.
The Brex founders are the textbook example. Winter 2017 YC batch. They didn't have a real product yet — just a virtual credit card. They emailed their batchmates a six-line message: "Hey, we're opening up our beta for the W17 batch. 10 spots. Brex is a corporate credit card focused on technology companies. We don't require a personal guarantee. It's free — merchants pay us." That's it. Henrique personally onboarded every single customer. No mobile app, no marketing site, no SDR team. Just the founder, the email, and the willingness to do the work himself.
The email worked because it followed rules that are now well-known and still ignored:
- Six to eight sentences. Maximum. If you're coming out of academia, your instinct will be to write 400 words. Don't. Nobody reads them.
- Plain text. No HTML. No drawings. Write it like you'd write to a friend.
- Say who you are and why you matter. Show, don't tell. "We're in YC" beats "we're domain experts with 12 years of experience."
- Address the problem the recipient actually has. Not your product's features.
- One ask. A demo, a call, a self-serve link. Pick one.
Then comes the part nobody wants to hear. Sales is a numbers game. You cannot close five customers from ten leads. Not in early-stage B2B. Not ever. The funnel math is brutal: 500 outbound emails → 250 opens → 20 replies → 10 demos → 2 customers. If those numbers feel humbling, good. They are.
The mistake almost every founder makes is sending 100 emails, closing zero, and concluding "sales doesn't work for us — let's try SEO." This is not a strategic insight. This is statistical illiteracy. You didn't fail at sales. You ran one-fifth of the experiment and gave up. Most of the people you emailed aren't early adopters and never will be — that's the population, not your fault. To find early adopters, you have to email enough strangers that the rare yes shows up. That's the whole game.
Two more rules that separate founders who close from founders who don't:
Your first customers should be your easiest, not your most prestigious. Sell to people you already know. Sell to other startups, not enterprises — startups have short decision cycles and no procurement team. Don't bite off the hardest deal in the pipeline because it would look impressive on the deck. You don't need impressive. You need ten customers.
Charge from day one. Free trials and unpaid pilots feel like de-risking, but a customer who hasn't paid you isn't a customer. They're a polite acquaintance. The money is the signal. If your prospect refuses to pay when you bring up price, fire them gently and move on — that's the qualification call doing its job. In B2B, replace free trials with a money-back guarantee or a monthly opt-out. Same de-risk for the buyer, but you're getting paid.
Here's what this all collapses down to:
You will not find product-market fit by thinking harder. You will find it by emailing 500 strangers, having ten awful demos, closing two, and learning everything you didn't know about your buyer in the process. There is no shortcut. There is no automation. There is no growth hack that substitutes for the founder picking up the phone.
If you're not doing this, you're not running a startup. You're maintaining a science project that happens to have a Stripe account.