Eric Gilpin.
President, GTM · G2
Chief Revenue Officer at G2 with 22 years of sales leadership experience scaling GTM organizations at Upwork and CareerBuilder. Expertise in cross-functional orchestration, executive talent acquisition, customer-centric go-to-market strategies, revenue operations alignment, and building high-performing sales teams through systematic hiring frameworks.
Guest
Eric Gilpin
President, GTM
Company:
G2
Location:
Chicago
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In this episode of How I Hire, Andy Mowat speaks with Eric Gilpin, President GTM at G2, about his systematic approach to executive hiring built on 22 years of sales leadership at companies like Upwork and CareerBuilder. Eric shares his contrarian philosophy on recruiting directly from your customer base, his specific four-stage VP+ interview process that treats candidates as collaborators rather than supplicants, and why he maintains relationships with his next three hires before roles even open. His insights reveal how leveraging conversation intelligence tools and transparent back-channeling can transform executive hiring outcomes.

Topics discussed:

ABOUT YOUR HOST: 

Andy Mowat has built GTM engines for top companies throughout his career. He led Revenue Operations and Demand Gen at four unicorns, including scaling from $10M to $100M ARR at both Upwork and Culture Amp, and helping guide Box and Carta through IPO scale. With a passion for connecting people, Andy has advised executives on their careers for years and launched Whispered to make searching for executive roles less intimidating. 

Learn more about about Whispered: www.whispered.com

Interact with AI Andy: www.whispered.com/whisper-search

Five takeaways from this conversation.

Actionable for Whispered Hiring marketers

  1. Recruit Directly From Your Customer Base
    Eric actively evaluates every customer CRO and CMO he meets as a potential hire. The advantage is significant: these candidates already have passion for your brand, understand your product application, and hit the ground running with a shortened learning curve. Even better, Eric uses Gong as a "cheat code" to review recordings of customer calls over the past two years, observing how candidates interact with his team before ever having a conversation.
  2. Maintain an Always-On Executive Pipeline
    Eric knows who his next three VP+ hires are right now, despite all current roles being filled. This approach, inspired by an early manager who kept three names on his whiteboard, eliminates reactive recruiting and prevents the internal mobility hoarding problem where managers block talent moves due to lack of pipeline. As Eric puts it: "If you have choices, you'll make choices."
  3. Design Roles for Team Capability Gaps, Not Just Job Requirements
    Before defining what a new hire needs, Eric audits his entire leadership team for capability gaps in areas like AI literacy, data-driven decision making, and emotional intelligence. This ensures each executive hire raises the bar across the organization rather than creating ten subject matter experts who all think the same way. Eric's framework: understand the impact and jobs to be done first, then ask what capabilities are missing from the team.
  4. Leverage Executive Search Agencies for VP+ Roles
    Eric leans hard into agency relationships for senior hires despite the cost. Agencies handle the heavy lifting on experience and compensation vetting, allowing hiring conversations to focus on co-authoring roles and assessing fit. More critically, top recruiters maintain year-round relationships with passive candidates and have access to the "private listing business" of unlisted opportunities. Eric runs joint Slack channels with both his internal TA team and agency partners to create collaboration.
  5. Conduct Transparent Back-Channel References Yourself
    Eric tells candidates upfront: "I'm going to poke around, you should too." He explicitly asks what's off limits to avoid blowing up their current situation, then conducts all back-channels himself rather than outsourcing to recruiters. This allows him to control market noise, hear context firsthand, and typically validates patterns already visible in the interview process rather than surfacing new surprises.