If you're preparing to hire your first one or two salespeople, you've probably started thinking about your sales and marketing technology.
Questions like:
These are some of the most common questions I hear from founders preparing for growth.
Recently, I spoke with a business owner preparing to hire his first salespeople. His CRM renewal was approaching, and he was trying to determine what technology he actually needed before growing his team.
On the surface, he was asking about software.
What he was really asking was:
"Am I building my business the right way for the next stage of growth?"
After more than 25 years in sales leadership—and helping small business owners build sales organizations since 2009—I've noticed something important.
The businesses that successfully scale do not start by choosing better software.
They start by building better businesses.
Technology is important, but it is not the foundation.
It is the infrastructure that supports the culture, strategy, processes, people, and leadership already being built.
So instead of starting with the question, "Which software should I buy?", let's begin with a more important one:
What capabilities should my business have before I decide which technology to buy?
Once you can answer that question, choosing the right technology becomes much simpler.
At first glance, choosing a sales and marketing technology stack seems like a software decision.
Should you invest in a CRM?
Do you need marketing automation?
Can your industry-specific software handle what you need?
Those are all reasonable questions.
But in my experience, they aren't the first questions founders should be asking.
The real concern usually sounds something like this:
"I don't want to invest thousands of dollars in technology only to discover a year from now that I bought the wrong system."
Or...
"I don't want my first salesperson to fail because I didn't have the right systems in place."
Those aren't technology problems. They're business problems.
Too often, founders begin comparing features before they've defined what success actually looks like.
They watch demonstrations.
They read reviews.
They ask other business owners which platform they use.
Then they choose software hoping it will solve problems like inconsistent follow-up, poor visibility into the pipeline, weak marketing, or founder dependency.
Technology is an accelerator, not a substitute.
If you've built a strong culture, clear processes, consistent expectations, and organized customer information, technology helps your team execute more consistently and gives leaders better visibility.
If you haven't, technology won't fix the problem. It will simply make the gaps easier to see.
That's why choosing software isn't the first decision.
Building the right business is.
Before we compare CRMs, marketing automation platforms, proposal software, or industry-specific tools, we need a better framework for deciding what your business actually needs.
That's where we'll begin next.
If technology isn't the place to start, where should founders begin?
At EPOCH, we use a simple philosophy to guide every major business decision:
Get the Culture Right.
Get the Strategy Right.
Get the Processes Right.
Get the People Right.
Then select and implement the tools that support the people, processes, and strategy.
Technology is important, but it isn't the foundation of a growing business. Culture, strategy, processes, and people are leadership responsibilities. When those elements are strong, technology helps your team execute more consistently, improves visibility, and creates greater accountability. When they're weak, software simply exposes the gaps.
Think about building a house.
You don't start by shopping for appliances. You begin with the foundation, the blueprint, and the structure. Only after those are in place do you choose the appliances that best fit the home you're building.
Building a business works the same way.
This philosophy has shaped how we've helped small business owners build and grow sales organizations since 2009. It's also the foundation of the EPOCH Founder Sales Leader Framework.
The good news is you don't have to guess what to build first. The EPOCH Founder Sales Leader Framework provides a practical roadmap for developing the business capabilities that should drive your technology decisions.
The framework identifies the core business capabilities founders need to build as they transition from being the primary salesperson to becoming the leader of a scalable revenue engine. More importantly, each capability helps determine what technology your business actually needs—and when you need it.
Let's look at those capabilities.
If building the business comes before choosing the technology, the next logical question is:
What exactly should founders be building?
Founder-led businesses do not scale simply because they hire another salesperson or invest in better software. They scale because the founder develops the capabilities needed to lead a growing revenue organization.
Our philosophy tells us the order: get the culture, strategy, processes, and people right—then choose the tools.
The EPOCH Founder Sales Leader Framework shows which capabilities to build as the business grows.
Together, they provide a roadmap for building a scalable revenue engine.
The framework identifies eight core capabilities founders typically develop as they transition from being the company’s primary salesperson to becoming the leader of a growing sales organization:
Each capability influences the technology your business needs. Some require very little software. Others require stronger systems, greater visibility, and more disciplined execution.
That is why asking, “What is the best CRM?” is usually the wrong place to begin.
A better question is:
“Which capability does my business need to strengthen next?”
Once you know the answer, selecting technology becomes much easier because you are choosing tools to support a capability—not hoping software will create one.
For the rest of this article, we'll focus on the five Founder Sales Leader Capabilities that have the greatest influence on your sales and marketing technology decisions as you prepare to hire your first one or two salespeople.
Before you hire your first salesperson, ask yourself one simple question:
Where will their opportunities come from?
Too many founders assume hiring a salesperson will solve their lead generation problem.
In reality, your first salesperson is far more likely to succeed when they inherit a business that consistently creates conversations with the right prospects.
For years, many small business owners believed they couldn't compete with larger companies in digital marketing. I agreed with that thinking. It seemed wiser to invest in selling and relationship building than to compete with companies that had much larger marketing budgets.
But buyer behavior has changed, and so has my thinking.
