For Startup Founders | Ventes Search | GTM Executive Hiring
You need a Chief Revenue Officer. You know it, your board knows it, and your head of sales — who’s been doing double duty for six months — definitely knows it.
So you do what feels logical: you post the role on LinkedIn. Maybe you use a job board. You brief your internal recruiter. You ask your network for referrals. And then you wait.
What comes back is usually a mix of people between jobs, career CROs who’ve been on the market longer than they let on, and a handful of genuinely interesting candidates who, once you get into the conversations, aren’t quite right for your stage or your sector.
Meanwhile, the person you actually want — the revenue leader who has already solved the problem you’re trying to solve, is currently running a team, and has no reason to check a job board — never sees your post.
This isn’t bad luck. It’s how the market for senior GTM talent works.
The Passive Candidate Problem
Research consistently shows that the best performers in any field are among the least likely to be actively job searching at any given moment. They’re the ones delivering results, getting promoted, being given more equity, and fielding retention conversations from their current employer.
This is especially true at the CRO and VP of Sales level. The commercial leaders who have built and scaled revenue organizations — who’ve taken a company from $5M to $50M ARR, navigated a category expansion, or led a post-acquisition integration — are almost never on the market by choice.
They move for the right opportunity. A compelling growth challenge. A founder they believe in. Meaningful equity. A board that understands what it takes to build a GTM function from the ground up.
But they will only move if someone finds them and makes the case.
Why Job Postings Don’t Reach Them
A LinkedIn job post reaches people who are actively looking — or who happen to see it in their feed. Even with a large follower base or a sponsored campaign, the organic reach of a job posting is primarily to active candidates.
The passive candidate — especially a senior one — isn’t refreshing job boards. They’re running QBRs, managing their team, and dealing with the demands of an executive role. If they are open to exploring something, they’ll hear about it through their network or through a direct, personalized approach that respects their time and speaks to their specific situation.
No job post does that. A well-researched, confidential outreach from a search firm that has identified them specifically — and can articulate exactly why this opportunity is worth their attention — sometimes does.
What “The Right CRO” Actually Looks Like for Your Stage
Part of what makes this search difficult is that founders often don’t know precisely what they need until they’ve had 15 conversations that go nowhere.
The CRO profile for a Series A SaaS company is fundamentally different from what a PE-backed manufacturing business needs, or what a founder-led professional services firm requires to scale its commercial team.
- A Series A company usually needs a builder — someone who’s comfortable with ambiguity, can design a sales process from scratch, and knows how to hire the first five reps.
- A Series B/C company often needs a scaler — someone who has taken a functioning sales team and added structure, analytics, and management layers without killing the culture.
- A PE-backed company frequently needs an operator — someone who can work with financial sponsors, hit quarterly targets, and move fast on integration or expansion.
The wrong CRO at the wrong stage is one of the most expensive mistakes a growth company can make. Recruiting cost, transition cost, the months of momentum lost, and the organizational disruption all compound quickly.
What a Retained Search Actually Does
When a search firm works on a retained basis, it means they’re mapping your specific market — identifying the revenue leaders at companies similar to yours in size, stage, or sector, researching their track records, and making confidential direct contact.
They’re not posting your role. They’re not waiting. They’re finding the people who aren’t looking and making a case compelling enough for those people to take a conversation.
That process takes access, relationships, and time. It also requires the search firm to deeply understand your business — your revenue model, your growth stage, your culture, your competitive context — before they make a single call. Done well, it surfaces candidates you would never have found through any other channel.
For Founders: What This Means Practically
If you’re a founder about to kick off a CRO search, here’s the honest advice:
- Don’t anchor your search to who applies. The best person for your company may have no idea you exist yet.
- Define what stage-appropriate looks like before you start. A CRO who scaled a 300-person enterprise sales org may be completely wrong for a 10-person startup.
- Protect the confidentiality of the search. The best candidates need to trust that exploring this conversation won’t end up on LinkedIn.
- Be prepared to move with conviction. Passive candidates at this level have options. If you find the right person, slow internal processes will lose them.
The Bottom Line
The CRO search is not a recruiting problem. It’s a market access problem. The candidates you want are not looking for you. They need to be found, qualified, and compelled — and that requires a process designed specifically for passive senior talent.
That’s exactly what a specialized GTM executive search firm is built to do.
Ventes Search is a boutique GTM executive search firm placing CROs, VPs of Sales, CCOs, and senior commercial leaders across the United States and Canada.