Sales Talent Assessment: How to Know Who to Hire, Coach, and Move

You don’t have a sales problem. You have a measurement problem disguised as sales.

Most founders and sales leaders operate on gut feel when making talent decisions. They hire based on resumes and charm. They coach based on what feels broken. They avoid firing until the damage is catastrophic. According to RevHeat data from 187 companies evaluating 5,000+ sales reps, this guesswork costs the average company $237,000 per bad hire and leaves 94% of sales teams with critical skill gaps they can’t see.

Key Takeaway: Sales talent assessment is the systematic measurement of 21 core sales competencies to determine who to hire, where to coach, and when to move people. Companies using competency-based assessment see 2.7x higher revenue per rep and reduce bad hires by 68%. The data from 5,000+ sellers shows only 6% possess the complete elite skill set — which means your current team almost certainly has 3-5 critical gaps you’re not addressing.

— Ken Lundin, CEO & Founder of RevHeat
Last Updated: January 2025

TL;DR

  • Only 6% of salespeople have elite-level skills across all 21 core competencies — 94% have at least one critical gap that compounds over time
  • System skills show 3-5x larger gaps than relationship skills — Social Selling (600% gap), Hunting (400%), and CRM Savvy (283%) are the most under-invested, highest-impact areas
  • The average sales leader overestimates team capability by 40-60% — without objective assessment, you’re coaching blind and hiring on hope
  • Moving your bottom quartile up one tier produces more revenue than improving your top quartile — the exponential performance pattern means small improvements in the right skills create outsized results

What Sales Talent Assessment Actually Is (And What It Isn’t)

Sales talent assessment is the objective, data-driven measurement of sales competencies against a defined standard. It answers three questions every sales leader faces daily:

  1. Who should I hire? (Pre-hire assessment: Does this candidate have the baseline competencies for the role?)
  2. Where should I coach? (Development assessment: Which specific skill gaps are costing us revenue?)
  3. When should I move someone? (Performance assessment: Is this a coaching problem or a capability problem?)

What it’s NOT:
– Personality tests that tell you if someone is “outgoing” (irrelevant to performance)
– Generic 360 reviews based on subjective opinions (no predictive validity)
– Annual performance reviews tied to compensation (backward-looking, politically distorted)
– One-time assessments during hiring (competencies change — measure continuously)

The RevHeat framework measures 21 core sales competencies across two dimensions:
Weak → Strong: Current capability level (1-10 scale)
Bottom 10% → Top 10%: Performance gap compared to elite sellers in your industry

This dual measurement reveals not just WHERE someone is weak, but HOW MUCH that gap costs you compared to what’s possible.

The 21-Competency Framework: What Actually Predicts Sales Performance

After analyzing 5,000+ sales reps across 187 companies, we’ve identified 21 core competencies that predict revenue performance. They fall into three tiers based on gap size and business impact.

Tier 1: System Skills (200%+ Gap — Fix These First)

These six competencies show the largest performance gaps and deliver the highest ROI when improved:

CompetencyGap (Bottom 10% → Top 10%)What It Measures
Social Selling600%Leveraging digital networks, content, and social proof systematically
Hunting400%Systematic prospecting and pipeline generation through repeatable process
Farming330%Structured account expansion and upsell/cross-sell execution
CRM Savvy283%Using CRM as a selling tool (forecasting, triggers, automation) not a reporting burden
Selling Value233%Diagnosing problems and quantifying ROI before prescribing solutions
Negotiating210%Process-based negotiation frameworks vs. personality-driven concessions

Critical insight: These are SYSTEM skills, not personality traits. They’re taught through process, not motivation. The 600% social selling gap is the single largest untapped revenue opportunity in the dataset — and 80% of companies don’t even measure it.

Tier 2: Hybrid Skills (100-200% Gap — Optimize Next)

CompetencyGapWhat It Measures
Sales Posturing150%Confidence derived from preparation and process mastery
Consultative Selling150%Diagnosis before prescription — asking vs. telling
Qualifying150%Ruthless pipeline quality management (BANT, MEDDIC, or equivalent)
Reaching Decision Makers133%Process-driven access to economic buyers and authority
Relationship Building117%Rapport, trust, and long-term account relationships
Presentation Approach110%Structure, storytelling, and executive-level communication

These skills matter, but they’re half as impactful as Tier 1. Most training budgets are backwards — 60% goes here, 10% goes to Tier 1.

Tier 3: Saturated Skills (<100% Gap — Maintain, Don’t Over-Invest)

Account Management shows an 18% gap — the smallest in the entire dataset. This is the most over-invested, least differentiating skill. If you’re spending 20% of your training budget on “account management skills,” you’re lighting money on fire.

The remaining 9 competencies (Time Management, Objection Handling, Active Listening, etc.) cluster in the 80-100% gap range. Important? Yes. High-leverage? No.

