Leadership hiring benchmarks for venture-backed and growth-stage companies — Q3 2026 data on search duration, vacancy cost, offer acceptance, and first-time VP hire outcomes across Series A through Series C.
Leadership hiring benchmarks for venture-backed and growth-stage companies — Q3 2026 data on search duration, vacancy cost, offer acceptance, and first-time VP hire outcomes across Series A through Series C.
For VC-backed companies, Q3 is the execution quarter. Board-level revenue targets set at the January planning session are now being tested against reality. The companies most at risk are those that entered Q3 with a VP-level seat still empty — VP Sales without a head of revenue, Series B running a VP Eng search, pre-profitability company without a CFO to manage the next raise.
The pressure is compounded by fundraising cycles. Companies that raised Series B or C in 2025 are now 12–18 months into deployment. Investors are expecting leadership team completion alongside revenue milestones. A VP search that runs into Q4 creates both organizational delay and investor friction.
The following metrics track movement in startup-specific leadership search data from the Q2 2026 baseline. This is the inaugural quarter of the Startup Hiring Index; Q2 figures represent the baseline established through Majhi Group's engagement history and published VC hiring data.
| Metric | Q2 2026 Baseline | Q3 2026 | Direction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Series B–C VP roles open 60+ days | 71% | 78% | ↑ Worsening |
| Median days open — VP Sales | 87 days | 94 days | ↑ Lengthening |
| Median days open — CTO/VP Eng | 78 days | 82 days | ↑ Lengthening |
| Offer acceptance (startup contingency) | 58% | 59% | ↔ Flat |
| Offer acceptance (Majhi Group retained) | 88% | 91% | ↑ Improving |
| First-time VP hire failure rate | 52% | 52% | ↔ Structural |
| Majhi Group close time — startup VP | 38 days avg | 30–45 days | ↑ Improving |
Post-Series A companies attempting their first VP hire face a structural problem that has nothing to do with candidate availability. The problem is intake. When a company has never hired at VP level before, the role specification is typically written by a founding team describing what they need today — not the leadership capability required to operate at the scale the company is trying to reach.
This creates a hire who is right for the company at the moment of joining and wrong within 12 months as the company grows past the role definition. The placement is not a failure of the candidate — it is a failure of the specification. Majhi Group's intake process specifically addresses this: the first session is a forward-looking role design exercise, not a job description review.
Replacement searches — where a VP is being replaced after departure — benefit from a company that has already learned what the role requires through experience. The failure rate drops from 52% to 38% because the intake quality is higher. The company knows what did and did not work. That institutional knowledge is what drives a more accurate specification and a more successful placement.
VP Sales is the role with the highest vacancy cost and the longest average time-to-fill at Series B–C companies. The vacancy cost range of $45K–$180K per month reflects direct impact on revenue execution: quota that isn't being assigned, pipeline that isn't being managed, and the organizational signal sent to a sales team operating without a head.
Counterintuitively, VP Sales searches are also the most likely to be run via contingency. Companies under revenue pressure want speed — and contingency firms promise speed. The result is a 59% offer acceptance rate and a meaningful percentage of placements that do not survive 90 days. The search that felt fast produces a replacement search 8 months later.
Majhi Group's 90%+ offer acceptance rate on VP Sales searches is not a coincidence. It reflects qualification depth that prevents the conditions for offer decline: compensation misalignment, competing processes not surfaced, equity expectations not calibrated, cultural misread between founder and candidate. Retained search surfaces these conditions before offer stage. Contingency surfaces them at offer — when it's too late.
Representative of Majhi Group's Q3 engagement pattern: a VC-backed SaaS company, Series B, VP Sales role open 60+ days before engaging Majhi Group on a retained basis. The prior process used a contingency firm that presented 8 candidates over 6 weeks, none of whom reached offer. Majhi Group rebuilt the intake criteria, identified the compensation structure misalignment that had caused the prior shortlist to fail, and placed a candidate in 38 days at 90% offer acceptance. The placement remained in role through Q3 2026.
20-minute confidential search assessment — Majhi Group reviews your criteria, prior process, and compensation structure to identify where the search has stalled. Your actual mandate. Not a demo.
Request Search AssessmentStartup executive search is more culturally driven and structurally less defined. Role scope evolves faster, compensation requires equity-to-cash calibration, and cultural fit with a founding team carries more weight than pedigree. Enterprise search has larger candidate pools and more defined role specifications. Startup searches fail more often due to role definition drift and cultural misalignment — not candidate unavailability.
Majhi Group estimates $45K–$180K per month in direct revenue execution delay depending on team size and average quota. This excludes the compounding cost of a sales team operating without strategic leadership — pipeline degradation, rep attrition, and missed forecasts that accrue during the vacancy period. A 90-day VP Sales vacancy typically costs more than the search fee many times over.
Post-Series A hires are often the company's first VP-level appointment. Founders underestimate the intake rigor required. The job spec is written for the current company, not the company in 12 months. Cultural alignment is assumed rather than tested. And compensation structures — particularly equity — are rarely competitive when benchmarked against what candidates can get elsewhere. Majhi Group's intake process specifically addresses the specification problem before sourcing begins.
Q3 is high-urgency for VC-backed companies executing second-half growth plans. Revenue targets require VP-caliber leadership to execute. Companies that missed Q2 hiring targets face compounded pressure. Candidate availability also tightens as competing offers accumulate. The result is maximum urgency coinciding with reduced candidate supply — exactly the conditions that reward structured retained search and punish reactive contingency approaches.
Three signals that a retained search firm is operating at VP level: they require exclusivity (no exclusivity means no real commitment), they offer a 90-day replacement guarantee (no guarantee means no confidence in placement quality), and they use your actual mandate from day one. Fee structure should be retained — 1/3 upfront at signing, 1/3 at candidate submission, 1/3 at placement. Contingency structure for VP hires is the wrong incentive structure.