Today's buyers research online, compare alternatives, read reviews, consume educational content, and often form opinions before they ever speak with a salesperson.
Digital marketing is no longer optional for businesses that want to scale.
A marketing engine is simply a repeatable system for attracting the right prospects, building trust before the first sales conversation, and creating a steady flow of qualified opportunities for your sales team. It doesn't have to be complicated. It does need to work consistently.
That doesn't mean every company needs an enterprise marketing budget. It means every growing business needs a marketing system that's appropriate for its stage of growth.
For most founder-led businesses preparing to hire their first salespeople, that marketing engine includes technology that supports:
Examples include HubSpot, Brevo, MailerLite, HubSpot Forms, Gravity Forms, and Typeform, depending on your business model and stage of growth.
The goal isn't to own the most marketing technology.
It's to build a marketing engine that consistently turns interested prospects into qualified sales conversations.
Next, we'll look at how founders complement marketing by creating predictable opportunities through referrals, strategic relationships, networking, and proactive business development.
Marketing is only one way to generate new business.
As your company grows, you need a second capability: creating predictable opportunities through intentional business development.
Many founder-led businesses rely on the owner's relationships and reputation.
That works—for a while.
After working with small business owners for many years, I've noticed this is often the first growth ceiling they encounter. The founder knows exactly who to call next, but others in the business struggle to do the same. Top-of-the-funnel opportunities exist in the founder's head instead of inside the business.
But if your first salesperson depends on waiting for the phone to ring or hoping for referrals, you're asking them to succeed without a repeatable opportunity creation system.
Opportunities are created by people following a repeatable business development process. Technology supports that work by helping your team stay organized, follow through consistently, and understand which activities are producing results.
As you prepare to hire your first salespeople, your technology should support:
Examples include CRM platforms such as HubSpot, Zoho CRM, or Pipedrive; LinkedIn and LinkedIn Sales Navigator for relationship-based prospecting; scheduling tools such as HubSpot Meetings and Calendly; and prospecting platforms like Apollo or LeadIQ. The right combination depends on your business model, sales process, and stage of growth.
The goal is to make opportunity creation intentional, measurable, and repeatable instead of relying on the founder's memory or personal network.
When opportunity creation becomes a business capability instead of a founder responsibility, your sales team has a predictable flow of opportunities to pursue—and your business becomes far less dependent on you.
Next, we'll look at how technology supports the capability every founder ultimately wants to improve: winning more of the right opportunities.
Creating opportunities is only half the battle.
To build a scalable business, your team must consistently convert the right opportunities into customers.
That's why founders need a repeatable sales process before hiring additional salespeople.
Without one, every salesperson develops their own approach to discovery, qualification, proposals, follow-up, and closing. Results become inconsistent, coaching becomes difficult, and the founder gets pulled back into every important opportunity.
Winning more deals starts with a disciplined sales process. The right technology supports that process by helping your team prepare, execute consistently, capture the right information, and improve over time.
As you prepare to hire your first salespeople, your technology should support:
Examples include CRM platforms such as HubSpot, Zoho CRM, or Pipedrive; proposal platforms such as PandaDoc, Proposify, or DocuSign; meeting platforms such as Zoom, Google Meet, or Microsoft Teams; and video messaging tools such as Loom, Vidyard, or BombBomb.
Success comes from helping every salesperson follow the same process so leaders can coach more effectively, improve results, and avoid being pulled back into every important deal.
Next, we'll look at the capability that transforms sales activity into visibility, accountability, and better leadership.
As your business grows, you eventually reach a point where you can no longer manage sales from memory.
You need visibility.
Not just into your pipeline, but into the activities, opportunities, and trends that drive future results.
That's the purpose of a CRM.
It isn't simply a place to store contacts.
It's the foundation for measuring performance, coaching salespeople, forecasting revenue, and creating accountability.
The key is to capture only the information that helps someone make a better decision, coach more effectively, or improve future performance.
Meaningful scorecards, dashboards, and reports depend on trusted data.
Trusted data depends on a clearly defined source of truth, consistent adoption, and leadership that reinforces them.
Your CRM doesn't have to contain every piece of business information, but everyone should know which system is the authoritative source for customer relationships, pipeline information, and other critical sales data.
As you prepare to hire your first salespeople, your technology should support:
Leading examples include CRM platforms such as HubSpot, Zoho CRM, or Pipedrive, along with reporting and dashboard capabilities that provide timely, reliable visibility.
Great sales leadership doesn't happen from behind a dashboard.
The best leaders use data to identify where to focus, then participate in real sales conversations, observe performance, and coach what they see.
Next, we'll look at how the right technology helps new salespeople succeed faster through consistent onboarding, shared processes, and clear expectations.
Hiring your first salesperson isn't the goal.
Building a sales team that can grow the business without depending on you is.
The right salesperson will struggle without clear expectations, documented processes, effective onboarding, and the tools needed to do the job consistently.
Your first salesperson shouldn't have to figure out how you sell. They should inherit playbooks, tools, and coaching that help them succeed faster than you did.
