If you hire a regular AE when what you need is a Founding AE, you'll churn the rep, burn months, and convince yourself the product can't be sold. If you hire a Founding AE before you're ready, you'll hand them a blank map and ask them to reach quota anyway.

Here's a clean way to think about the roles, what great looks like, and a real checklist for founder readiness.

AE vs. Founding AE

What a great AE does

  • Runs the playbook you already have
  • Sells what exists today
  • Works a defined ICP and territory
  • Leans on existing materials, tools, and process
  • Provides customer feedback through normal channels

What a great Founding AE does

  • Translates founder magic into a repeatable motion
  • Defines the ICP — not a napkin sketch, real clarity
  • Sells the future responsibly without over-promising
  • Builds the first playbook from scratch
  • Becomes the voice of the customer inside the company
  • Orchestrates the company around live deals
  • Documents everything so hire #2 can repeat it

A regular AE sells inside a system. A Founding AE designs a system while selling.

First 90 Days for a Founding AE

If walking in as a Founding AE, here's how the first quarter should run:

Founder Readiness: The Real Checklist

You're ready to hire a Founding AE when the answer is "yes" to most of these.

Market pull exists
  • New customers who did not know you personally have purchased
  • At least a few look alike in size, use case, and pricing
  • Inbound curiosity shows up from content, community, or product usage
A path is visible
  • You can describe the real steps from "never heard of us" to "signed"
  • You can explain if pilots are required and what "good" looks like
  • You've captured the founder pitch somewhere the AE can study
You can hand off work, not a wish
  • There is live pipeline the AE can advance that isn't only your network
  • You're comfortable with the AE calling your customers and hearing the truth
  • You will show up for late-stage calls when title matching matters
You are ready to pay for outcomes
  • Big commission checks will not trigger resentment
  • Comp is written, calculable, and you will honor it on time
  • You're open to a rational ramp or draw while the motion hardens
You're building demand, not just hoping for it
  • The founding team publishes, speaks, or ships consistently
  • You're hiring a seller to accelerate momentum, not to rescue a flatline

If most of these are "no," keep selling as the founder a little longer, document, and create pull. A Founding AE can figure things out. They cannot fix a void.

Passed the checklist? That's the starting line, not the finish line.

Confirming you're ready to hire is different from confirming your sales motion is ready to be handed off. Many founders clear the checklist above and still struggle because the motion itself — the way credibility is built, deals are advanced, and trust transfers beyond the founder — hasn't been stress-tested.

Before you post the role, it's worth asking six harder questions: Can someone other than you generate strong first calls? Can you define purchase intent, not just curiosity? Are your results consistent enough to replicate? Is your ICP specific enough to create learning velocity? Can your AI risk narrative hold up without you in the room? And critically — can closing authority actually transfer away from you?

A Founding AE placed into an untested motion will expose every gap, fast, and usually at the worst possible time. Run the motion diagnostic before you hire.

Comp: Make It Real

This role deserves real upside. It also needs cash flow sanity.

The bad smell everyone recognizes

Huge OTE built on fantasy pipeline. Microscopic equity. Hand-wavy quotas set by a spreadsheet.

If you would not be excited to sign that plan yourself, don't expect your Founding AE to be.

When Not to Hire

That isn't a Founding AE problem. That is a founder problem. Keep selling, tighten the ICP, build brand, and try again later.


Originally published on 100founders.ai — a weekly newsletter for B2B founders navigating the zero-to-revenue journey. Subscribe here →