The 7 Mistakes Companies Make When Hiring Their First SDR

The 7 Mistakes Companies Make When Hiring Their First SDR

For many growing businesses, hiring their first Sales Development Representative feels like a natural step. The Founder has been doing most of the selling, pipeline is inconsistent, and growth targets are increasing. Bringing in a dedicated salesperson appears to be the logical next move.

But building a successful outbound function is rarely as simple as hiring one person and expecting results.

Having worked with hundreds of organisations developing their sales functions, we regularly see the same mistakes appear again and again. Avoiding these pitfalls can save months of frustration and significant investment.

1

Hiring Before Building a Sales Plan

Many companies jump straight to recruitment.

The thinking is simple: we need more sales activity.

But without a clear plan, even experienced SDRs struggle to succeed.

Before hiring, organisations need clarity around:

  • target markets and ideal customer profiles
  • messaging and value propositions
  • qualification criteria
  • sales process structure
  • lead handover between SDR and closing teams

This is where an outbound sales playbook becomes critical. It provides the structure that enables new hires to operate effectively from day one and ensures your team is targeting the right prospects with the right messaging.

2

Expecting an SDR to Replicate Founder Success

Founders often underestimate how much of their own success comes from:

  • deep product knowledge
  • personal credibility
  • autonomy in conversations
  • passion for the business

A new hire simply does not have those advantages.

Expecting an SDR to immediately replicate founder-level results can quickly lead to disappointment. Even highly capable salespeople need time to develop confidence in the product, the market and the messaging.

3

Underestimating Ramp Time

Many businesses assume that once hired, an SDR will start producing meetings almost immediately.

In reality, most SDRs require three to six months before consistently generating pipeline.

During that time they must learn:

  • the market
  • the product
  • the messaging
  • the sales process
  • the objection landscape

Structured training and coaching are essential to accelerate that learning curve. In fact, this is exactly how we build high-performing outsourced SDRs within our own programmes.

Without that structure, early performance can appear disappointing and organisations may lose confidence in their investment before the foundations are in place.

4

Hiring the Wrong Type of Salesperson

Not all sales professionals are the same.

An SDR responsible for high-volume outbound activity requires a very different skill set from someone navigating complex enterprise buying groups.

When hiring your first SDR, businesses must think carefully about what the role actually requires.

For example:

  • high activity outreach versus account-based engagement
  • simple product conversations versus technical discovery
  • short sales cycles versus long consultative deals

Each of these scenarios requires a different type of salesperson.

Getting that match wrong can quickly slow pipeline development.

5

Ignoring the Importance of Data

Even highly capable SDRs cannot succeed without quality data.

Without a defined data strategy, new hires can spend large amounts of time:

  • researching prospects
  • validating contact information
  • identifying suitable target accounts

This dramatically reduces time spent actually selling.

Strong outbound performance depends on clear target profiles and access to clean, segmented data that enables SDRs to focus on conversations rather than research.

6

Underestimating the True Cost

Salary is only one component of building an SDR function.

Organisations must also account for:

  • recruitment costs
  • ramp time
  • sales technology
  • leadership management time
  • attrition risk

When everything is factored in, the real investment can easily exceed £70k-£100k in the first year before predictable pipeline emerges.

Many organisations only discover this after attempting to build the function internally.

7

Expecting Immediate ROI

Outbound pipeline takes time to build.

Deals generated today may not close for months depending on the sales cycle.

If expectations are misaligned internally, leaders can lose confidence in the investment before it has had time to deliver results.

A realistic plan for pipeline generation, opportunity creation and revenue forecasting is essential. Many organisations discover these challenges when reviewing their sales process and identifying where pipeline performance is breaking down.

Building a Sales Function the Right Way

Hiring your first SDR can absolutely be the right move. But success rarely comes from recruitment alone.

High-performing outbound teams are built on strong foundations:

  • a clear sales playbook
  • well-defined target markets
  • consistent messaging
  • structured coaching
  • realistic expectations around pipeline timelines

For some organisations, building this capability internally makes sense. For others, working with an outsourced SDR team can provide a faster route to consistent pipeline while avoiding the challenges of recruitment, ramp time and management overhead.