The Assessment Process: How to Measure What Matters

Effective sales talent assessment follows a four-stage cycle:

1. Baseline Competency Mapping (Hire Stage)

When: Pre-hire and onboarding (first 30 days)
What: Measure all 21 competencies against role requirements
Output: Competency scorecard with Tier 1 skill gaps highlighted

For hiring decisions:
– Tier 1 gaps: Must be coachable or disqualifying (you can’t fix a 400% hunting gap through “motivation”)
– Tier 2 gaps: Expected in early-stage sellers, addressable through structured onboarding
– Tier 3 gaps: Rarely disqualifying unless extreme

2. Quarterly Competency Review (Coach Stage)

When: Every 90 days for all sellers
What: Re-measure Tier 1 and Tier 2 skills, track velocity of improvement
Output: Individual development plans with specific skill targets

Coaching allocation rule:
– Bottom quartile: 60% of coaching time (highest ROI per hour invested)
– Middle 50%: 30% of coaching time (prevent regression)
– Top quartile: 10% of coaching time (mostly peer learning and advanced techniques)

The exponential performance pattern means moving your bottom quartile up one tier produces MORE revenue than improving your top quartile. Most leaders do the opposite.

3. Annual Strategic Assessment (Move Stage)

When: Annually, tied to comp planning (not performance reviews)
What: Full 21-competency assessment + role fit analysis
Output: Hire/coach/move decisions with objective data

Decision framework:
Hire more: Competency scores trending up across Tier 1, consistent quota attainment
Coach harder: Competency gaps identified but velocity of improvement is positive
Move (lateral): Strong in some competencies but mismatched to role (farmer in hunter role)
Move (out): No improvement velocity after two quarters of focused coaching

4. Continuous Competency Tracking (System Stage)

When: Real-time via CRM activity data and deal outcome analysis
What: Leading indicators of competency application (activity metrics that predict skill usage)
Output: Early warning system for regression or skill decay

Examples:
– Social Selling: LinkedIn engagement rate, content shares, inbound leads from social
– Hunting: Outbound touches per week, connect rate, meetings booked per 100 touches
– CRM Savvy: Data quality score, forecast accuracy, pipeline velocity

This is where sales people strategy becomes operational — you’re not managing activity, you’re managing competency application.

The Hidden Cost of Assessment Avoidance

Most founders avoid formal sales talent assessment because it feels like overhead. The real cost of a bad sales hire proves otherwise.

What assessment avoidance actually costs:

Direct costs:
– $237,000 average cost per bad sales hire (salary + lost opportunity + team disruption)
– 68% of bad hires could have been prevented with pre-hire competency assessment
– 9.2 months average time-to-termination when hired without assessment vs. 3.1 months with assessment

Indirect costs:
– Sales leaders spend 40% of their time coaching the wrong skills because they can’t see the real gaps
– Bottom performers stay 2.3x longer without objective data forcing the decision
– Top performers leave 1.8x faster when surrounded by unaddressed mediocrity

Opportunity costs:
– Companies without competency frameworks promote based on tenure and likeability, not capability
– 73% of sales managers were promoted from top individual contributors — but only 31% possess the competencies required for effective coaching (different skill set entirely)
– Revenue per rep stagnates because you’re optimizing the wrong variables

The data from 187 companies shows a clear pattern: assessment avoidance doesn’t save time — it creates a compounding talent debt that gets exponentially more expensive to fix.

How Assessment Changes Across the 5 Growth Stages

Sales talent assessment isn’t one-size-fits-all. What you measure and how you act on it changes as you scale through the 5 stages of revenue growth.

Startup Stage ($0-$3M): Founder-Led Assessment

Primary challenge: You ARE the top seller. You need to clone yourself.
Assessment focus: Can this person do what I do (even if they can’t articulate how)?
Key competencies: Selling Value (233% gap), Consultative Selling (150% gap), Relationship Building (117% gap)
Hiring mistake: Hiring “experienced” sellers who need structure you don’t have yet

Emerging Stage ($3M-$10M): First Formal Assessments

Primary challenge: Your first 2-3 hires are inconsistent. You don’t know why.
Assessment focus: Which competencies predict success in YOUR specific sale?
Key competencies: Qualifying (150% gap), Hunting (400% gap), CRM Savvy (283% gap)
Coaching mistake: Treating all skill gaps as equally important (they’re not — Tier 1 first)

Scaling Stage ($10M-$30M): System Skill Infrastructure

Primary challenge: Hero-selling breaks. You need repeatable process.
Assessment focus: Who can execute the system vs. who needs the system to not exist?
Key competencies: Social Selling (600% gap — largest untapped opportunity), Hunting (400% gap), Negotiating (210% gap)
Move mistake: Keeping “rainmakers” who refuse to follow process (they cap your scale)

Optimizing Stage ($30M-$75M): Competency-Based Coaching Layers

Primary challenge: Management layers are in place but coaching is inconsistent.
Assessment focus: Do your managers possess coaching competencies (not just selling competencies)?
Key competencies: Sales Posturing (150% gap), Reaching Decision Makers (133% gap), Presentation Approach (110% gap)
System mistake: Assuming top sellers automatically become effective coaches (only 31% do)

Enterprise Stage ($75M-$150M+): Predictive Competency Models

Primary challenge: Talent planning at scale — hiring 20+ sellers per year.
Assessment focus: Which competency profiles predict success in each role (SDR vs. AE vs. AM)?
Key competencies: Role-specific — different profiles for different functions
Data mistake: Not tracking competency-to-outcome correlation (you’re flying blind on what actually predicts performance)

In-Depth Resources: Sales Talent Assessment

These posts provide the detailed frameworks, data, and step-by-step processes for implementing competency-based assessment:

Core Assessment Frameworks

Hiring & Selection

Coaching & Development

Performance Management

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