Mis-hires rarely fail on capability, they fail on context
If you’ve hired in AdTech long enough, you’ve seen it.
A strong CV.
Relevant logos.
Impressive numbers.
And then… 6–9 months later you’re wondering how someone with “the perfect background” didn’t land.
Our proprietary takeaway from patterns across AdTech hiring mandates:
Most “failed hires” don’t fail because they can’t do the job.
They fail because they were hired into the wrong context.
AdTech is particularly unforgiving here because the surface-level job titles look similar — but the environment behind them can be completely different.
A “Sales Director” at a DSP isn’t living the same reality as one at an SSP.
A “Commercial Lead” selling measurement doesn’t operate like one selling a managed service.
A “Partnerships” hire who thrived in cookies-era identity might struggle in a privacy-first go-to-market.
So when hiring goes wrong, it’s rarely a talent problem.
It’s a context definition problem.
The real gap: employers write job specs, candidates accept “games”
Most companies brief a role like a job description: responsibilities, targets, “must have” bullets.
Most candidates evaluate it like a game they can win: where the demand comes from, who buys, what slows deals, who owns the narrative, what “good” looks like internally.
When those two interpretations don’t match, you get an expensive outcome:
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High activity, low conversion
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Great relationships, no revenue
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Early pipeline, late-stage stalls
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“Smart operator” who can’t get traction
Across mandates, three context gaps show up again and again.
Context Gap #1: Motion mismatch (the most common AdTech mis-hire driver)
In AdTech, “enterprise sales” can mean at least four distinct motions:
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Agency-led buying (holding companies, trader desks, multi-layer stakeholders)
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Direct brand buying (marketing, commerce, data teams, shifting priorities)
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Publisher/supply-side sales (inventory strategy, yield, monetisation trade-offs)
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Platform/technical sale (integration cycles, security, data governance, product maturity)
On paper, it’s all “enterprise.” In reality, the motion determines everything:
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Sales cycle length
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Stakeholder count
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How political the deal becomes
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Whether ROI is provable quickly
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How procurement behaves
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How much technical depth is required
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The role of relationships vs product proof
Pattern we see:
Companies hire someone who wins via one motion (e.g., brand-led velocity with strong inbound demand)… into a business that requires another (e.g., agency politics + long-cycle + procurement + complex activation).
The result is predictable:
You get activity, not outcomes.
Fix: define the motion in the brief as clearly as you define the role.
Not “sell to agencies,” but:
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Who is the economic buyer?
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Who blocks the deal?
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What triggers urgency?
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What’s the typical first “yes”?
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What’s the typical last objection?
In AdTech, motion clarity reduces mis-hire risk more than almost anything else.
Context Gap #2: Proof without conditions (the CV tells you what happened — not why)
AdTech CVs are full of “proof”:
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“Closed $X”
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“Built $XM pipeline”
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“Scaled a new market”
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“Top performer 3 years running”
Useful… but incomplete.
Because outcomes in AdTech are heavily shaped by conditions.
Same revenue number can be achieved in wildly different environments:
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Inbound vs outbound reality
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Brand pull vs challenger selling
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Established category vs “explain what we do”
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Founder-led close vs process-led close
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Pricing power vs discount-dependent
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Clear attribution vs messy measurement
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Strong integrations vs scrappy workarounds
Pattern we see:
Hiring teams over-index on outcome proof and under-index on the conditions that made those outcomes possible.
So they hire a “proven winner”… and put them into a totally different set of conditions.
Fix: In interviews, pressure-test with condition questions:
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“Where did demand actually come from?”
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“What did you do when you didn’t have a narrative the market understood?”
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“How did you create urgency when budgets were already allocated?”
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“How much of the win was relationships vs product/ROI proof?”
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“What broke most often late-stage — and how did you unblock it?”
In AdTech, the best predictor isn’t the number.
It’s whether the candidate has won under similar constraints.
Context Gap #3: Metrics that aren’t agreed (and the hire becomes the compromise)
AdTech roles often carry multiple expectations at once:
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Pipeline creation
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Revenue delivery
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Strategic positioning
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Partnerships
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Product feedback loops
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Sometimes… team building too
That can work — but only when leadership agrees on what’s prioritised.
Pattern we see:
Stakeholders want different things, don’t resolve it upfront, and the new hire absorbs the ambiguity.
Examples that show up repeatedly:
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Commercial wants a hunter; Product wants an “advisory seller”
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Founder wants logos; Finance wants margin discipline
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RevOps wants process; Market needs creativity
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Partnerships wants long-term ecosystem; Sales wants this quarter’s revenue
The candidate gets hired as the “solution”… and then gets judged against shifting scorecards.
Fix: force alignment before you go to market:
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What does “good” look like in 90 days?
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What is the one leading indicator we care about most?
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If two priorities conflict, which wins?
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What will we de-prioritise to make this role achievable?
When you don’t decide, you don’t “stay flexible.”
You just outsource the decision to the person you hired.
The AdTech hiring reframe: define the environment, not just the role
A simple, repeatable way to reduce mis-hire risk is to write the brief in three layers:
1) The Motion
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Who buys? (agency, brand, publisher, platform)
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How do they buy? (RFP, relationship-led, performance proof, partner route)
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What blocks deals? (privacy, measurement, integration, procurement, internal politics)
2) The Conditions
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Is demand already present or do we create it?
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How strong is our narrative today?
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What’s our proof: case studies, benchmarks, logos, performance data?
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What’s the implementation reality: fast activation or long technical cycle?
3) The Metrics
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What are the leading indicators? (e.g., qualified agency relationships, live campaigns, integration milestones, win rate)
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What are the lagging indicators? (revenue, retention, expansion)
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What’s the time horizon for meaningful impact in this category?
If you can define those three, you can hire more accurately — and onboard more realistically.
What strong AdTech operators ask (and average ones don’t)
One of the clearest signals we see in process:
Top candidates ask context questions early — because they’re evaluating whether they can win.
They ask things like:
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“Where are deals stalling today — and why?”
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“Is measurement a strength or a debate in our sales cycle?”
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“How much is relationships vs performance proof?”
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“What’s the typical first use case that lands?”
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“What does implementation actually look like?”
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“Who internally makes the final call when stakeholders disagree?”
If candidates aren’t asking these questions, it’s not necessarily a red flag — but it is a reminder that you must define the context clearly yourself.
The bottom line
In AdTech, capability is table stakes.
Context fit is the differentiator.
If you want fewer mis-hires, don’t just hire for experience.
Hire for the ability to win in your environment — with your constraints — in this market.
Because the best hires aren’t asking, “Can I do the job?”
They’re asking, “Can I win in this context?”
If you’re hiring right now, pressure-test your brief against the three gaps above before you go to market. It’s one of the simplest ways to protect your reputation, your runway, and your momentum.