Final Thought

As Air Marketing Founder & CEO, Owen Richards, often says:

“You’re far more likely to get it wrong before you get it right.”

The key is learning from the mistakes others have already made.

If you’re reviewing how to build or scale your outbound function, we’re always happy to share what we’re seeing across B2B sales teams and how different organisations are approaching pipeline generation.

Complete the form below and we’ll get back to you within one working day.

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Air Marketing Celebrates 10 Years of Growth, People and Pipeline

Air Marketing Celebrates 10 Years as an Outsourced Sales Partner

Air Marketing is celebrating its 10th anniversary, marking a decade of building sales capability, supporting client growth and developing one of the UK’s leading outsourced sales teams.

Founded in 2016 by Owen Richards and Richard Forrest, Air Marketing has grown from a small start-up into a business of around 100 people delivering outsourced SDR, telemarketing and sales services for organisations across multiple sectors.

Reflecting on the milestone, Founder and CEO, Owen Richards, described the journey as anything but straightforward.

“I cannot believe it has been 10 years. Where the time goes, I don’t know.

I’m not going to do one of those posts where everything has been brilliant. It absolutely hasn’t. In fact, at times it has been pretty horrendous. But that’s the reality of building a business.”

 

While the path has included its share of challenges, the company’s growth reflects a consistent focus on people, performance and long-term partnerships.

Building a Sales Business From the Ground Up

Air Marketing was founded with a clear belief: sales is a specialist discipline and organisations perform better when it is executed by trained professionals using structured processes.

Over the past decade, the business has evolved from pure telemarketing support into a full sales delivery partner, providing:

Today, Air teams operate as an embedded extension of client organisations, combining experienced sales professionals with data-driven campaign optimisation and continuous training.

This approach has helped clients generate predictable pipeline and measurable revenue growth.

The People Behind the Growth

For Owen, the defining factor behind Air’s progress has always been the people who helped build it.

In the early years, team members such as Shaun Weston and Marco Alfano-Rogers played a pivotal role in helping establish the foundations of the business.

As the company expanded, leaders including Gracie-May Bryan, Alex Burgess, Verity Studley-Wootton, Neil Clarke and Clodagh Murphy contributed to shaping the organisation and strengthening its delivery model.

More recently, the leadership team has expanded again, with Scott Walker, Esta Rigler and Wesley Vedder helping drive operational maturity and improved commercial performance across the business.

This evolution has helped the company reach new levels of profitability, process maturity and campaign performance. Owen says:

“Despite having rocks thrown at us at times, these guys run into battle with me time and time again. The result has been outstanding to see.”

A Partnership at the Heart of Air

The business was originally launched by Owen Richards and Richard Forrest, who had already spent nearly a decade working together in Australia before starting Air.

That long-standing relationship remains central to the company’s story.

“Richard and I started this journey in early 2016, having already worked together in Australia for around eight years. Our connection goes far beyond business partnerships or co-founders.”

 

Owen also paid particular tribute to Samantha Bennett, highlighting her role in supporting the company’s journey from the early days through to its current scale.

“I literally could not have done this without Sam. A true friend, an exceptional teammate and one of the kindest, most supportive people I’ve ever met.”

A Decade of Lessons

Looking back over ten years of building the company, Owen believes the biggest lesson is not about growth metrics or financial milestones.

Instead, it comes down to the people you surround yourself with.

“Career success is not the money in your pocket, revenue growth, or the number of meetings your AI agent books while you sleep.

It’s how you choose to live, to work, to share moments with people. It’s having the freedom to laugh at work, win and lose together, and still feel like you have purpose.”

Looking Ahead

While the anniversary marks a significant milestone, the focus for Air Marketing remains firmly on the future.

Demand for outsourced sales capability continues to grow as organisations look for more predictable pipeline and specialist expertise without the cost and complexity of building internal teams.

With an experienced leadership team, a sales academy and a proven delivery model, Air Marketing is entering its second decade with the same ambition that launched the business in the first place.

“To everyone who has played a role in the last 10 years – thank you.”