As you prepare to hire your first salespeople, your technology should support:
Examples include CRM platforms such as HubSpot, Zoho CRM, or Pipedrive; document management platforms such as Google Drive, Microsoft OneDrive, or Dropbox; and shared knowledge bases that provide every salesperson with the same processes, messaging, and best practices.
Success means giving new salespeople a system they can learn, trust, and execute with confidence.
When every salesperson follows the same playbook, onboarding becomes faster, coaching becomes more effective, and performance becomes more consistent. Instead of teaching each new hire from scratch, founders can focus on developing people and leading the business.
Once you've built these capabilities, you're ready to answer the original question: What should your sales and marketing technology stack look like as your business grows from founder salesperson to founder sales leader?
So, what should your sales and marketing technology stack look like before you hire your first two salespeople?
The answer depends less on the software you choose than on the stage of growth your business has reached.
As your business grows, your technology should evolve to support new capabilities—not simply add more features.
At this stage, simplicity wins.
Your technology should help you capture leads, manage customer relationships, schedule meetings, create proposals, and follow up consistently. A simple marketing system, CRM, email, document management, and proposal tools are often all that's required.
The focus now shifts from personal productivity to shared execution.
Both people need access to the same customer information, sales process, playbooks, and opportunity pipeline. Marketing, business development, and sales activities should become consistent, measurable, and visible.
One client we worked with reached this stage and was adamant about upgrading to HubSpot Sales Professional. Rather than starting with the software, we focused first on putting the necessary business capabilities in place. Together, we developed playbooks for inbound marketing, Strategic Centers of Influence, Linked Networking, and outbound prospecting. Once those were in place, they were ready to expand their CRM capabilities to support those playbooks, improve follow-up, and provide better visibility for leadership.
The technology supported the new processes. Without those process improvements, the increased investment in software would have been a waste of money.
As additional salespeople join the team, technology should give leaders the visibility to coach, forecast, and hold the team accountable. Every major business function should have a clearly defined source of truth.
Many founders compare spreadsheets, standalone CRMs, industry-specific operating software, marketing automation platforms, and integrated business systems.
The best technology stack is the one that strengthens the capabilities your business needs next, establishes a trusted source of truth for your critical information, and is simple enough for your team to use consistently.
That's why we recommend building your culture, strategy, processes, and people first—then selecting the technology that best supports them.
By now, you may be wondering whether your business has too little technology, too much technology, or simply the wrong technology for your current stage of growth.
The answer isn't found by counting applications.
It's found by evaluating how well your technology supports the capabilities your business needs today.
These are usually signs that the business has outgrown its current systems.
These are often signs that technology has outpaced the business capabilities it's meant to support.
The goal isn't to own the fewest tools or the most tools.
The goal is to have the right technology, supporting the right capabilities, at the right stage of growth.
If your technology feels too simple or unnecessarily complex, don't start by shopping for another platform.
Start by asking:
Which business capability are we trying to strengthen next?
The answer will usually clarify what your technology needs to support.
Before investing in another sales or marketing tool, ask yourself these questions.
If you answered "no" to several of these questions, your next investment probably isn't software—it's strengthening the business capabilities the software is meant to support.
Evaluate your business before you evaluate your software.
If you've made it this far, you may be wondering why I haven't recommended a specific CRM, marketing automation platform, or sales technology stack.
That was intentional.
Feature comparisons are valuable—but only after you've defined what your business needs the technology to accomplish.
Otherwise, you're comparing software without knowing what problem you're trying to solve.
Before comparing products, answer these questions:
Once you've answered those questions, software comparisons become far more meaningful.
That's exactly what we'll explore in future articles.
Choosing the right sales and marketing technology is only one part of building a scalable revenue engine.
Over the coming months, we'll continue answering the questions founders ask most often as they transition from founder salesperson to founder sales leader.
Future articles in this series include:
My goal is to help founders build businesses that can grow beyond themselves—and choose technology that supports that growth.
If there's a sales or marketing technology question you'd like us to address in a future article, let me know.
If enough founders are asking the same question, we'll answer it.
Section 14: The Right Technology Starts With the Right Business
If you're preparing to hire your first one or two salespeople, don't start by asking, "Which CRM should I buy?"
Start by asking:
What kind of business am I trying to build?
The answer to that question will shape every technology decision that follows.
When your culture is healthy, your strategy is clear, your processes are documented, your people are in the right roles, and your business is developing the capabilities it needs, choosing technology becomes much easier.
Instead of searching for software that will fix your business, you'll choose technology that strengthens the business you're already building.
That's the difference between buying tools and building a scalable revenue engine.
Technology will continue to evolve. New platforms will emerge. Existing products will add new features. Artificial intelligence will continue to change the way sales and marketing teams work.
But one thing won't change.
Technology is most valuable when it supports a well-built business.
Build the business first.
Then build the technology stack that helps it grow.
That's how founders scale beyond themselves.
As we continue this series, we’ll answer more of the sales and marketing technology questions founders are asking most often.
Which question is most important to you right now?
Let me know. If enough founders are asking the same question, we’ll answer it.