Why Your GTM Job Description Isn’t Attracting the Right Talent
Why Your GTM Job Description Isn’t Attracting the Right Talent
The Overlooked First Step in Hiring Success
When a hiring process struggles, most companies look at:
- Candidate quality
- Interview process
- Compensation
But one of the most common issues actually starts much earlier:
The job description itself isn’t attracting the right people.
In competitive SaaS and AI markets, your job spec isn’t just a formality — it’s a sales document.
And many companies are still getting it wrong.
1️⃣ Most Job Descriptions Are Too Generic
A typical GTM job spec often includes:
- A long list of responsibilities
- Broad requirements
- Generic company descriptions
The problem?
It doesn’t differentiate your opportunity.
Top candidates aren’t looking for “another AE role” — they’re looking for:
- A compelling product
- A clear market opportunity
- A role where they can succeed
If your job description could apply to 50 other companies, it won’t stand out.
2️⃣ There’s No Clear Picture of Success
Strong GTM candidates want to understand:
“What does success actually look like in this role?”
But most job specs don’t answer that.
Instead of vague expectations, high-performing candidates are looking for clarity on:
- Pipeline expectations
- Deal size and sales cycle
- Quota and ramp timeline
- Support from SDRs/marketing
Without this, candidates are left guessing — and often assume the worst.
3️⃣ The GTM Context Is Missing
One of the biggest gaps in most job descriptions is lack of context around the revenue engine.
Candidates want to know:
- Is there product-market fit?
- Where does pipeline come from?
- What’s working today — and what isn’t?
Without this, the role feels risky.
The best companies treat this as an opportunity to sell the vision and the reality — not just list tasks.
4️⃣ You’re Not Speaking to the Right Profile
Another common issue:
Job descriptions try to appeal to everyone — and end up appealing to no one.
For example:
- Enterprise AEs vs mid-market AEs
- Builders vs process-driven sellers
- Early-stage vs scale-stage operators
Top candidates quickly self-select out if the role feels misaligned.
The more specific you are, the better your conversion.
Key Takeaways
- Your job description is a critical part of your hiring funnel
- Generic specs fail to attract top GTM talent
- Candidates want clarity on success, not just responsibilities
- Context around pipeline and product-market fit is essential
- Specificity improves candidate quality and conversion
Final Thoughts
In today’s market, attracting top GTM talent requires more than just posting a role.
It requires positioning the opportunity effectively from the very first touchpoint.
The companies that consistently hire well are the ones that:
- Clearly articulate the opportunity
- Show candidates how they’ll succeed
- And differentiate themselves early
Because the best candidates don’t apply everywhere — they apply where it’s clear they can win.
At GroTech Search, we help SaaS and AI scale-ups position their GTM hiring opportunities to attract and secure high-impact talent.